WoRMS source details

Santín, A.; Grinyó, J.; Uriz, M. J.; Lo Iacono, C.; Gili, J. M.; Puig, P. (2021). Mediterranean Coral Provinces as a Sponge Diversity Reservoir: Is There a Mediterranean Cold-Water Coral Sponge Fauna?. Frontiers in Marine Science. 8.
408014
10.3389/fmars.2021.662899 [view]
Santín, A.; Grinyó, J.; Uriz, M. J.; Lo Iacono, C.; Gili, J. M.; Puig, P.
2021
Mediterranean Coral Provinces as a Sponge Diversity Reservoir: Is There a Mediterranean Cold-Water Coral Sponge Fauna?
Frontiers in Marine Science
8
Publication
Available for editors  PDF available [request]
Cold-water coral reefs (CWC) are known to be biodiversity hotspots, however, the sponge assemblages found to dwell within these habitats haven not been studied in depth to date in the Mediterranean Sea. The present article provides the first insight on the associated sponge fauna of the recently discovered CWC communities on the Catalan Margin and, to a lesser extent, the Cabliers Coral Mound Province, while also reviewing the current knowledge of the sponge fauna dwelling in all the Mediterranean CWC provinces. In regards to the studied areas, some rare species are cited for the first time in the Mediterranean or redescribed, while two of them, Hamacantha (Hamacantha) hortae sp. nov. and Spongosorites cabliersi sp. nov. are new to science. At a basin scale, Mediterranean CWC appear as poriferan biodiversity hotspots, yet current diversity values on each site rather represent a small fraction of its actual fauna. Additionally, the existence of an endemic sponge fauna exclusively dwelling on CWC is refuted. Nonetheless, the sponge fauna thriving in Mediterranean CWC appears to be unique, and different from that of other Atlantic regions. Finally, with the current knowledge, the sponge fauna from the Mediterranean CWC is grouped in three distinguishable clusters (Alboran Sea, Western and Eastern Mediterranean), which appears to be determined by the basins water circulation, specially the Levantine Intermediate Water and the Atlantic Water following a western-eastern pattern from the Strait of Gibraltar to the Adriatic Sea. Overall, sponge living in Mediterranean CWC are still poorly explored in most areas, yet they appear to be good candidates for biogeographical studies.
Mediterranean Sea in general
Biodiversity, Taxonomic and ecological diversity
Systematics, Taxonomy
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2021-06-16 07:45:08Z
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2023-10-26 10:15:05Z
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Alboran Sea for Spongosorites cabliersi Santín, Grinyó & Lo Iacono, 2021 
Spanish Exclusive Economic Zone [Mediterranean part] for Acanthancora schmidti (Topsent, 1898) 
Spanish Exclusive Economic Zone [Mediterranean part] for Cladorhiza abyssicola Sars, 1872 
Spanish Exclusive Economic Zone [Mediterranean part] for Haliclona (Flagellia) hiberniae Van Soest, 2017 
Spanish Exclusive Economic Zone [Mediterranean part] for Hamacantha (Hamacantha) hortae Santín, Grinyó, Uriz & Gili, 2021 
Spanish Exclusive Economic Zone [Mediterranean part] for Hymedesmia (Hymedesmia) quadridentata Cardone, Pansini, Corriero & Bertolino, 2019 
Spanish Exclusive Economic Zone [Mediterranean part] for Spongosorites cabliersi Santín, Grinyó & Lo Iacono, 2021 
Western Mediterranean for Acanthancora schmidti (Topsent, 1898) 
Western Mediterranean for Hamacantha (Hamacantha) hortae Santín, Grinyó, Uriz & Gili, 2021 
Western Mediterranean for Hymedesmia (Hymedesmia) quadridentata Cardone, Pansini, Corriero & Bertolino, 2019 
Holotype MZB 2020-0936, geounit Alboran Sea, identified as Spongosorites cabliersi Santín, Grinyó & Lo Iacono, 2021
Holotype MZB 2020-0967, geounit Western Mediterranean, identified as Hamacantha (Hamacantha) hortae Santín, Grinyó, Uriz & Gili, 2021