Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/41468
Título: Checklists of Crustacea Decapoda from the Canary and Cape Verde Islands, with an assessment of Macaronesian and Cape Verde biogeographic marine ecoregions
Autores/as: González, J. A. 
Clasificación UNESCO: 240114 Taxonomía animal
240119 Zoología marina
Palabras clave: Crustacea
Benthic environment
Biogeographic patterns
Catalogues
Decapod crustaceans, et al.
Fecha de publicación: 2018
Publicación seriada: Zootaxa 
Resumen: The complete list of Canarian marine decapods (last update by Gonzalez & Quiles 2003, popular book) currently comprises 374 species/subspecies, grouped in 198 genera and 82 families; whereas the Cape Verdean marine decapods (now fully listed for the first time) are represented by 343 species/subspecies with 201 genera and 80 families. Due to changing environmental conditions, in the last decades many subtropical/tropical taxa have reached the coasts of the Canary Islands. Comparing the carcinofaunal composition and their biogeographic components between the Canary and Cape Verde archipelagos would aid in: validating the appropriateness in separating both archipelagos into different ecoregions (Spalding et al. 2007), and understanding faunal movements between areas of benthic habitat. The consistency of both ecoregions is here compared and validated by assembling their decapod crustacean checklists, analysing their taxa composition, gathering their bathymetric data, and comparing their biogeographic patterns. Four main evidences (i.e. different taxa; divergent taxa composition; different composition of biogeographic patterns; different endemicity rates) support that separation, especially in coastal benthic decapods; and these parametres combined would be used as a valuable tool at comparing biotas from oceanic archipelagos. To understand/predict south-north faunal movements in a scenario of regional tropicalization, special attention is paid to species having at the Canaries their southernmost occurrence, and also to tropical African warm-affinity species.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/41468
ISSN: 1175-5326
DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4413.3.1
Fuente: ZOOTAXA [ISSN 1175-5326], v. 4413 (3), p. 401-448
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