Abstract

Recent years have witnessed growing appreciation for the ways in which human-mediated species introductions have reshaped marine biogeography. Despite this we have yet to grapple fully with the scale and impact of anthropogenic dispersal in both creating and determining contemporary distributions of marine taxa. In particular, the past several decades of research on marine biological invasions have revealed that broad geographic distributions of coastal marine organisms—historically referred to simply as “cosmopolitanism”—may belie complex interplay of both natural and anthropogenic processes. Here we describe a framework for understanding contemporary cosmopolitanism, informed by a synthesis of the marine bioinvasion literature. Our framework defines several novel categories in an attempt to provide a unified terminology for discussing cosmopolitan distributions in the world’s oceans. We reserve the term eucosmopolitan to refer to those species for which data exist to support a true, natural, and prehistorically global (or extremely broad) distribution. While in the past this has been the default assumption for species observed to exhibit contemporary cosmopolitan distributions, we argue that given recent advances in marine invasion science this assignment should require positive evidence. In contrast, neocosmopolitan describes those species that have demonstrably achieved extensive geographic ranges only through historical anthropogenic dispersal, often facilitated over centuries of human maritime traffic. We discuss the history and human geography underpinning these neocosmopolitan distributions, and illustrate the extent to which these factors may have altered natural biogeographic patterns. We define the category pseudocosmopolitan to encompass taxa for which a broad distribution is determined (typically after molecular investigation) to reflect multiple, sometimes regionally endemic, lineages with uncertain taxonomic status; such species may remain cosmopolitan only so long as taxonomic uncertainty persists, after which they may splinter into multiple geographically restricted species. We discuss the methods employed to identify such species and to resolve both their taxonomic status and their biogeographic histories. We argue that recognizing these different types of cosmopolitanism, and the important role that invasion science has played in understanding them, is critically important for the future study of both historical and modern marine biogeography, ecology, and biodiversity.

Highlights

  • Specialty section: This article was submitted to Marine Ecosystem Ecology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Marine Science

  • We argue that recognizing these different types of cosmopolitanism, and the important role that invasion science has played in understanding them, is critically important for the future study of both historical and modern marine biogeography, ecology, and biodiversity

  • We describe here a framework for understanding cosmopolitanism in the context of lessons learned over three decades of marine invasion biology

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Summary

THE NEED FOR A TYPOLOGY OF

Students of marine biodiversity have long eyed the phenomenon of cosmopolitanism with some skepticism. In the absence of non-genetic corroboration of species-level distinctions, these lineages normally remain unnamed (Pante et al, 2015a), leaving us with a single accepted binomial describing a taxon with cosmopolitan distribution that we suspect may represent a complex of multiple species—some or all of which may, be geographically restricted provincials We define such taxa, numerous in the literature, as pseudocosmopolitan to reflect the possibility that their current cosmopolitan status may be an illusory effect of overconservative taxonomy; that effect could be—and sometimes is—dispelled by future integrated taxonomic revision of the taxon. They used the terms much as we use them here, defining them as either “true or natural cosmopolitan species” or “human-transported cosmopolitans.” Gartner (1998), apparently independently, used eucosmopolitan to refer to what was thought to be a “circumglobal” mesopelagic

Introduced Regional Pseudocosmopolitan
CREATION OF COSMOPOLITAN SPECIES
NEOCOSMOPOLITAN AND
Not specified
Gracilaria vermiculophylla
EVIDENCE FOR CRYPTIC LINEAGES
Jassa marmorata
Native range in Atlantic North
Several highly divergent lettered lineages identified
Three unnamed clades in the northwest Pacific
Carijoa riisei
Genetic evidence for multiple Introduction to Hawaii from
Genetic data consistent with multiple possible biogeographic scenarios
Two divergent lettered lineages
Asparagopsis taxiformis
UNNAMED LINEAGES
STORY AND A CAUTIONARY TALE
CRYPTOGENIC SPECIES
BENTHIC EUCOSMOPOLITAN SPECIES?
Findings
THE WAY FORWARD
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