Abstract

This review of copepod crustaceans associated with reef-dwelling cnidarians, sponges and echinoderms of the Greater Caribbean is based on published records, systematically arranged by the classification of symbiotic copepods and their hosts, sampling sites, coordinates, depth and date of sampling, literature sources, and three recent surveys (Cuba, St. Eustatius in the Eastern Caribbean and Curaçao in the Southern Caribbean). This resulted in totals of 532 records of 115 species of symbiotic copepods (47 genera, 17 families, three orders) hosted by 80 species of invertebrates, representing scleractinians (47%), octocorals (9%), echinoderms (3%), and sponges (1%). Among ten Caribbean ecoregions, the Greater Antilles (with 64 species of symbiotic copepods) as well as the Southern and Eastern Caribbean (with 46 and 17 species of copepods, respectively) are the most studied and best represented, whereas only six species of copepods are known from Bermuda, one from Southwestern Caribbean and none from the Gulf of Mexico. The absence of poecilostomatoid copepods (Anchimolgidae, Rhynchomolgidae and Xarifidae) on Caribbean stony corals as noted by Stock (1988) is confirmed. The results indicate that the diversity and ecology of Caribbean symbiotic copepods are still poorly investigated.

Highlights

  • Symbiotic copepods are a widespread, numerous and diverse group of crustaceans living in association with other marine animals ­(Gotto, 1979, 1993; Humes, 1985a, 1994; Ho, 2001)

  • A high degree of endemism as well as a remarkable difference in taxonomic composition of copepods living in a poorly studied symbiosis with Caribbean stony corals is noticed in comparison with the Indo-Pacific (Stock, 1988)

  • The first study of symbiotic copepods living on cnidarians, echinoderms and sponges of the Greater Caribbean was conducted by Edwards (1891), who discovered Diogenidium nasutum, living on the sea cucumber Holothuria scabra, in the Bahamas

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Summary

Introduction

Symbiotic copepods are a widespread, numerous and diverse group of crustaceans living in association (parasitism, commensalism, mutualism) with other marine animals ­(Gotto, 1979, 1993; Humes, 1985a, 1994; Ho, 2001). Bar, Bon, Humes & Stock, Cur, Jam, MI, PR 1973

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