Abstract

We describe for the first time subtropical intertidal foraminiferal assemblages from beach sands on São Vincente, Cape Verdes. Sixty-five benthic foraminiferal species were recognised, representing 47 genera, 31 families, and 8 superfamilies. Endemic species were not recognised. The new checklist largely extends an earlier record of nine benthic foraminiferal species from fossil carbonate sands on the island. Bolivina striatula, Rosalina vilardeboana and Millettiana milletti dominated the living (rose Bengal stained) fauna, while Elphidium crispum, Amphistegina gibbosa, Quinqueloculina seminulum, Ammonia tepida, Triloculina rotunda and Glabratella patelliformis dominated the dead assemblages. The living fauna lacks species typical for coarse-grained substrates. Instead, there were species that had a planktonic stage in their life cycle. The living fauna therefore received a substantial contribution of floating species and propagules that may have endured a long transport by surface ocean currents. The dead assemblages largely differed from the living fauna and contained redeposited tests deriving from a rhodolith-mollusc carbonate facies at <20 m water depth. A comparison of the Recent foraminiferal inventory with other areas identified the Caribbean and Mediterranean as the most likely source regions. They have also been constrained as origin points for littoral to subtidal macroorganisms on other Cape Verdean islands. Micro-and macrofaunal evidences assigned the Cape Verde Current and North Equatorial Current as the main trajectories for faunal immigrations. The contribution from the NW African coast was rather low, a pattern that cannot be explained by the currently available information.

Highlights

  • The species inventory of oceanic islands, their evolution and their connectivity has been the subject of scientific research for decades (McArthur & Wilson 1967, and references therein)

  • We describe for the first time subtropical intertidal foraminiferal assemblages from beach sands on São Vincente, Cape Verdes

  • The goal of the present paper is to explore the intertidal benthic foraminiferal inventory of the Cape Verdean island São Vincente, which has not been described to date

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Summary

Introduction

The species inventory of oceanic islands, their evolution and their connectivity has been the subject of scientific research for decades (McArthur & Wilson 1967, and references therein). Later studies investigated the role of isolation, size and age of the islands in balancing the ratio of endemic and immigrated taxa Hachich et al 2015; Cunha et al 2017; Pinheiro et al 2017). They suggested that gene flow, i.e. connectivity, and island age were important for the biogeographical distribution of species. Pleistocene sea-level changes were considered a critical variable in the evolution and dispersal of marine organisms on and between oceanic islands (Ávila et al 2018)

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