Abstract

The diversity of tropical marine organisms has not been studied as intensively as the terrestrial biota worldwide. Additionally, marine biodiversity research in the tropics lags behind other regions. The 43,000 ha Sector Marino of Área de Conservación Guanacaste (ACG, Marine Sector of Guanacaste Conservation Area), on the North Pacific coast of Costa Rica is no exception. For more than four decades, the terrestrial flora and fauna has been studied continuously. The ACG marine biodiversity was studied in the 1930’s by expeditions that passed through the area, but not much until the 1990’s, except for the marine turtles. In the mid 1990’s the Center for Research in Marine Science and Limnology (CIMAR) of the Universidad de Costa Rica (UCR) initiated the exploration of the marine environments and organisms of ACG. In 2015, ACG, in collaboration with CIMAR, started the BioMar project whose goal is to inventory the species of the marine sector of ACG (BioMar ACG project). As a baseline, here I have compiled the published records of marine ACG species, and found that 594 marine species have been reported, representing 15.5% of the known species of the Pacific coast of Costa Rica. The most diverse groups were the crustaceans, mollusks and cnidarians comprising 71.7% of the ACG species. Some taxa, such as mangroves and fish parasites are well represented in ACG when compared to the rest of the Costa Rican coast but others appear to be greatly underrepresented, for example, red algae, polychaetes, copepods, equinoderms, and marine fishes and birds, which could be due to sampling bias. Thirty species have been originally described with specimens from ACG, and 89 species are not known from other localities on the Pacific coast of Costa Rica except ACG. Most of the sampling has been concentrated in a few localities in Sector Marino, Playa Blanca and Islas Murciélago, and in the nearby waters of Bahía Santa Elena. In an effort to fill this gap, CIMAR is collaborating with ACG and a private foundation to start an inventory of the marine organisms of the conservation area. The project will be assisted by two marine parataxonomists, and all samples will be catalogued, photographed, bar coded and voucher specimens deposited at the Museo de Zoología, UCR. All the information will be available through Internet. It is anticipated that the BioMar project will fill many of the knowledge gaps and significantly more marine species will be encountered. This project could become a viable model for marine biodiversity inventories in other Costa Rican Conservation Areas (Áreas de Conservación) and in other countries.

Highlights

  • Marine biodiversity studies have lagged behind terrestrial research, especially in the tropics, with a few exceptions such as Australia (Chapman 2009)

  • A new initiative, BioMar ACG (Marine Biodiversity of ACG), was started in 2015 to inventory the marine organisms of the area, and make all the information publicly available, mainly through the Internet, and with scientific and popular publications. This project is a 5-year collaboration between the conservation area, a private foundation and academia; all samples are being catalogued, photographed, bar coded, and vouchers deposited at the Museo de Zoología (Museum of Zoology) at the Universidad de Costa Rica (UCR)

  • Compared to other areas on the Pacific of Costa Rica, the ACG has fewer known marine species (594 spp.) than does Golfo Dulce (1028 spp.: Morales-Ramírez 2011) or Isla del Coco (1688 spp.: Cortés 2012), but about the same as what is currently known for Bahía Culebra (577 spp: Cortés et al 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Marine biodiversity studies have lagged behind terrestrial research, especially in the tropics, with a few exceptions such as Australia (Chapman 2009). The same occurs geographically: some countries in the tropics have been relative well studied, for example, Costa Rica (Wehrtmann and Cortés 2009), while in other countries (such as Nicaragua) research and publications on marine biodiversity are scarce. A new initiative, BioMar ACG (Marine Biodiversity of ACG), was started in 2015 to inventory the marine organisms of the area, and make all the information publicly available, mainly through the Internet, and with scientific and popular publications This project is a 5-year collaboration between the conservation area, a private foundation and academia; all samples are being catalogued, photographed, bar coded, and vouchers deposited at the Museo de Zoología (Museum of Zoology) at the Universidad de Costa Rica (UCR). An outstanding oceanographic feature of the region is the seasonal upwelling

Materials and methods
Results
Notes Entire Conservation Area
Discussion

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