Abstract
The diversity of deep-water corals in the Caribbean Sea was studied using records from oceanographic expeditions performed by the R/V Pillsbury. Sampled stations were sorted according to broad depth ranges and ecoregions and were analyzed in terms of species accumulation curves, variance in the species composition and contributions to alpha, beta and gamma diversity. According to the analysis of species accumulation curves using the Chao2 estimator, more diversity occurs on the continental slope (200–2000 m depth) than on the upper continental shelf (60–200 m depth). In addition to the effect of depth sampling, differences in species composition related to depth ranges were detected. However, the differences between ecoregions are dependent on depth ranges, there were fewer differences among ecoregions on the continental slope than on the upper continental shelf. Indicator species for distinctness of ecoregions were, in general, Alcyonaria and Antipatharia for the upper continental shelf, but also the scleractinians Madracis myriabilis and Cladocora debilis. In the continental slope, the alcyonarian Placogorgia and the scleractinians Stephanocyathus and Fungiacyathus were important for the distinction of ecoregions. Beta diversity was the most important component of gamma diversity in the Caribbean Basin. The contribution of ecoregions to alpha, beta and gamma diversity differed with depth range. On the upper continental shelf, the Southern Caribbean ecoregion contributed substantially to all components of diversity. In contrast, the northern ecoregions contributed substantially to the diversity of the Continental Slope. Strategies for the conservation of deep-water coral diversity in the Caribbean Basin must consider the variation between ecoregions and depth ranges.
Highlights
Deep-water corals represent a diverse group of cnidarians, including scleractinians, zoanthids, alcyonarians, antipatharians and hydrocorals (Stylasteridae), and are widely distributed in all oceans at depths below 50 m [1,2]
Some taxa have few records and species compared with previous records for the Caribbean Basin, such as Stylasteridae [58,59], in general the dataset is a representative sample of the deep-water coral diversity of the area
Based on analyses of species accumulation curves, the present study confirms previous suggestions, based on species depth ranges, that coral diversity is higher on the continental slope in the Caribbean Sea [34]
Summary
Deep-water corals represent a diverse group of cnidarians, including scleractinians, zoanthids, alcyonarians, antipatharians and hydrocorals (Stylasteridae), and are widely distributed in all oceans at depths below 50 m [1,2] Despite its diversity, this group is ecologically important because it includes many habitat-building species (e.g., scleractinian formations and octocoral aggregations) and many species form associations with other species occurring on their surfaces [3]. According to Spalding et al [10], the Caribbean Sea includes five marine ecoregions: the Eastern Caribbean in the Grenada Basin; the Southern Caribbean in the Venezuelan Basin; the Southwestern Caribbean in the Colombian Basin; the Western Caribbean in the Yucatan Basin; and the Greater Antilles formed by Cuba, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico and the Cayman Islands
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