Abstract

This study assesses the biogeographic classification of the Western Indian Ocean (WIO) on the basis of the species diversity and distribution of reef-building corals. Twenty one locations were sampled between 2002 and 2011. Presence/absence of scleractinian corals was noted on SCUBA, with the aid of underwater digital photographs and reference publications for species identification. Sampling effort varied from 7 to 37 samples per location, with 15 to 45 minutes per dive allocated to species observations, depending on the logistics on each trip. Species presence/absence was analyzed using the Bray-Curtis similarity coefficient, followed by cluster analysis and multi-dimensional scaling. Total (asymptotic) species number per location was estimated using the Michaelis-Menten equation. Three hundred and sixty nine coral species were named with stable identifications and used for analysis. At the location level, estimated maximum species richness ranged from 297 (Nacala, Mozambique) to 174 (Farquhar, Seychelles). Locations in the northern Mozambique Channel had the highest diversity and similarity, forming a core region defined by its unique oceanography of variable meso-scale eddies that confer high connectivity within this region. A distinction between mainland and island fauna was not found; instead, diversity decreased radially from the northern Mozambique Channel. The Chagos archipelago was closely related to the northern Mozambique Channel region, and analysis of hard coral data in the IUCN Red List found Chagos to be more closely related to the WIO than to the Maldives, India and Sri Lanka. Diversity patterns were consistent with primary oceanographic drivers in the WIO, reflecting inflow of the South Equatorial Current, maintenance of high diversity in the northern Mozambique Channel, and export from this central region to the north and south, and to the Seychelles and Mascarene islands.

Highlights

  • The reef-building coral fauna of the Western Indian Ocean (WIO) is one of the least known globally

  • Red List coral distributions Across all tropical Marine Ecoregions of the World (MEOW) provinces, the Red List dataset on corals shows a significant segregation of provinces between the four Indo-Pacific Realms (ANOSIM, R = 0.558, p,0.001)

  • Field data on coral distributions Following reconciliation of field identifications across 21 study locations (Table 2), 413 distinct species or colony morphologies were noted, including a number of unidentified records that could not be assigned a species name either in situ or in post-processing of photographs and records. Excluding these uncertain records resulted in 369 stable identifications, including working identifications recorded as numbered records (e.g. ‘sp.1’) that were used consistently across locations

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Summary

Introduction

The reef-building coral fauna of the Western Indian Ocean (WIO) is one of the least known globally. A greater number of studies have recently been undertaken in the northern parts of the Indian Ocean, including the Red Sea and Gulfs regions e.g. Sheppard [18] noted that this decline does not hold for the Red Sea, finding a regional peak in diversity in the Red Sea, but species richness for mainland East Africa and adjacent island sites showed a clear decline. Work in the WIO and Red Sea has highlighted a number of new records for the region as well as previously unknown coral species [21,22,23], and cryptic species or genetic disjunctions between Indian and Pacific Ocean populations [24,25,26,27]

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