Tropical Marine Ecology. Daniel M. Alongi

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Tropical Marine Ecology - Daniel M. Alongi

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province. Similarly, most of the fauna of the warm‐temperate Carolina Province originates from the Caribbean. The Gulf Stream plays an important role as a mode of transport as shown by the islands of Bermuda which are clearly populated from the Caribbean. The CA has been functioning as the centre of origin for the warm provinces of the Atlantic as indicated by its great diversity and the dispersal of fauna to north, east, and south. The greatest diversity of coastal invertebrate species within the CA occurs from Cuba through the Antilles to Colombia and Venezuela (Miloslavich et al. 2010).

      The tropical Atlantic continues to gain species from other sources. Evolutionary separation is stimulated by the three soft barriers of the Amazon, mid‐Atlantic, and the Benguela. A few species have colonised north from the BR to add to the species richness of the CA (Rocha et al. 2008). Parapatric speciation (two subpopulations of a species evolve reproductive isolation from one another while continuing to exchange genes) may predominate due to the softness of these barriers while allopatric speciation (speciation that happens when two populations of the same species become isolated from each other due to geographic changes) may predominate across wide stretches of the open ocean between the West, Central, and East Atlantic (Briggs and Bowen 2013).

      The greatest richness of invertebrate and vertebrate species lies in the IWP. This has been acknowledged since at least the time of Ekman (1953) and the reasons for this richness continue to be a source of rich debate (Bellwood et al. 2012; Veron et al. 2015). The IWP spans an immense area, and this is reflected in the unique distribution patterns of fish (Allen 2008; Mundy et al. 2010). Allen (2008) calculated an average range for reef fish of 9 357 070 km2, and Mundy et al. (2010) found that of the fish fauna of the US Phoenix and Line Islands nearly 70% ranged from the Indian Ocean to their study area at the eastern edge of the SW Pacific. Obviously, a high level of connectivity is maintained across vast expanses of ocean (Eble et al. 2011) including the barriers between the eastern and western Indian Ocean and across the far eastern Pacific. In contrast, there is considerable flow of fauna between the western Pacific and the eastern Indian Ocean that are connected via the Indonesian Throughflow (ITF). Considerable research has focused on this connectivity (Williams et al. 2002; Gaither et al. 2010). The bridge between both oceans was not nearly so open as it is now; during the last glaciation about 18 000 years ago, sea levels were considerably lower (about 130 m) than at present, although there was still a narrow connection. Nevertheless, during the Pliocene–Pleistocene glaciations, the ITF was reduced, lessening the chance for ecological connectivity. Gaither et al. (2010) have provided some evidence of genetic distinctions within 15 of 18 species of fish, crustaceans, and echinoderms between both oceans, although these genetic breaks are no larger than found elsewhere in the sea (e.g., Horne et al. 2008). On the other hand, Veron (1995) considered the coral fauna of the eastern Indian Ocean to be nearly identical to that of the western Pacific underscoring the fact that there have been, and continues to be, connections between the faunas of the Indian and Pacific Oceans.

      There are also connections between the western Pacific with the Hawaiian archipelago and the central Pacific with the eastern Pacific. However, the eastern Indian and western Pacific may eventually be distinguished. Briggs and Bowen (2013) point out two points that must be considered in this regard: (i) the unique possibility of overlap by distinct fauna by the fact that the Indo‐Pacific barrier is different from other barriers in that it switches on and off in 100 000 year oscillations (Rocha et al. 2005b) and (ii) the Pacific fauna is expanding westwards due to the presence of Indian and Pacific taxa hybridising in the Indian Ocean (Hobbs et al. 2009). The barrier between the Indian and Pacific Oceans thus appears to be diffuse in the current day and ephemeral over evolutionary time, being spread across 25° longitude from the Sunda shelf to the Cocos/Keeling Island group. Briggs and Bowen (2013) concluded that the distinction between the western Pacific and the eastern Indian Oceans has been blurred due to repeated invasions of species, although the eastern Indian Ocean at the height of the last glaciation 18 000 years ago may have been a distinct biogeographic province.

      Seagrasses are also composed of relatively few species: currently 58 species in 12 genera. They appear to have evolved more than once and have an evolutionary history that is still the subject of debate. Seagrasses are divided into 5 families and 12 genera: Hydrocharitaceae (Halophila, Enhalus, Thalassia), Ruppiaceae (Ruppia), Zosteraceae (Zostera, Phyllospadix), Posidoniaceae (Posidonia), and Cymodoceaceae (Amphibolis, Cymodocea, Halodule, Syringodium, Thalassodendron). Globally, seagrass distribution is divided into six regional floras: temperate North Atlantic, tropical Atlantic, Mediterranean, temperate North Pacific, tropical Indo‐Pacific, and temperate Southern Ocean. Species richness is positively correlated with decreasing latitude with the greatest richness occurring in Southeast Asia (Hogarth 2015).

      The plankton of the open ocean contains relatively few species in diverse groups, owing to the scarcity of credible barriers. Pelagic organisms have widespread distributions through dispersal; allopatric speciation seems to be unimportant. They seem to live quite well at the edges of their range. However, very rapid species turnover has been established from the fossil record and is most likely the result of sympatric speciation (Norris 2000). Thus, it is unsurprising that there is no unambiguous centre of biodiversity, although planktonic Foraminifera show some evidence

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