Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Erpenbeck D., Galitz A., Berumen M. L., Büttner G., Debitus Cécile, Dirnberger M., Ekins M., Hall K., Namuth L., Petek Sylvain, Rahnamae N., Reddy M. M., Rettenberger D., Ries S. R., Schätzle S., Schönberg C. H. L., Setiawan E., van der Sprong J., Thomas O. P., Tirumalasetty V., de Voogd N. J., Voigt O., Hooper J. N. A., Wörheide G. (2026). Barcoding-inferred biodiversity of shallow-water Indo-Pacific demosponges. Journal of Biogeography, 53 (3), p. e70171 [13 p.]. ISSN 0305-0270.

Titre du document
Barcoding-inferred biodiversity of shallow-water Indo-Pacific demosponges
Année de publication
2026
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:001715158100001
Auteurs
Erpenbeck D., Galitz A., Berumen M. L., Büttner G., Debitus Cécile, Dirnberger M., Ekins M., Hall K., Namuth L., Petek Sylvain, Rahnamae N., Reddy M. M., Rettenberger D., Ries S. R., Schätzle S., Schönberg C. H. L., Setiawan E., van der Sprong J., Thomas O. P., Tirumalasetty V., de Voogd N. J., Voigt O., Hooper J. N. A., Wörheide G.
Source
Journal of Biogeography, 2026, 53 (3), p. e70171 [13 p.] ISSN 0305-0270
Aim The Indo-Pacific is the world's largest marine biogeographic region. It is characterised by different degrees of connectivity among its subregions and harbours the majority of demosponge species currently known to science. Comparisons between regional sponge faunas have been undertaken in the past, mostly based on morphological species identification. The Sponge Barcoding Project, in tandem with regional DNA taxonomy campaigns, provides one of the largest DNA-based taxonomic data collections from sponges of the Indo-Pacific. Here, we utilise the barcoding data in the most extensive molecular biodiversity study of sponges to date, which reveals patterns of shallow-water demosponge faunal connectivity, endemism and distribution in the Indo-Pacific with a level of resolution unavailable in prior morphology-based studies. Location Demosponge specimens in this study cover 13 marine provinces (MPs) of the Indo-Pacific. Methods We classified demosponge barcodes from 1910 sponge samples into 701 molecular operational taxonomic units (MOTUs) using 28S rRNA. MOTU composition of the MPs was compared based on Jaccard and S & oslash;renson dissimilarities and other biodiversity indices.Results Our data corroborated high endemism in MPs (up to 84.1% endemic MOTUs). Faunal overlaps are between the Red Sea and the Gulf, which displayed small connectivity with other MPs in the Western Indian Ocean. The Western Indian Ocean is a strong faunistic boundary to the Central Indo-Pacific, to which the Polynesian sponge faunas were comparatively isolated as well. Main Conclusions Our data corroborate case studies on sponges that generally reject the presence of cosmopolitan or otherwise widespread sponge species, instead revealing high levels of regional endemism. This is consistent with similar observations and hypotheses in other marine invertebrates, and highlights the need for close regional monitoring to identify biodiversity changes. Connectivity among Indo-Pacific MPs differs for demosponges in many aspects from that of other marine taxa, hypothetically due to their shorter pelagic larval phase.
Plan de classement
Sciences fondamentales / Techniques d'analyse et de recherche [020] ; Sciences du milieu [021] ; Etudes, transformation, conservation du milieu naturel [082]
Description Géographique
OCEAN INDIEN ; PACIFIQUE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010096503]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010096503
Contact
  • Coordonnées :
    Mission Science Ouverte (MSO)
    IRD - Délégation régionale Île-de-France & Ouest
    Campus Condorcet - Hôtel à projets
    8 cours des Humanités - 93322 Aubervilliers Cedex
    Horizon Pleins textes
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