TY - JOUR T1 - Microhabitat diversity of Svalbard bryozoa JF - Journal of Natural History Y1 - 2005 A1 - Kuklinski, P. A1 - Barnes, D. K. A. SP - 539 EP - 554 KW - antarctica KW - Arctic KW - biodiversity KW - communities KW - epibiota KW - fauna KW - Kongsfjorden KW - signy island KW - substrata KW - substratum-bryozoan association AB - Bryozoans are one of the major macrofaunal groups of the high polar regions. Here we present data on the nature of bryozoan assemblages in the Svalbard Archipelago sampled over 6 years between 1997 and 2002. Samples were collected with use of Van Veen grab, dredge and Scuba diving at depths ranging from 0 to 268 m. Among examined material (5026 items) bryozoans were present on one type of abiotic (stones) and 40 types of biotic substrata. The biotic substrata we investigated included algae (12 taxa) and invertebrates (28 taxa: Hydrozoa, Gastropoda, Bivalvia, Polychaeta, Crustacea, Ascidiacea, other Bryozoa). Both a priori ANOSIM (Global R=0.512, P=0.001) and cluster analyses reveal differences between the assemblages on different types of substrata. Cluster analyses distinguish two distinct groups of substrata. The first (stable) included stones, molluscs and Balanus balanus whilst the second (flexible) consisted of algae, hydrozoans and bryozoans. Bryozoan assemblages which colonized different substrata, varied in terms of species composition and their dominance. Bryozoan species were categorized as generalists, low-specificity epibiotic species or locally abundant background species. No species were found to be substratum-specific to any type. Among substrata with the richest bryozoan fauna were stones (156 taxa), Chlamys islandica (68) and Balanus balanus (62). There were clear patterns in the distribution of substrata colonized by bryozoans within the fiord system: those shallow near the mouth were rich whilst those in deeper water were depauperate. We consider environmental gradients such as siltation and processes related to depth to be responsible for such patterns. VL - 39 SN - 0022-2933 UR - ://000226666000003 N1 - ISI Document Delivery No.: 892QVTimes Cited: 6Cited Reference Count: 43Taylor & francis ltdAbingdon ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Diversity and taxonomy of intertidal Bryozoa (Cheilostomata) at Akkeshi Bay, Hokkaido, Japan JF - Journal of Natural History Y1 - 2007 A1 - Grischenko, A. V. A1 - Dick, M. H. A1 - Mawatari, S. F. SP - 1047 EP - 1161 KW - biodiversity KW - biogeography KW - bryozoa KW - Cheilostomata KW - genus KW - intertidal KW - islands KW - new KW - species KW - species richness KW - taxonomy AB - We found 39 cheilostome species among more than 7000 specimens collected at 10 intertidal sites in rocky habitats along the shore of Akkeshi Bay, eastern Hokkaido Island, Japan. These species are herein described in detail and illustrated by scanning electron microscopy. Nine species (23% of total) are described as new (Electra asiatica, Callopora sarae, Conopeum nakanosum, Cauloramphus cryptoarmatus, Cauloramphus multispinosus, Cauloramphus niger, Stomachetosella decorata, Microporella luellae, and Celleporina minima), and 21 species (54%) are reported for the first time from Japan. Species richness ranged from eight to 29 species per study site. A TWINSPAN analysis showed the species fell into nine groups defined by the local pattern of distribution. A cluster analysis of study sites based on similarity of species composition showed three faunistic groups distributed geographically: in Akkeshi Lake, along the eastern-central shore of the bay, and at the mouth of the bay. Species richness in estuarine Akkeshi Lake was low, with a species composition very different from the outer bay. Most cheilostomes were found on rock and shell substrata, but uncommonly occurred on concrete walls, algae, hydroids, tubes of polychaetes, other bryozoans, and anthropogenic debris. Of the 39 species found, 33 (85%) contained embryos during the collecting periods, 2-7 June and 3-6 July 2004. The biogeographical composition of intertidal cheilostomes at Akkeshi Bay included species with Arctic-Boreal (28%), Boreal (59%), and Boreal-Subtropical (13%) distributions. The overall species richness of intertidal cheilostomes was two-thirds that documented intertidally in a comparable study at Kodiak, Alaska, a locality 15 degrees higher in latitude. We attribute the lower richness at Akkeshi to differences in the nearshore marine environment between the two localities. VL - 41 SN - 0022-2933 UR - ://000247967500005 N1 - ISI Document Delivery No.: 189CVTimes Cited: 4Cited Reference Count: 193Grischenko, Andrei V. Dick, Matthew H. Mawatari, Shunsuke F.Taylor & francis ltdAbingdon ER -