4.6 Article

Biogeography of the coastal fishes of the Socotra Archipelago: Challenging current ecoregional concepts

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 17, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0267086

Keywords

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Funding

  1. UNDP-GEF project 'Conservation and Sustainable Use of Socotra Archipelago' [UNOPS YEM/96/G32, C-972248]
  2. research funding programme 'LOEWE -Landes-Offensive zur Entwicklung Wissenschaftlich-okonomischer Exzellenz' of Hesse's Ministry of Higher Education, Research, and the Arts

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The study focuses on the distributional biogeography of coastal fish fauna in the Socotra Archipelago and its relation to ichthyogeographic and ecoregional concepts, highlighting close affinities to a putative ecoregion in the eastern Gulf of Aden and the Arabian Sea coast of Oman. It suggests that the Socotra Archipelago should be considered a distinct ecoregion due to its unique marine diversity levels.
The Socotra Archipelago, located in the eastern Gulf of Aden, has a unique marine environment, which combines tropical and 'pseudo-temperate' elements. An updated species inventory recently considered its coastal fish diversity the highest among Arabian ecoregions, necessitating to re-assess the ichthyogeographic position of the island group. The main aim of this study is to describe the distributional biogeography of its coastal fish fauna in relation to contemporary ichthyogeographic and ecoregional concepts. Inferences are drawn with regard to the marine biogeographic arrangement and ecoregional partitioning of the Arabian region. The main datasets comprise eight and twenty selected families including 404 and 898 species, respectively, from Arabian ecoregions. The Socotra Archipelago has close affinities to a putative ecoregion in the eastern Gulf of Aden that extends to southern Oman. It is more closely related to the Arabian Sea coast of Oman than to ecoregions in the Red Sea and a putative ecoregion in the western Gulf of Aden. The Gulf of Aden does not represent a consistent ecoregion in ichthyogeographic terms, because its eastern and western parts are less closely related to one another than to other ecoregions. The Socotra Archipelago and the eastern Gulf of Aden should therefore not be assigned to a joined province with Red Sea ecoregions. The coastal fish faunas of the southern Red Sea have close affinities with those of the western Gulf of Aden. The Arabian/Persian Gulf is least related to the other Arabian ecoregions. The authors posit the Socotra Archipelago as a distinct ecoregion, either on its own or in combination with affiliated mainland areas. This best reflects the ichthyogeographic data and the exceptionally high levels of fish and overall marine diversity. Two alternative ecoregional delineations are proposed, serving as working hypotheses for onward research.

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