4.6 Article

Deep sea starfishes (Echinodermata: Asteroidea) from the Avil acute accent es Canyon System (Bay of Biscay), including two new records

Journal

ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE
Volume 277, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2022.107993

Keywords

Echinoderms; Sea -star; Echinodermata; Asteroidea; LIFE plus INDEMARES; Biscay bay; Avile ?s canyon system

Funding

  1. Ministry for the Ministry Agriculture, Food and Environment
  2. European Union's LIFE programme
  3. Spanish Ministry of Environment
  4. University of Malaga
  5. Malaga University
  6. [013/0032460-80625/47.6006]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study aims to inventory and review the asteroid fauna in the Aviles Canyon System, providing updated knowledge on the diversity and distribution of species. The research reveals new records and expands the bathymetric range of certain species, contributing important information for the conservation and management of the marine ecosystem in the region.
The Avile acute accent s Canyon System (ACS) is located at the Southern Bay of Biscay (Northern Spain, Cantabrian Sea). The ACS occupies a total of 339.026 ha and is composed of three canyons, reaching the abyssal plain at 4700 m depth. Water masses that mix in the area form gyres and upwelling that contribute to increasing the nutrients at different depths, which makes it an important place for the settlement of benthic communities. They have been declared Site of Community Importance (SCI: C ESZZ12003) within the Natura 2000 Network and recognized as a Vulnerable Marine Ecosystem where Echinoderms play an important role in these communities and habitats.The present study tries to inventory and review asteroid fauna collected during the INDEMARES project in the ACS and compare the new findings with previous studies Official Spanish Checklist (IEEM: Inventario Espan tilde ol de Especies Marinas, 2017, 2020) to update our knowledge on the diversity and distribution of the asteroid's species.During the surveys carried out within the project LIFE + INDEMARES-Avile acute accent s Canyon System (2010-2012) a total of 445 specimens, belonging to 25 Asteroids species, were collected from 36 stations in a depth range between 266 and 1476 m. The most frequent species were Nymphaster arenatus (Perrier, 1881) (30.55%) and Henricia caudani (Koehler, 1895) (25%). After public datasets, two species should be considered as new records for Spanish waters: Radiaster tizardi (Sladen, 1882) and Henricia sexradiata (Perrier, 1881), and 4 species expand their bathymetric range: Novodinia pandina (Sladen, 1889), H. caudani, H. sexradiata (Perrier, 1881) and Myxaster perrieri Koehler, 1895.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available