Browsing by Author "Brown, Judith"
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- Diversity of Saint Helena Island and zoogeography of zoantharians in the Atlantic Ocean: jigsaw falling into placePublication . Santos, Maria E. A.; Wirtz, Peter; Montenegro, Javier; Kise, Hiroki; Lopez, Cataixa; Brown, Judith; Reimer, James DavisDiversity surveys in isolated sites, such as oceanic islands, provide biogeographic data that can improve our analyses and knowledge of evolutionary processes in the oceans. Zoantharians (Cnidaria: Anthozoa) are common and widespread components of shallow-water reefs, but distributional analyses are scarce for this group. In this study, we collected Zoantharia specimens from around Saint Helena Island (STH) in the mid-Atlantic and identified species using external morphology and molecular data. Moreover, we compiled and analysed the most comprehensive distributional data for zoantharian species in the subtropical and tropical Atlantic Ocean to date. Our results show eight zoantharian species in STH, which includes seven new records for STH waters. Furthermore, all families and genera of the suborder Brachycnemina recorded are widespread in the Atlantic Ocean, including at least four amphi-Atlantic species. The Caribbean is the richness centre in the Atlantic Ocean for zoantharian species, a pattern similar to that observed for many other subtropical/tropical marine taxa. However, Zoantharia may have a lower endemism rate in some areas than other common reef animals, for example zooxanthellate scleractinian corals and reef fishes. Moreover, zoantharian species have a more extensive distribution than close-related taxa such as zooxanthellate scleractinian corals and hydrocorals in the Atlantic Ocean.
- Diving into the vertical dimension of elasmobranch movement ecologyPublication . Andrzejaczek, Samantha; Lucas, Tim C. D.; Goodman, Maurice C.; Hussey, Nigel E.; Armstrong, Amelia J.; Carlisle, Aaron; Coffey, Daniel M.; Gleiss, Adrian C.; Huveneers, Charlie; Jacoby, David M. P.; Meekan, Mark G.; Daly, Ryan; Dewar, Heidi; Doherty, Philip D.; McAllister, Jaime D.; Domingo, Andrés; Dove, Alistair D. M.; Drew, Michael; Dudgeon, Christine L.; Duffy, Clinton A. J.; Elliott, Riley G.; Papastamtiou, Yannis P.; Ellis, Jim R.; Erdmann, Mark V.; Farrugia, Thomas J.; Ferreira, Luciana C.; McCully Phillips, Sophy R.; Ferretti, Francesco; Filmalter, John D.; Finucci, Brittany; Fischer, Chris; Fitzpatrick, Richard; Patterson, Toby A.; Forget, Fabien; Forsberg, Kerstin; Francis, Malcolm P.; Franks, Bryan R.; Gallagher, Austin J.; McGregor, Frazer; Galvan-Magana, Felipe; García, Mirta L.; Gaston, Troy F.; Gillanders, Bronwyn M.; Pierce, Simon J.; Gollock, Matthew J.; Green, Jonathan R.; Green, Sofia; Griffiths, Christopher A.; Hammerschlag, Neil; Hasan, Abdi; McMillan, Matthew N.; Hawkes, Lucy A.; Hazin, Fabio; Heard, Matthew; Peel, Lauren R.; Hearn, Alex; Hedges, Kevin J.; Henderson, Suzanne M.; Holdsworth, John; Holland, Kim N.; Howey, Lucy A.; Hueter, Robert E.; McNaughton, Lianne M.; Humphries, Nicholas E.; Hutchinson, Melanie; Queiroz, Nuno; Jaine, Fabrice R. A.; Jorgensen, Salvador J.; Kanive, Paul E.; Labaja, Jessica; Lana, Fernanda O.; Lassauce, Hugo; Lipscombe, Rebecca S.; Llewellyn, Fiona; Mendonça, Sibele A.; Macena, Bruno C. L.; Radford, Craig A.; Meyer, Carl G.; Meyers, Megan; Mohan, John A.; Mourier, Johann; Montgomery, John C.; Mucientes, Gonzalo; Musyl, Michael K.; Nasby-Lucas, Nicole; Natanson, Lisa J.; O’Sullivan, John B.; Richardson, Andy J.; Oliveira, Paulo; Richardson, Anthony J.; Righton, David; Rohner, Christoph A.; Brooks, Edward J.; Royer, Mark A.; Saunders, Ryan A.; Schaber, Matthias; Schallert, Robert J.; Abrantes, Kátya; Scholl, Michael C.; Seitz, Andrew C.; Semmens, Jayson M.; Setyawan, Edy; Shea, Brendan D.; Brown, Judith; Shidqi, Rafid A.; Shillinger, George L.; Shipley, Oliver N.; Shivji, Mahmood S.; Sianipar, Abraham B.; Afonso, André S.; Silva, Joana F.; Sims, David W.; Skomal, Gregory B.; Sousa, Lara L.; Burke, Patrick J.; Southall, Emily J.; Spaet, Julia L. Y.; Stehfest, Kilian M.; Stevens, Guy; Stewart, Joshua D.; Sulikowski, James A.; Ajemian, Matthew J.; Syakurachman, Ismail; Thorrold, Simon R.; Thums, Michele; Butcher, Paul; Tickler, David; Tolloti, Mariana T.; Townsend, Kathy A.; Travassos, Paulo; Tyminski, John P.; Vaudo, Jeremy J.; Veras, Drausio; Anderson, Brooke N.; Wantiez, Laurent; Weber, Sam B.; Castleton, Michael; Wells, R.J. David; Weng, Kevin C.; Wetherbee, Bradley M.; Williamson, Jane E.; Witt, Matthew J.; Wright, Serena; Zilliacus, Kelly; Block, Barbara A.; Anderson, Scot D.; Curnick, David J.; Chapple, Taylor K.; Araujo, Gonzalo; Armstrong, Asia O.; Bach, Pascal; Barnett, Adam; Bennett, Mike B.; Bezerra, Natalia A.; Bonfil, Ramon; Boustany, Andre M.; Bowlby, Heather D.; Branco, Ilka; Chateau, Olivier; Braun, Camrin D.; Clarke, Maurice; Coelho, Rui; Cortes, Enric; Mambrasar, Ronald; Couturier, Lydie I. E.; Cowley, Paul D.; Croll, Donald A.; Cuevas, Juan M.; Curtis, Tobey H.; Dagorn, Laurent; Dale, Jonathan J.Knowledge of the three-dimensional movement patterns of elasmobranchs is vital to understand their ecological roles and exposure to anthropogenic pressures. To date, comparative studies among species at global scales have mostly focused on horizontal movements. Our study addresses the knowledge gap of vertical movements by compiling the first global synthesis of vertical habitat use by elasmobranchs from data obtained by deployment of 989 biotelemetry tags on 38 elasmobranch species. Elasmobranchs displayed high intra- and interspecific variability in vertical movement patterns. Substantial vertical overlap was observed for many epipelagic elasmobranchs, indicating an increased likelihood to display spatial overlap, biologically interact, and share similar risk to anthropogenic threats that vary on a vertical gradient. We highlight the critical next steps toward incorporating vertical movement into global management and monitoring strategies for elasmobranchs, emphasizing the need to address geographic and taxonomic biases in deployments and to concurrently consider both horizontal and vertical movements.
- On a collection of caridean shrimps (Decapoda, Caridea) from St. Helena, south-central Atlantic, with further records from Ascension IslandPublication . De Grave, Sammy; Brown, Judith; Wirtz, Peter; Anker, ArthurWe report on a recent collection of caridean shrimps from St. Helena in the south-central Atlantic Ocean, raising the total number of species known from the island to 24. Six species are newly recorded for the area, with no endemic species present. Additional three species are recorded from Ascension Island. A close biogeographical connection between the caridean faunas of St. Helena and Ascension Island is evident.
- The fishes of St Helena Island, central Atlantic Ocean-new records and an annotated check-listPublication . Brown, Judith; Beard, Annalea; Clingham, Elizabeth; Fricke, Ronald; Henry, Leeann; Wirtz, PeterA check-list of the fishes of St Helena Island is presented. The following species are recorded for the first time from St. Helena Island: Rhincodon typus, Mobula tarapacana, Muraena melanotis, Caranx latus, Seriola rivoliana, Balistes capriscus, Lutjanus jocu, Centropyge aurantonotus, Acanthurus coeruleus, Lepidocybium flavobrunneum, Tetrapturus pfluegeri, Coelorinchus geronimo, Pentaceros richardsoni, Gephyroberyx darwinii, Brotula cf multibarbata, Poromitra crassiceps, Echiostoma barbatum, Malacosteus niger, Pachystomias microdon. Including these nineteen new records there are 189 fish species currently known from St Helena. Three of them appear to be undescribed. Eight species and two subspecies are currently considered endemic to St. Helena Island.
- The polychaete Lygdamis wirtzi at Ascension and St Helena Islands (Annelida, Polychaeta, Sabellariidae)Publication . Brown, Judith; Nishi, Eijiroh; Wirtz, PeterThe genus Lygdamis (Family Sabellariidae) currently contains 20 species (Hutchings et al. 2012; Capa et al. 2015). Lygdamis wirtzi Nishi and Núñez, 1999, was originally described from Madeira Island and the Canary Islands and has also been found at the Cape Verde Islands and at São Tomé Island (Wirtz 2001, 2003). New observations of this species were made while SCUBA diving at the coasts of Ascension and St Helena Islands in 2013 and 2015.
