Sosa Senckenberg Ocean Species Alliance, Brandt Angelika, Chen Chong, Engel Laura, Esquete Patricia, Horton Tammy, Jażdżewska Anna M, Johannsen Nele, Kaiser Stefanie, Kihara Terue C, Knauber Henry, Kniesz Katharina, Landschoff Jannes, Lörz Anne-Nina, Machado Fabrizio M, Martínez-Muñoz Carlos A, Riehl Torben, Serpell-Stevens Amanda, Sigwart Julia D, Tandberg Anne Helene S, Tato Ramiro, Tsuda Miwako, Vončina Katarzyna, Watanabe Hiromi K, Wenz Christian, Williams Jason D
Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum Frankfurt, Department of Marine Zoology, Senckenberganlage 25, 60325, Frankfurt am Main, Germany Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum Frankfurt, Department of Marine Zoology, Senckenberganlage 25, 60325 Frankfurt am Main Germany.
Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Frankfurt, Department of Biological Sciences, Institute of Ecology, Evolution and Diversity, Max-von-Laue-Str. 13, 60438, Frankfurt am Main, Germany Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Frankfurt, Department of Biological Sciences, Institute of Ecology, Evolution and Diversity, Max-von-Laue-Str. 13, 60438 Frankfurt am Main Germany.
Biodivers Data J. 2024 Aug 6;12:e128431. doi: 10.3897/BDJ.12.e128431. eCollection 2024.
Discoveries of new species often depend on one or a few specimens, leading to delays as researchers wait for additional context, sometimes for decades. There is currently little professional incentive for a single expert to publish a stand-alone species description. Additionally, while many journals accept taxonomic descriptions, even specialist journals expect insights beyond the descriptive work itself. The combination of these factors exacerbates the issue that only a small fraction of marine species are known and new discoveries are described at a slow pace, while they face increasing threats from accelerating global change. To tackle this challenge, this first compilation of (OSD) presents a new collaborative framework to accelerate the description and naming of marine invertebrate taxa that can be extended across all phyla. Through a mode of publication that can be speedy, taxonomy-focused and generate higher citation rates, OSD aims to create an attractive home for single species descriptions. This (SOSA) approach emphasises thorough, but compact species descriptions and diagnoses, with supporting illustrations and with molecular data when available. Even basic species descriptions carry key data for distributions and ecological interactions (e.g., host-parasite relationships) besides universally valid species names; these are essential for downstream uses, such as conservation assessments and communicating biodiversity to the broader public.
This paper presents thirteen marine invertebrate taxa, comprising one new genus, eleven new species and one re-description and reinstatement, covering wide taxonomic, geographic, bathymetric and ecological ranges. The taxa addressed herein span three phyla (Mollusca, Arthropoda, Echinodermata), five classes, eight orders and twelve families. Apart from the new genus, an updated generic diagnosis is provided for four other genera. The newly-described species of the phylum Mollusca are Vončina, (Polyplacophora, Mopaliidae), Chen, Watanabe & Tsuda, (Gastropoda, Lepetodrilidae), Chen, Watanabe & Tsuda, (Gastropoda, Phenacolepadidae) and Machado & Sigwart, (Bivalvia, Lyonsiellidae). The new taxa of the phylum Arthropoda are all members of the subphylum Crustacea: Lörz & Engel, (Amphipoda, Lepechinellidae), Tandberg & Jażdżewska, (Amphipoda, Maeridae), Williams & Landschoff, (Isopoda, Bopyridae), Wenz, Knauber & Riehl, (Isopoda, Haploniscidae), Jonannsen, Riehl & Brandt, (Isopoda, Macrostylidae), Kaiser, Kniesz & Kihara, (Isopoda, Nannoniscidae) and Esquete & Tato, (Tanaidacea, Apseudidae). In the phylum Echinodermata, the reinstated species is E. Perrier, 1886 (Holothuroidea, Psychropotidae).The study areas span the North and Central Atlantic Ocean, the Indian Ocean and the North, East and West Pacific Ocean and depths from 5.2 m to 7081 m. Specimens of eleven free-living and one parasite species were collected from habitats ranging from an estuary to deep-sea trenches. The species were illustrated with photographs, line drawings, micro-computed tomography, confocal laser scanning microscopy and scanning electron microscopy images. Molecular data are included for nine species and four species include a molecular diagnosis in addition to their morphological diagnosis.The five new geographic and bathymetric distribution records comprise Lörz & Engel, , Tandberg & Jażdżewska, , Williams & Landschoff, , Kaiser, Kniesz & Kihara, and E. Perrier, 1886, with the novelty spanning from the species to the family level. The new parasite record is Williams & Landschoff, , found in association with the hermit crab Landschoff & Komai, 2018.
新物种的发现往往依赖于一个或几个标本,这导致研究人员等待更多背景信息时出现延误,有时长达数十年。目前,对于单个专家发表独立的物种描述几乎没有专业激励。此外,虽然许多期刊接受分类描述,但即使是专业期刊也期望除描述工作本身之外有更多见解。这些因素共同加剧了一个问题,即只有一小部分海洋物种为人们所知,新发现的描述速度缓慢,而它们正面临全球变化加速带来的日益严重的威胁。为应对这一挑战,《海洋物种描述》(OSD)的首次汇编提出了一个新的合作框架,以加速海洋无脊椎动物分类群的描述和命名,该框架可扩展到所有门类。通过一种快速、以分类学为重点且能产生更高引用率的出版模式,OSD旨在为单个物种描述创造一个有吸引力的平台。这种“单物种分析”(SOSA)方法强调全面但简洁的物种描述和诊断,并配有支持性插图以及可用时的分子数据。即使是基本的物种描述,除了通用有效的物种名称外,还承载着分布和生态相互作用(如宿主 - 寄生虫关系)的关键数据;这些对于下游用途至关重要,例如保护评估以及向更广泛公众传播生物多样性。
本文介绍了13个海洋无脊椎动物分类群,包括1个新属、11个新物种以及1个重新描述和恢复的物种,涵盖广泛的分类学、地理、深度和生态范围。本文涉及的分类群跨越三个门(软体动物门、节肢动物门、棘皮动物门)、五个纲、八个目和十二个科。除新属外,还为其他四个属提供了更新的属诊断。软体动物门新描述的物种有Vončina、Chen、Watanabe & Tsuda、Chen、Watanabe & Tsuda以及Machado & Sigwart。节肢动物门的新分类群均为甲壳亚门成员:Lörz & Engel、Tandberg & Jażdżewska、Williams & Landschoff、Wenz、Knauber & Riehl、Jonannsen、Riehl & Brandt、Kaiser、Kniesz & Kihara以及Esquete & Tato。在棘皮动物门中,恢复的物种是E. Perrier,1886年(海参纲,Psychropotidae)。研究区域跨越北大西洋和中大西洋、印度洋以及北太平洋、东太平洋和西太平洋,深度从5.2米到7081米。从河口到深海海沟等栖息地收集了11个自由生活物种和1个寄生物种的标本。通过照片、线条图、微计算机断层扫描、共聚焦激光扫描显微镜和扫描电子显微镜图像对这些物种进行了说明。九个物种包含分子数据,四个物种除形态诊断外还包括分子诊断。五个新的地理和深度分布记录包括Lörz & Engel、Tandberg & Jażdżewska、Williams & Landschoff、Kaiser、Kniesz & Kihara以及E. Perrier,1886年,新发现范围从物种到科级。新的寄生虫记录是Williams & Landschoff,与寄居蟹Landschoff & Komai,2018年相关发现。