Interstitial Annelida

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Interstitial Annelida. / Worsaae, Katrine; Kerbl, Alexandra; Di Domenico, Maikon; Gonzalez, Brett C.; Bekkouche, Nicolas; Martínez, Alejandro.

In: Diversity, Vol. 13, No. 2, 77, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Worsaae, K, Kerbl, A, Di Domenico, M, Gonzalez, BC, Bekkouche, N & Martínez, A 2021, 'Interstitial Annelida', Diversity, vol. 13, no. 2, 77. https://doi.org/10.3390/d13020077

APA

Worsaae, K., Kerbl, A., Di Domenico, M., Gonzalez, B. C., Bekkouche, N., & Martínez, A. (2021). Interstitial Annelida. Diversity, 13(2), [77]. https://doi.org/10.3390/d13020077

Vancouver

Worsaae K, Kerbl A, Di Domenico M, Gonzalez BC, Bekkouche N, Martínez A. Interstitial Annelida. Diversity. 2021;13(2). 77. https://doi.org/10.3390/d13020077

Author

Worsaae, Katrine ; Kerbl, Alexandra ; Di Domenico, Maikon ; Gonzalez, Brett C. ; Bekkouche, Nicolas ; Martínez, Alejandro. / Interstitial Annelida. In: Diversity. 2021 ; Vol. 13, No. 2.

Bibtex

@article{80efa17837314a0da53af6fbffb4247d,
title = "Interstitial Annelida",
abstract = "Members of the following marine annelid families are found almost exclusively in the interstitial environment and are highly adapted to move between sand grains, relying mostly on ciliary locomotion: Apharyngtidae n. fam., Dinophilidae, Diurodrilidae, Nerillidae, Lobatocerebridae, Parergodrilidae, Polygordiidae, Protodrilidae, Protodriloididae, Psammodrilidae and Saccocirridae. This article provides a review of the evolution, systematics, and diversity of these families, with the exception of Parergodrilidae, which was detailed in the review of Orbiniida by Meca, Zhadan, and Struck within this Special Issue. While several of the discussed families have previously only been known by a few described species, recent surveys inclusive of molecular approaches have increased the number of species, showing that all of the aforementioned families exhibit a high degree of cryptic diversity shadowed by a limited number of recognizable morphological traits. This is a challenge for studies of the evolution, taxonomy, and diversity of interstitial families as well as for their identification and incorporation into ecological surveys. By compiling a comprehensive and updated review on these interstitial families, we hope to promote new studies on their intriguing evolutionary histories, adapted life forms and high and hidden diversity.",
keywords = "Annelids, Identification, Meiobenthos, Systematics",
author = "Katrine Worsaae and Alexandra Kerbl and {Di Domenico}, Maikon and Gonzalez, {Brett C.} and Nicolas Bekkouche and Alejandro Mart{\'i}nez",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.3390/d13020077",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
journal = "Diversity",
issn = "1424-2818",
publisher = "M D P I AG",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Interstitial Annelida

AU - Worsaae, Katrine

AU - Kerbl, Alexandra

AU - Di Domenico, Maikon

AU - Gonzalez, Brett C.

AU - Bekkouche, Nicolas

AU - Martínez, Alejandro

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Members of the following marine annelid families are found almost exclusively in the interstitial environment and are highly adapted to move between sand grains, relying mostly on ciliary locomotion: Apharyngtidae n. fam., Dinophilidae, Diurodrilidae, Nerillidae, Lobatocerebridae, Parergodrilidae, Polygordiidae, Protodrilidae, Protodriloididae, Psammodrilidae and Saccocirridae. This article provides a review of the evolution, systematics, and diversity of these families, with the exception of Parergodrilidae, which was detailed in the review of Orbiniida by Meca, Zhadan, and Struck within this Special Issue. While several of the discussed families have previously only been known by a few described species, recent surveys inclusive of molecular approaches have increased the number of species, showing that all of the aforementioned families exhibit a high degree of cryptic diversity shadowed by a limited number of recognizable morphological traits. This is a challenge for studies of the evolution, taxonomy, and diversity of interstitial families as well as for their identification and incorporation into ecological surveys. By compiling a comprehensive and updated review on these interstitial families, we hope to promote new studies on their intriguing evolutionary histories, adapted life forms and high and hidden diversity.

AB - Members of the following marine annelid families are found almost exclusively in the interstitial environment and are highly adapted to move between sand grains, relying mostly on ciliary locomotion: Apharyngtidae n. fam., Dinophilidae, Diurodrilidae, Nerillidae, Lobatocerebridae, Parergodrilidae, Polygordiidae, Protodrilidae, Protodriloididae, Psammodrilidae and Saccocirridae. This article provides a review of the evolution, systematics, and diversity of these families, with the exception of Parergodrilidae, which was detailed in the review of Orbiniida by Meca, Zhadan, and Struck within this Special Issue. While several of the discussed families have previously only been known by a few described species, recent surveys inclusive of molecular approaches have increased the number of species, showing that all of the aforementioned families exhibit a high degree of cryptic diversity shadowed by a limited number of recognizable morphological traits. This is a challenge for studies of the evolution, taxonomy, and diversity of interstitial families as well as for their identification and incorporation into ecological surveys. By compiling a comprehensive and updated review on these interstitial families, we hope to promote new studies on their intriguing evolutionary histories, adapted life forms and high and hidden diversity.

KW - Annelids

KW - Identification

KW - Meiobenthos

KW - Systematics

U2 - 10.3390/d13020077

DO - 10.3390/d13020077

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85101280085

VL - 13

JO - Diversity

JF - Diversity

SN - 1424-2818

IS - 2

M1 - 77

ER -

ID: 258825126