An Ocean Away: Two New Encrusting Anemones Found in Unexpected Locations
ScienceDaily (Nov. 29, 2012)
— As a result of field work by associate professor James Davis Reimer
and two graduate students from the University of the Ryukyus in Okinawa,
Japan has found two new species of encrusting anemones, or colonial
zoanthids, in unexpected locations. The species belong to the genus Neozoanthus,
which was previously known only from a single species in the Indian
Ocean. Surprisingly, the new species were found in the Pacific Ocean, in
southern Japan and on the Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
The study was published in the open access journal ZooKeys.
The only previous species of Neozoanthus was described in
1972 from Madagascar, and subsequently it was not seen for almost 40
years, until recent research had ascertained that new Pacific specimens
likely belonged to Neozoanthus (Reimer et al. 2011, in the journal Marine Biology). The new study formally describes these new specimens as two species.
The members of this genus are small, with individual polyps no more
than 6 mm in diameter, and have red, gray, blue or purple oral discs;
all inhabit coral reef ecosystems in areas with strong currents and some
siltation. Both new species and the species from Madagascar contain
symbiotic, photosynthetic, single-celled algae that can provide them
with energy from the sun.
"We were very surprised in 2008 to discover Neozoanthus in
the Pacific, in Japan," said Reimer, "and initially thought that perhaps
these were very rare." However, further research in southern Japan by
graduate students Yuka Irei and Takuma Fujii, co-authors on the new
paper, revealed that the Japanese species was locally common. A further
surprise came during the Census of Marine Life's Census of Coral Reef
Ecosystems (CReefs) surveys on the Great Barrier Reef in 2009 and 2010,
when similar encrusting anemones were found thousands of kilometers away
from both Madagascar and Japan.
"These findings can be explained by the fact that there are very few
zoanthid researchers in the world. These species are not particularly
hard to find, but there was no one looking for them," Reimer added.
"This research demonstrates how little we know about marine
biodiversity, even in regions relatively well researched."
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