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Diversity and biogeography of testate amoebae

Auteur(s)
Smith, Humphrey Graham
Bobrov, Anatoly
Lara, Enrique 
Institut de biologie 
Date de parution
2008
In
Journal of Experimental Botany, Springer, 2008/17/2/329-343
Mots-clés
  • Biogeography
  • Cosmopolitanism
  • Diversity
  • Ecology
  • Endemism
  • Flagship species
  • Fossil testates
  • Testate amoebae
  • Biogeography

  • Cosmopolitanism

  • Diversity

  • Ecology

  • Endemism

  • Flagship species

  • Fossil testates

  • Testate amoebae

Résumé
Testate amoebae are amoeboid protists inhabiting a test (shell). They occur globally in soils, wetlands and freshwater, especially peats and mosses. They are of ancient origin, dating from at least the Mesozoic, with possible ancestors as old as the Neoproterozoic. Approximately 2,000 taxa have been described—a number which could easily rise to 4,000 with comprehensive recording. Whilst many protists appear to be cosmopolitan as morphospecies, some of the larger testate species (exceeding 100 μm) have long been considered, controversially, to be geographically restricted. Definitive conclusions have often been confounded by gaps in distributional data and misidentification. Recent increases in recording from previously little known regions, and the rise of molecular taxonomy, have started to resolve outstanding issues—processes still far from complete. Accordingly, biogeographical studies have concentrated on “flagship” species—those which can be identified with certainty and are sufficiently recorded to determine their ecological ranges. <i>Apodera vas</i> (Certes) has been proved to be largely restricted to the Gondwanaland continents and sub-Antarctic islands, but absent from the Holartic despite the availability of much suitable habitat. An early analysis postulated a Mesozoic origin of the species and a distribution influenced by continental drift. Recent molecular evidence could imply a later origin. Either way, its current distribution is clearly influenced by the pattern of global wind currents and lack of lowland tropical habitat. By contrast a “Gondwana-tropical” group of species appears to be restricted to latitudes unaffected by glaciation. Instances of local endemism, such as restriction to a single island, are also known, which await molecular evidence for substantiation.
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/14144
_
10.1007/s10531-007-9260-9
Type de publication
journal article
Dossier(s) à télécharger
 main article: Smith_Humphrey_Graham_-_Diversity_and_biogeography_of_testate_20100319.pdf (525.22 KB)
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