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Eukarya biodiversity in the Thala Hills, East Antarctica

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 October 2021

Dzmitry A. Lukashanets*
Affiliation:
Klaipėda University, Marine Research Institute, Universiteto 17, 92294Klaipėda, Lithuania Polish Academy of Sciences, Institute of Oceanology, Powstańców Warszawy 55, 81-712, Sopot, Poland
Peter Convey
Affiliation:
British Antarctic Survey, NERC, High Cross, Madingley Road, CambridgeCB3 0ET, UK University of Johannesburg, Department of Zoology, PO Box 524, Auckland Park2006, South Africa
Oleg I. Borodin
Affiliation:
National Academy of Sciences of Belarus, Scientific and Practical Center for Bioresources, Akademicheskaya 27, 220072Minsk, Belarus
Vladislav Ye. Miamin
Affiliation:
National Academy of Sciences of Belarus, Scientific and Practical Center for Bioresources, Akademicheskaya 27, 220072Minsk, Belarus Belarusian State University, Biology Faculty, Nezavisimosti Ave 4, 220030Minsk, Belarus
Yury H. Hihiniak
Affiliation:
National Academy of Sciences of Belarus, Scientific and Practical Center for Bioresources, Akademicheskaya 27, 220072Minsk, Belarus
Alexey A. Gaydashov
Affiliation:
National Academy of Sciences of Belarus, Republican Center for Polar Research, Komsomolskaya 16, 220030Minsk, Belarus
Aleksander P. Yatsyna
Affiliation:
Belarusian State University, Biology Faculty, Nezavisimosti Ave 4, 220030Minsk, Belarus National Academy of Sciences of Belarus, Institute of Experimental Botany, Akademicheskaya 27, 220072Minsk, Belarus
Vasil V. Vezhnavets
Affiliation:
National Academy of Sciences of Belarus, Scientific and Practical Center for Bioresources, Akademicheskaya 27, 220072Minsk, Belarus
Natallia N. Maysak
Affiliation:
National Academy of Sciences of Belarus, Scientific and Practical Center for Bioresources, Akademicheskaya 27, 220072Minsk, Belarus
Tatyana V. Shendrik
Affiliation:
National Academy of Sciences of Belarus, Scientific and Practical Center for Bioresources, Akademicheskaya 27, 220072Minsk, Belarus

Abstract

Knowledge of the biodiversity of the Thala Hills oasis (Enderby Land, East Antarctica) is very limited. Here, we integrate all information available since 1962, when the Russian ‘Molodyozhnaya’ station was established in the western part of the oasis. The published data on local eukaryote diversity (lichens, embryophytes, metazoans) include records of 90 species. Since 2008, Belarusian Antarctic Expedition researchers have worked in the eastern part of the oasis, accessible from the Belarusian station ‘Vechernyaya Mount'. This research revealed 95 species, including 44 species not recorded in the earlier published literature. The level of available information is uneven across major taxa. Lichens are the better-known group, with 51 species recorded in total, including 13 species recently recorded for the first time in the oasis. New records were also obtained for rotifers. Thala Hills biodiversity is consistent with wider patterns of Antarctic biogeography, with a high proportion of regionally endemic species (especially metazoans), the occurrence of both endemic and bipolar species of lichens and generally low numbers of cosmopolitan species (largely limited to aquatic rotifers, with the caveat that up-to-date taxonomic studies are required). The lack of data on marine macrobenthos, soil nematodes and terrestrial rotifers emphasizes the need for studies focusing on these groups.

Type
Biological Sciences
Copyright
Copyright © Antarctic Science Ltd 2021

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