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Biodiversity and the biogeographic relationships of the Amphipoda: Gammaridea on the French coastline

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 May 2004

Jean-Claude Dauvin
Affiliation:
Station Marine de Wimereux, UMR 8013 CNRS ELICO, Université Lille1, BP 80, F-62930 Wimereux, France
Denise Bellan-Santini
Affiliation:
Station Marine d'Endoume, UMR CNRS DIMAR, Université de la Méditerranée, rue de la Batterie des Lions, F-13007 Marseille Cedex, France

Abstract

A recent inventory of the benthic Gammaridea: Amphipoda species on the French continental coastline catalogued 495 species. An analysis of the biodiversity and the biogeographic relationships that exist between the French Amphipoda: Gammaridea, living on the coastline that extends along 10° latitude range in the temperate region between 41° and 51° North and the other gammaridean faunas living in the north-eastern Atlantic has drawn the pattern of diversity in this marine invertebrate group on a large biogeographical scale. Gammaridean amphipods exhibit a latitudinal gradient over the total number of species, including the continental shelf species and the bathyal species. There are four main fauna groups, which correspond to the biogeographical zones of the north-eastern Atlantic: (1) a cold arctic and cool-temperate Svalbard and Norwegian coastal fauna; (2) a cool-temperate boreal and Boreal–Lusitanian United Kingdom, Irish and English Channel shallow fauna; (3) a warm-temperate Lusitanian Bay of Biscay and subtropical central Atlantic fauna; and (4) a subtropical Mediterranean fauna. The French fauna appears particularly rich, presenting 44% of the 1119 species recorded in the north-eastern Atlantic along the 50° latitude range (30°N–80°N).  

This is obviously due to France's intermediate latitudinal location within the Lusitanian temperate biogeographical zone, which produces a biogeographical cross between the boreal fauna in the north and the warm temperate and sub-tropical fauna in the south.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2004 Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom

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