Introduction
The Fernando de Noronha Archipelago, along with Atol das Rocas, has been considered a World Heritage Site as part of the Brazilian Atlantic islands since 2001 (Unesco, 2001). It is an oceanic archipelago located 545 kilometres away from the Brazilian coast, and situated on top of volcanic peaks from an underwater mountain chain, whose consolidated base is more than four thousands metres deep (Unesco, 2001; Castro, Reference Castro2010; Serafini et al., Reference Serafini, De França and Andriguetto-Filho2010). The archipelago is represented by 21 volcanic islands, forming numerous beaches, coves, and coral reefs, among other marine microhabitats (Gillespie, Reference Gillespie2001; Serafini et al., Reference Serafini, De França and Andriguetto-Filho2010; Gove et al., Reference Gove, McManus, Neuheimer, Polovina, Drazen, Smith, Merrifield, Friedlander, Ehses, Young, Dillon and Williams2016).
The largest island of the archipelago, which shares the name of Fernando de Noronha and is more than 17 km in length, houses over 3000 people (IBGE, 2023), along with an increasing number of tourists throughout the year (Pereira et al., Reference Pereira, Silva, Cândido and Oliveira2024). Due to this fluctuating population, the main island deserves special attention, as the local environment may suffer direct anthropogenic and social disturbances (Pereira et al., Reference Pereira, Silva, Cândido and Oliveira2024).
Fernando de Noronha is one of the most representative sites of Brazilian biodiversity, from the tiniest invertebrates to the largest vertebrates (IBAMA, 2005; Fioravanso and Nicolodi, Reference Fioravanso and Nicolodi2021). The peculiar aspects of its fauna, flora, and ecosystems, set the archipelago apart from other environments on Earth (Unesco, 2001). As a set of oceanic islands with a large quantity of endemic fauna, it is considered an ecological hotspot of biodiversity (Gillespie, Reference Gillespie2001; Gove et al., Reference Gove, McManus, Neuheimer, Polovina, Drazen, Smith, Merrifield, Friedlander, Ehses, Young, Dillon and Williams2016). The archipelago is a no-take marine region under two different Brazilian conservation legislations: it is an ‘Área de Proteção Ambiental (APA)’ (i.e. Environmental Protection Area) and a ‘Parque Nacional Marinho (PARNAMAR)’ (i.e. National Marine Park) (Brasil, 1988; Fioravanso and Nicolodi, Reference Fioravanso and Nicolodi2021).
Since the end of the XIX century, efforts have been made to record the diversity of the decapod crustacean fauna (crabs, shrimps, lobsters, among others) inhabiting the archipelago (Pocock, Reference Pocock1890; Fausto-Filho, Reference Fausto-Filho1974; Coelho et al., Reference Coelho, Santos, Torres, Monteiro, Almeida, Tabarelli and Silva2002, Reference Coelho, Almeida, Souza-Filho, Bezerra and Giraldes2006; Coelho-Filho, Reference Coelho-Filho2006). More recently, two major checklists concerning this group have been published, recording more than 130 species in over 40 families, showing the importance of the region for Brazilian crustacean fauna (Alves et al., Reference Alves, Ramos-Porto and Viana2008; Souza et al., Reference Souza, Schwamborn, Barreto, Farias, Fernandes and Coelho2011).
Within the decapod species of the archipelago, the shrimps of the infraorder Caridea have great representativeness, with 41 records distributed into seven families. Most of this diversity is concentrated on species of the family Alpheidae Rafinesque, 1815, with almost half (21) of all caridean shrimps reported, followed by Palaemonidae Rafinesque, 1815, with eight species (Alves et al., Reference Alves, Ramos-Porto and Viana2008). These records are not surprising, since Alpheidae is one of the richest families in the infraorder, and is ubiquitous in the shallow-waters of tropical marine and estuarine areas (Almeida et al., Reference Almeida, Terossi, Buranelli, Castilho, Costa, Zara and Mantelatto2018; Bauer, Reference Bauer2023).
This study aims to provide five new records of alpheids for Fernando de Noronha, updating the number of species recorded for the region. It also provides molecular data alongside geographical distribution, photographs, ecological notes, and species remarks for the taxa sampled.
Material and methods
Two expeditions were conducted to the Fernando de Noronha Archipelago in June/July 2019 and 2022, with 10 days of sampling effort in each expedition. The specimens analysed here were captured by active search during low tide (day and night) and SCUBA diving (day) in six sampled sites (Table 1, Figures 1, 2). For the active search, specimens were sampled manually from under rocks, rubble, sand crevices, and inside biogenic substrates. Sample efforts were determined by the duration of the low tide and how long the substrate remained exposed. For SCUBA diving, the collection was performed by four divers, totalling 4 h of catching effort per expedition. The map of the Fernando de Noronha Archipelago with all sampled locations (Figure 1) was created using the QGIS software (Geographic Information System; http://www.qgis.org).
The criteria used to search for shrimps in the subtidal zone was based on knowledge of the lifestyle of the target species, as alpheids are often found on hard bottoms, seeking sheltered places and in association with other invertebrates. All specimens sampled were immediately stored individually in plastic flasks to preserve the morphological integrity of the specimens.
All shrimps were photographed and fixed in 80% alcohol, to be transferred to the laboratory and identified according to the literature. The specimens were sexed based on the presence or absence of the appendix masculina on the endopod of the second pleopods, being designated as males or females, respectively (Bauer, Reference Bauer2023). Moreover, females were also identified by the presence of eggs attached to the pleopods and subsequently defined as ovigerous females. All specimens were deposited in the Coleção de Crustáceos do Departamento de Zoologia da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (DZ/UFRGS).
The ‘Ecological notes’ included in the results section provides habitat and ecological details for each species based on observations made during the collections. These are descriptions of the locations where the specimens were found, if symbiosis was observed, and substrate distribution along the sampling sites.
Obtaining genetic data (tissue DNA extraction, PCR amplification, PCR product cleanup, sequencing, and consensus sequence) was conducted following Soledade et al. (Reference Soledade, Terossi, Scioli, Mantelatto and Almeida2019). An ~500-bp region of the mitochondrial 16S gene and ~650-bp region of the barcode region of cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) gene were amplified using the primers (melting temperature of 46–48°C): 1472 (5′–AGATAGAAACCAACCTGG–3′) and 16SL2 (5′–TGCCTGTTTATCAAAAACAT–3′) (Crandall and Fitzpatrick, Reference Crandall and Fitzpatrick1996; Schubart et al., Reference Schubart, Cuesta and Felder2002) for 16S, and COH6 (5′-TADACTTCDGGRTGDCCAAARAAYCA-3′), COL6B2 (5′- ACAAATCATAAAGATATYGG-3′), COIAH2 m (5 ́- GACCRAAAAATCARAATAAATGTTG-3′) and COIAL2o (5 ́-ACGCAACGATGATTATTTTCTAC-3′) (Schubart and Huber, Reference Schubart and Huber2006; Mantelatto et al., Reference Mantelatto, Carvalho, Simões, Negri, Souza-Carvalho and Terossi2016) for COI.
Sequences were edited and the consensus sequences were obtained by using the BioEdit v7.0.9.0 software (Hall, Reference Hall1999). All consensus sequences were confirmed by using the application BLASTn available at the NCBI database (http://blast.ncbi.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/blast.cgi). A phylogram was generated for sequences of mitochondrial 16S gene based on the new sequences from Fernando de Noronha and the closest sequences according to BLASTn, which were downloaded from Genbank and included in the analysis. Also, a sequence of Leptalpheus Williams, 1965 retrieved from Genbank was used as an outgroup. Genbank sequence accession numbers were included in the phylogram (Figure 3) and cited in the text.
Sequence alignment was performed in MUSCLE (Multiple Sequence Comparison by Log-Expectation) (Edgar, Reference Edgar2004), available on the platform Cyberinfrastructure for Phylogenetic Research (CIPRES) (Miller et al., Reference Miller, Pfeiffer and Schwartz2010). The maximum likelihood analysis (ML) was conducted with RAxML 8.2.12 (Stamatakis, Reference Stamatakis2014) using the online version at CIPRES. ML was conducted with the default parameters for RAxML for the GTR model of evolution, using the option to automatically determine the number of bootstraps to be run in RAxML (Stamatakis et al., Reference Stamatakis, Hoover and Rougemont2008), thus, 950 bootstrap pseudo-replicates were run, and only confidence values >50% are reported.
Results and discussion
Family Alpheidae Rafinesque, 1815
Genus Alpheus Fabricius, 1798
Alpheus agilis Anker, Hurt and Knowlton, Reference Anker, Hurt and Knowlton2009
(Figure 4A, B)
Alpheus agilis Anker, Hurt and Knowlton, Reference Anker, Hurt and Knowlton2009: 12, Figs 4, 5F.
Material examined: 1 ovigerous female and 1 male, Praia do Porto de Santo Antônio, 1 July 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6961); 1 female, Praia do Porto de Santo Antônio, 3 July 2022, coll. A. Horch & K. Pasinatto (DZ/UFRGS #6962); 1 male, Praia do Porto de Santo Antônio, 3 July 2022, coll. A. Horch & K. Pasinatto (DZ/UFRGS #6965); 2 females and 4 males, Praia Caieiras, 28 June 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6959); 1 male, Praia da Pontinha, 27 June 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6957); 1 female, Praia da Pontinha, 28 June 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6958); 1 female and 6 males, Praia Sueste, 29 June 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6960); 1 specimen of unidentified sex, Praia Sueste, 29 June 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6963); 1 female, Praia Sueste, 29 June 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6964, genetic voucher).
Geographical distribution: Amphi-Atlantic. Eastern Atlantic – Cape Verde Archipelago and São Tomé & Príncipe. Western Atlantic – Brazil (Atol das Rocas, Fernando de Noronha and Trindade Island) (Anker et al., Reference Anker, Hurt and Knowlton2009, Reference Anker, Tavares and Mendonça2016; present study).
Ecological notes: In tide pools, mostly under rocks in the intertidal.
Remarks: Alpheus agilis was described to the Eastern Atlantic Ocean (São Tomé) and reported in Brazil (Atol das Rocas) by Anker et al. (Reference Anker, Hurt and Knowlton2009). The second record of the species in Brazil occurred in 2016, at Trindade Island (Anker et al., Reference Anker, Tavares and Mendonça2016). Now we record the species for the first time in Fernando de Noronha. So far, all Brazilian records have been made at oceanic islands. No information about the biological and ecological features of this species is provided in the literature.
Genetic data: Here we provide the first mitochondrial 16S sequence of the species (GenBank access PQ041197). In the phylogram (Figure 3), A. agilis from Fernando de Noronha was close to Alpheus bouvieri A. Milne-Edwards, 1878. This was expected, considering that both belong to the same species complex and are closely related on the phylogeny proposed by Anker et al. (Reference Anker, Hurt and Knowlton2009). Unfortunately, no COI sequence was obtained for this species.
Alpheus angulosus McClure, Reference McClure2002
(Figure 4C, D)
Alpheus angulosus McClure, Reference McClure2002: 368.
Material examined: 6 females (3 ovigerous) and 8 males, Praia do Porto de Santo Antônio, 1 July 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6975); 9 females (6 ovigerous) and 3 males, Praia do Porto de Santo Antônio, 3 July 2022, coll. A. Horch & K. Pasinatto (DZ/UFRGS #6976); 1 male, Praia do Porto de Santo Antônio, 3 July 2022, coll. A. Horch & K. Pasinatto (DZ/UFRGS #6977); 1 male, Praia Caieiras, 28 June 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6978); 4 females (2 ovigerous) and 1 male, Praia da Pontinha, 27 June 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6980); 1 male, Praia da Pontinha, 28 June 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6979); 6 females (4 ovigerous) and 7 males, Praia Sueste, 29 June 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6974, genetic voucher).
Geographical distribution: Western Atlantic – USA (North Carolina to Florida), Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea, French Guyana, Brazil (Atol das Rocas, Fernando de Noronha, Maranhão, Ceará, Paraíba, Pernambuco, Bahia, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Santa Catarina, Rio Grande do Sul) (Anker, Reference Anker2012; Tracey et al., Reference Tracey, Pereira, Hughes and Korey2013; Almeida et al., Reference Almeida, Terossi, Buranelli, Castilho, Costa, Zara and Mantelatto2018; Costa-Souza et al., Reference Costa-Souza, Souza and Almeida2019, Reference Costa-Souza, Souza and Almeida2022; Teles and Mantelatto, Reference Teles and Mantelatto2023; present study).
Ecological notes: In tide pools, mostly under rocks in the intertidal.
Remarks: Although the occurrence of A. angulosus in Fernando de Noronha has been registered by Anker (Reference Anker2012), the author did not provide any material examined from this region, nor does it provide a previous reference for the occurrence of the species there. In the present study, we confirmed the occurrence of A. angulosus in the archipelago.
Genetic data: The mitochondrial 16S sequence of A. angulosus from Fernando de Noronha (GenBank accession PQ041199) is almost identical to the sequences of A. angulosus from Florida (USA, near type locality) and Atol das Rocas (Brazil) (Figure 3), within the Alpheus armillatus H. Milne Edwards, 1837 species complex (see Anker, Reference Anker2012). The COI sequence of A. angulosus from Fernando de Noronha (GenBank accession PQ041234) is almost identical to a sequence of A. angulosus from Bahia (Brazil, GenBank accession KU312996).
Alpheus rudolphi Almeida and Anker, Reference Almeida and Anker2011
(Figure 4E, F)
Alpheus rudolphi Almeida and Anker, Reference Almeida and Anker2011: 3, Figs. 1–22.
Material examined: 1 male, Laje Dois Irmãos, 30 June 2022, coll. I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6948, genetic voucher); 1 female (parental with larvae), Laje Dois Irmãos, 30 June 2022, coll. I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6949).
Geographical distribution: Western Atlantic – Brazil (Fernando de Noronha, Trindade Island, Ceará, Pernambuco, Alagoas, Bahia, Espírito Santo) (Almeida and Anker, Reference Almeida and Anker2011; Hurt et al., Reference Hurt, Silliman, Anker and Knowlton2013; Cunha et al., Reference Cunha, Soledade, Boos and Almeida2015; Anker et al., Reference Anker, Tavares and Mendonça2016; present study).
Ecological notes: At a depth of 15 m, on a bottom with corals and other invertebrates, associated with unidentified sea anemones.
Remarks: This species belongs to the Alpheus armatus Rathbun, 1901 species complex. Since the species description (Almeida and Anker, Reference Almeida and Anker2011), the population density appears to be low, with no more than seven specimens recorded in the literature (Cunha et al., Reference Cunha, Soledade, Boos and Almeida2015; Anker et al., Reference Anker, Tavares and Mendonça2016). Alpheus rudolphi has only been recorded in Brazilian waters so far. The species is generally found in continental islands or near the coast, but was registered in the Trindade and Martin Vaz Archipelago at a depth of 16 m (Anker et al., Reference Anker, Tavares and Mendonça2016). Here we record the occurrence of A. rudolphi in Fernando de Noronha for the first time.
Genetic data: Here we provide the first mitochondrial 16S sequence of A. rudolphi (GenBank accession PQ041198). It also represents the first mitochondrial 16S sequence from a species of the A. armatus complex, making genetic comparisons with closely related species difficult. In the BLAST analysis, the closest sequence belongs to Alpheus lobidens De Haan, 1849, with only 86% similarity, and this was included in the phylogram (Figure 3). The COI sequence of A. rudolphi from Fernando de Noronha (GenBank accession PQ041233) is identical to a sequence of A. rudolphi from Ceará (Brazil, GenBank accession KF131534).
Genus Automate De Man, Reference De Man1888
Automate dolichognatha sensu lato De Man, Reference De Man1888
(Figure 5A, B)
Automate dolichognatha De Man, Reference De Man1888: 529, Fig. 5, pl. 22.
Material examined: 1 female and 1 specimen of unidentified sex, Praia do Porto de Santo Antônio, 1 July 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6951, genetic voucher); 4 specimens of unidentified sex, Abreus, 2 July 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6952).
Geographical distribution: Worldwide. Eastern Pacific – from USA (California) to Peru, including Cocos Island and Galapagos. Indo-West Pacific – from the Red Sea to Japan, Australia and French Polynesia. Eastern Atlantic – Cape Verde and Ascension Island. Western Atlantic – USA (from North Carolina to Florida), Mexico (Gulf of Mexico and Yucatan Peninsula), Virgin Islands, Antigua Island, Barbados, and Brazil (Atol das Rocas, Fernando de Noronha, Trindade Island, Bahia and Rio de Janeiro) (Holthuis, Reference Holthuis1951; Chace, Reference Chace1972 as Automate gardineri; Banner and Banner, Reference Banner and Banner1973; Williams, Reference Williams1984; Chace, Reference Chace1988; Manning and Chace, Reference Manning and Chace1990; Christoffersen, Reference Christoffersen and Young1998; Wicksten and Hendrickx, Reference Wicksten, Hendrickx and Hendrickx2003; Almeida et al., Reference Almeida, Costa-Souza, Cunha, Santos, Oliveira and Soledade2013; Anker et al., Reference Anker, Tavares and Mendonça2016; present study).
Ecological notes: Under rocks and rubble, sometimes in burrows, mostly in the intertidal.
Remarks: Due to its pantropical distribution and variations in morphology and coloration, this species is considered in the literature as a species complex (Almeida et al., Reference Almeida, Costa-Souza, Cunha, Santos, Oliveira and Soledade2013; Anker et al., Reference Anker, Tavares and Mendonça2016). According to Anker et al. (Reference Anker, Tavares and Mendonça2016), all western Atlantic records should be assigned to A. dolichognatha sensu lato. In Brazilian waters, the species has been recorded in both continental (Rio de Janeiro by Christoffersen, Reference Christoffersen and Young1998, without figures; Bahia by Almeida et al., Reference Almeida, Costa-Souza, Cunha, Santos, Oliveira and Soledade2013, with photographs) and insular areas (Atol das Rocas and Trindade Island by Anker et al., Reference Anker, Tavares and Mendonça2016, without figures; Fernando de Noronha by the present study). We confirm the difficulty of registering the colour pattern for this species, mainly due to the translucent condition seen in all six specimens sampled. Despite that, we were able to photograph a female with an ovary showing bright yellow developed oocytes (Figure 5A, B), a characteristic that is likely an important coloration trait for this species.
Genetic data: Here we provide the first sequences from Brazilian material of A. dolichognatha sensu lato (GenBank accession – 16S: PQ041196; COI: PQ041232). In the mitochondrial 16S gene phylogram (Figure 3), the specimen from Fernando de Noronha was very similar to a specimen sampled in Bocas del Toro (Panama) and well separated from one specimen sampled in French Polynesia, giving support to the hypothesis of a species complex under the name A. dolichognatha. In the BLAST analysis, the COI sequence from Fernando de Noronha had 99% similarity with a sequence from Bocas del Toro, Panama (GenBank accession MN184105). A detailed morphological analysis of the material sampled in Brazil is ongoing, along with additional molecular analyses.
Genus Salmoneus Holthuis, 1955
Salmoneus ortmanni (Rankin, Reference Rankin1898)
(Figure 5C, D)
Athanas ortmanni Rankin, Reference Rankin1898: 251, Fig. 7, pl. 30.
Material examined: 3 specimens of unidentified sex, Praia do Porto de Santo Antônio, 21 June 2019, coll. G. Bochini & K. Pasinatto (DZ/UFRGS #6973); 2 females, Praia do Porto de Santo Antônio, 1 July 2022, coll. A. Horch, I. Moraes, K. Pasinatto & M. Terossi (DZ/UFRGS #6950); 1 specimen of unidentified sex, Praia da Pontinha, 20 June 2019, coll. G. Bochini & K. Pasinatto (DZ/UFRGS #6972, genetic voucher).
Geographical distribution: Western Atlantic – Bahamas, Aruba, Mexico (Yucatan Peninsula), Costa Rica, Panama, Venezuela, Bermuda; Brazil (Atol das Rocas, Fernando de Noronha, São Paulo) (Rankin, Reference Rankin1898; Verrill, Reference Verrill1922; Chace, Reference Chace1972; Rodríguez, Reference Rodríguez1986; Anker, Reference Anker2007, Reference Anker2010; Anker et al., Reference Anker, Mendonça, Pachelle and Tavares2013, present study).
Ecological notes: In tide pools, mostly under rocks in the intertidal.
Remarks: The taxonomic status of S. ortmanni was revised by Anker (Reference Anker2007), along with a redescription of the species and additional illustrations. Salmoneus ortmanni was previously considered a transisthmian species, occurring in both the Western Atlantic and the Eastern Pacific Oceans, but all Eastern Pacific specimens have been assigned to other species, keeping S. ortmanni exclusively in the Atlantic (Anker and Lazarus, Reference Anker and Lazarus2015). As described by Anker et al. (Reference Anker, Mendonça, Pachelle and Tavares2013), this species presents a semitransparent bright orange-yellow colour, which can be seen in the specimens collected in the present study (Figure 5C, D).
Genetic data: Here we provide the first sequences of the species (GenBank accession – 16S: PQ041195; COI: PQ041231). Salmoneus ortmanni from Fernando de Noronha was well separated from other species of the genus in the mitochondrial 16S gene phylogram (Figure 3). Regarding COI, the only other sequence available is from Salmoneus carvachoi Anker, Reference Anker2007, which showed 86% similarity in the BLAST analysis.
Conclusion
In this study, we record five additional alpheid species for the Fernando de Noronha Archipelago. Together with the previous records, it brings the total species of alpheid and caridean shrimps known from the archipelago to 26 and 46, respectively. Our results indicate that despite the previous efforts made to evaluate the decapod fauna of Fernando de Noronha (Pocock, Reference Pocock1890; Fausto-Filho, Reference Fausto-Filho1974; Coelho et al., Reference Coelho, Santos, Torres, Monteiro, Almeida, Tabarelli and Silva2002, Reference Coelho, Almeida, Souza-Filho, Bezerra and Giraldes2006; Coelho-Filho, Reference Coelho-Filho2006; Alves et al., Reference Alves, Ramos-Porto and Viana2008; Souza et al., Reference Souza, Schwamborn, Barreto, Farias, Fernandes and Coelho2011), our knowledge regarding the biodiversity of this important invertebrate group is still incomplete.
Preserved areas aim primarily to conserve biodiversity and manage natural resources. Therefore, the creation and application of legislations for no-take marine regions depend on in-depth knowledge of the local biota (Hendrickx, Reference Hendrickx1995; Gerhardinger et al., Reference Gerhardinger, Godoy, Jones, Sales and Ferreira2011; Gamarra et al., Reference Gamarra, Correia, Bragagnolo, Campos-Silva, Jepson, Ladle and Mendes Malhado2019). Considering the caridean shrimps, it is known that they are geographically and ecologically diverse in their distribution, and participate directly in the balance of aquatic food webs since they feed on lower trophic levels and transfer energy into food for other major predators (Wenner and Boesch, Reference Wenner and Boesch1979; Amaral and Nallin, Reference Amaral and Nallin2011).
Moreover, this is the first study with decapods from Fernando de Noronha that includes molecular data and records the colour pattern of the species. Some alpheid shrimps are difficult to identify based solely on the morphology of material preserved in ethanol (Knowlton and Mills, Reference Knowlton and Mills1992; Anker, Reference Anker2001). Thus, genetic and colour data can help in this process, which are now available for these species and can be used for comparisons in future studies. Finally, we highlight the importance of continuous biodiversity surveys to properly describe the biodiversity of the archipelago, employing different collection methods, recording colour and molecular data, and focusing on subsampled microhabitats. The data we provide here are essential for the continuous conservation and management of this important hotspot of Brazilian marine fauna.
Acknowledgements
Thanks are due to Leonardo Lopes Gonçalves da Silva for all the help during the scuba diving, to Angélica Viana e Silva and Pedro Augusto Mendes de Castro Melo, for Instituto Chico Mendes de Conservação da Biodiversidade (ICMBio NGI Noronha), Autarquia Territorial Distrito Estadual de Fernando de Noronha - ATDEFN, and Dive Operator Atlantis for all logistical support during the fieldwork. We are also grateful to the two anonymous reviewers for the suggestions and corrections that improved the manuscript.
Author Contributions
IRRM: Sampling, main text writing, bibliography survey, specimen photography, and editing.
KP: Sampling and organization of the samples, identification, main text revision, and bibliography survey.
GLB: Sampling, bibliography survey, and taxonomy comments.
APH: Sampling and organization of the samples, production of map, main text revision, English grammar correction.
AOA: Identification, main text revision, taxonomic comments, and taxonomic revision.
MT: Research conception and design, coordinated the financial grants that supported the project (sampling and laboratory costs), sampling and organization of the samples, text writing and full text revision, genetic analyses.
Financial Support
This study was supported by Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) Research Grants to MT (Universal 421193/2018-2, PQ 311340/2021-0), AOA (PQ 311217/2022-2), APH (PhD fellowship 140920/2021-8), and KP (PhD fellowship 140066/2021-7).
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interest or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
Ethical Standards
All samplings in this study were conducted according to applicable state and federal laws, license no. 66478 MMA/IBAMA/SISBIO granted to MT.
Data Availability
All specimens presented here were deposited and are now available for consultation in the Coleção de Crustáceos do Departamento de Zoologia da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (DZ/UFRGS). The genetic sequences provided for each species are available on GenBank (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genbank/) and the access numbers can be found in the text and in the phylogram (Figure 3).