SCAR Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean - Tanaidacea - Data

Occurrence
Latest version published by SCAR - AntOBIS on May 5, 2023 SCAR - AntOBIS
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Publication date:
05 May 2023
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Description

Species occurrence dataset supplied in the framework of the Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean (BASO) (De Broyer et al. 2019). Occurrence records in various regions of the Southern Ocean (below 55°S) were collated from the literature (1902-2000) into a dataset including over 1500 records; a further 150 records, mainly from the Ross Sea, represent previously unpublished data.

Data Records

The data in this occurrence resource has been published as a Darwin Core Archive (DwC-A), which is a standardized format for sharing biodiversity data as a set of one or more data tables. The core data table contains 1,815 records.

This IPT archives the data and thus serves as the data repository. The data and resource metadata are available for download in the downloads section. The versions table lists other versions of the resource that have been made publicly available and allows tracking changes made to the resource over time.

Versions

The table below shows only published versions of the resource that are publicly accessible.

How to cite

Researchers should cite this work as follows:

Blazewicz-Paszkowycz M (2023). SCAR Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean - Tanaidacea - Data. Version 1.3. SCAR - AntOBIS. Occurrence dataset. https://ipt.biodiversity.aq/resource?r=baso_crustacea_tanaidacea&v=1.3

Rights

Researchers should respect the following rights statement:

The publisher and rights holder of this work is SCAR - AntOBIS. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY 4.0) License.

GBIF Registration

This resource has been registered with GBIF, and assigned the following GBIF UUID: 62df6800-27f8-4f7a-bd8f-5ff82893b841.  SCAR - AntOBIS publishes this resource, and is itself registered in GBIF as a data publisher endorsed by Ocean Biodiversity Information System.

Keywords

Crustacea_Tanaidacea; SCAR-MARBIN; BASO; Occurrence; Occurrence

Contacts

Magda Blazewicz-Paszkowycz
  • Metadata Provider
  • Originator
  • Point Of Contact
Dr.
University of Lodz
Narutowicza 65
90-131 Lodz
Lodz
PL
+42 635 42-97

Geographic Coverage

Near global

Bounding Coordinates South West [-90, -180], North East [90, 180]

Taxonomic Coverage

No Description available

Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Arthropoda
Class Malacostraca
Order Tanaidacea
Family Agathotanaidae, Akanthophoreidae, Anarthruridae, Apseudidae, Colletteidae, Cryptocopidae, Heterotanoididae, Kalliapseudidae, Leptocheliidae, Leptognathiidae, Metapseudidae, Mirandotanaidae, Neotanaidae, Nototanaidae, Paratanaidae, Paratanaoidea incertae sedis, Pseudotanaidae, Tanaellidae, Tanaidae, Tanaissuidae, Tanaopsidae, Typhlotanaidae
Genus Acutihumerus, Akanthophoreus, Allodaposia, Allotanais, Anarthrura, Andrognathia, Apseudes, Araphura, Araphuroides, Arhaphuroides, Arthrura, Bacescapseudes, Bathytanaissus, Carololangia, Chauliopleona, Collettea, Cryptocopoides, Dimorphognathia, Exspina, Fageapseudes, Filitanais, Hamatipeda, Heterotanoides, Langapseudes, Langitanais, Larsenotanais, Leptognathia, Leptognathiella, Leptognathioides, Leviapseudes, Meromonakantha, Mimicarhaphura, Mirandotanais, Monstrotanais, Neotanais, Nototanais, Obesutanais, Pancoloides, Paradoxapseudes, Parafilitanais, Paragathotanais, Paraiungentitanais, Paraleptognathia, Paranarthrura, Paratanais, Paratyphlotanais, Peraeospinosus, Portaratrum, Protanaissus, Pseudoleptochelia, Pseudoleptognathia, Pseudonototanais, Pseudoparatanais, Pseudotanais, Pugiodactylus, Pulcherella, Robustochelia, Singula, Siphonolabrum, Stenotanais, Synapseudes, Tanaella, Tanaissus, Tanaopsis, Torquella, Typhlamia, Typhlotanais, Typhlotanaoides, Zeuxo, Zeuxoides

Temporal Coverage

Start Date / End Date 1874-01-01 / 2008-01-01

Project Data

The “Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean” is a legacy of the International Polar Year 2007-2009 (www.ipy.org) and of the Census of Marine Life 2000-2010 (www.coml.org), contributed by the Census of Antarctic Marine Life (www.caml.aq) and the SCAR Marine Biodiversity Information Network (www.scarmarbin.be; www.biodiversity.aq). The “Biogeographic Atlas” is a contribution to the SCAR programmes Ant-ECO (State of the Antarctic Ecosystem) and AnT-ERA (Antarctic Thresholds- Ecosystem Resilience and Adaptation) (www.scar.org/science-themes/ecosystems). The Census of Marine Life, was an ambitious ten-year long international project that was to examine the world’s oceans and log the occurrence and demise of marine species. Its principal objective was to assess the state of marine biodiversity at the start of the 21st century to enable predictions to be made about what species might inhabit oceans in the future. By supporting scientific coordination, rather than putting ships in the water, the Foundation leveraged over USD 650 million in total outlays. The Census ran until a final meeting in October 2010 in the Royal Society in London at which outcomes from the six ocean realms under study were presented. In total, some 2700 scientists from 80 nations participated in the Census, undertaking 540 research expeditions and producing over 2600 publications. The ocean realm “Ice Ocean; Arctic and Antarctic” was the responsibility of two projects – Arctic Ocean Diversity (ArcOD) for the north of the globe, and the Census of Antarctic Marine Life (CAML) for the south. Both projects worked closely together and engaged in a number of joint initiatives. CAML started its activities mid-way through the Census, in 2005, following a deci- sion to hold a third International Polar Year (IPY) in 2007–2009. The Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) accepted a proposal from its Life Sciences committee that CAML should go ahead as one of fifteen biological projects to be undertaken in Antarctica during the IPY; in the event CAML turned out to be the largest of them. A key element in CAML’s success as a project was its close association with SCAR’s Marine Biodiversity Information Network (SCAR-MarBIN, www. scarmarbin.be), a data portal initiated by the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences in Brussels, implemented by the Belgian Biodiversity Platform and supported financially by the Belgian Science Policy Office. It was accepted by SCAR as the main repository for marine biodiversity data in 2005. SCAR- MarBIN became CAML’s database.

Title Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean
Funding Published by: The Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research, Scott Polar Research Institute, Lensfield Road, Cambridge, CB2 1ER, United Kingdom (www.scar.org). Publication funded by: - The Census of Antarctic Marine Life (Albert P. Sloan Foundation, New York) - The TOTAL Foundation, Paris. The “Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean” shared the Cosmos Prize awarded to the Census of Marine Life by the International Osaka Expo’90 Commemorative Foundation, Tokyo, Japan. Publication supported by: - The Belgian Science Policy (Belspo), through the Belgian Scientific Research Programme on the Antarctic and the “biodiversity.aq” network (SCAR-MarBIN/ANTABIF) - The Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences (RBINS), Brussels, Belgium - The British Antarctic Survey (BAS), Cambridge, United Kingdom - The Université Pierre et Marie Curie (UPMC), Paris, France - The Australian Antarctic Division, Hobart, Australia - The Scientific Steering Committee of CAML, Michael Stoddart (CAML Administrator) and Victoria Wadley (CAML Project Manager)

The personnel involved in the project:

Magda Blazewicz-Paszkowycz

Sampling Methods

/

Study Extent Literature study
Quality Control /

Method step description:

  1. /

Collection Data

Collection Name UL
Collection Identifier Literature study
Parent Collection Identifier Biodiversity.aq
Specimen preservation methods Other

Bibliographic Citations

  1. Amar, R., Roman M.L., 1974. Invertébrés marins des XIIème et XVème Expéditions Antarctiques Françaises en Terre Adélie. 14 Tanaidacés et Isopodes. Téthys, 5, 561–600.
  2. Beddard, F.E., 1886a. Preliminary notice of the Isopoda collected during the voyage of H.M.S ‘Challenger.’ Part III. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 1886, 26, 97–122.
  3. Beddard, F.E., 1886b. Report on the Isopoda collected by H.M.S. Challenger during the years 1873– 1876 Part II. Report on the Scientific Results of the Voyage of H.M.S. Challenger During the Years 1873–1876. Zoology, 17, 1–178, pls. 1–25.
  4. Vanhöffen, E., 1914. Die Isopoden der deutschen Südpolar-Expedition 1901–1903. Deutsche Südpolar-Expedition 15. Zoologie, 7, 447–598.
  5. Tzareva, L.A., 1982. Dopolnenie k faune kleshchenosnikh oslikov (Crustacea: Tanaidacea) shel’fovykh zon Antarktiki i Subantarktiki [Contribution to tanaids fauna (Crustacea: Tanaidacea of Antarctic and Subantaractic shelf]. In: Kavanov, A.I. (eds.). Fauna i raspredelenie rakoobraznykh notal´nykh i antarkticheskikh vod [Fauna and distribution of crustaceas in Antiboreal and Antarctic waters]. Akademija Nauk SSSR: Vladivostok, pp. 40–61. [in Russian]
  6. Błażewicz, M., Jażdżewski, K., 1996. A contribution to the knowledge of Tanaidacea (Crustacea, Malacostraca) of Admiralty Bay, King George Island, Antarctic. Polish Polar Research, 17, 213–220.
  7. Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, M., Jażdżewski, K., 2000. Quantitative data on Tanaidacea of Admiralty Bay (King George Island, South Shetland Islands, Antarctica). Polish Polar Research, 21, 171–180.
  8. Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, M., Sekulska-Nalewajko, J., 2004. Tanaidacea (Crustacea, Malacostraca) of two polar fjords: Kongsfjorden (Arctic) and Admiralty Bay (Antarctic). Polar Biology, 27, 222–230.
  9. Dayton, P.K., Oliver, J.S., 1977. Antarctic soft-bottom benthos inoligotrophic and eutrophic environments. Science, 197, 55–58.
  10. Delille, D., Guidi, L.D., Soyer, J., 1985. Nutrition of Allotanais hirsutus (Crustacea: Tanaidacea) at Kerguelen Island. In: Siegfried, W.R., Condy, P.R., Laws R.M. (eds.). Antarctic Nutrient Cycles and Food Webs. Springer-Verlag: Berlin, pp. 378–380.
  11. Gallardo, V.A., Castillo, J.G., Retamal, M.A., Yáñez, A., Moyano, H.I., Hermosilla, J.G., 1977. Quantitative studies on the soft-bottom macrobenthic animal communities of shallow Antarctic bays. In: Llano, G.A. (ed.). Proceedings of the Third SCAR Symposium on Antarctic Biology. Smithsonian Institution: Washington, D.C., pp. 361–387.
  12. Gambi, M.C., Lorenti, M., Russo, G.F., Scipione, M.B., 1994. Benthic associations of the shallow hard bottoms off Terra Nova Bay, Ross Sea: zonation, biomass and population structure. Antarctic Science, 6(4), 449–462.
  13. Gambi, M.C., Buia, M.C., Mazzella, L., Lorenti, M., Scipione, M.B., 2000. Spatio-temporal variability in the structure of benthic populations in a physically controlled system off Terra Nova Bay: the shallow hard bottoms. In: Faranda, F., Guglielmo, L., Ianora,
  14. Gerdes, D., Klages, M., Arntz, W.E., Galeron, J., Hain, S., 1992. Quantitative investigations on macrobenthos communities of the southeastern Weddell Sea shelf based on multibox corer samples. Polar Biology, 12, 291–301.
  15. Hale, H.M., 1937. Isopoda and Tanaidacea. Australasian Antarctic Expedition 1911–14. Scientific Reports. Series C. Zoology and Botany, 2(2), 1–45.
  16. Hodgson, T.V., 1902. Crustacea. In: Lankester, E.R. (ed.). Report on the Collections of Natural History Made in the Antarctic Regions During the Voyage of the “Southern Cross”. British Museum Trustees, London, 11: 228–261, pls 29–40.
  17. Jażdżewski, K., Jurasz, W., Kittel, W., Presler, E., Presler, P., Siciński, J., 1986. Abundance and biomass estimates of the benthic fauna in Admiralty Bay, King George Island South Shetland Islands. Polar Biology, 6, 5–16.
  18. Kudinova-Pasternak, R.K., 1993. Tanaidacea (Crustacea, Malacostraca) collected in the 43 cruise of the R/V “Dmitri Mendeleev” in the South-western Atlantic and the Weddell Sea. Trudy Instituta Okeanologii, 127, 134–146. [in Russian]
  19. Kussakin, G.O., 1967. K faune Isopoda i Tanaidacea shel’fovykh zon Antarkticheskikh i Subantarkticheskikh vod. Rezul’taty Biologicheskikh Issledovanij Sovetskoj Antarkticheskoj Ekspedicii (1955–1958) [On the fauna of Isopoda and Tanaidacea of Antarctic and Subantarctic shelf waters. Results of biological studies by Russian Antarctic Expedition 1955- 1958]. Issledovanija Fauny Morei, 4, 220–380. [in Russian]
  20. Lang, K., 1953. The postmarsupial development of the Tanaidacea. Arkiv för Zoologi, Series 2, 4, 409–422.
  21. Larsen, K., 2000. Revision of the genus Collettea (Crustacea: Tanaidacea). Invertebrate Taxonomy, 14, 681–693.
  22. Lowry, J.K., 1975. Soft bottom macrobenthic community of Arthur Harbor, Antarctica. Antarctic Research Series (Biology of the Antarctic Seas V), 23, 1–19.
  23. Monod, T., 1926. Tanaïdes, Isopodes et Amphipodes. Expédition Antarctique Belge. Résultats du Voyage de la Belgica, en 1897-99, Zoologie. Buschmann, Anvers, 1–67.
  24. Oliver, J.S., Slattery, P.N., 1985. Effects of crustacean predators on species composition and population structure of softbodied infauna from McMurdo Sound, Antarctica. Ophelia, 24, 155–175.
  25. Richardson, H., 1906. Isopodes. In: Charcot, J. (ed.). Expédition Antarctique Française (1903–1905). Sciences Naturelles: Documents Scientifiques. Masson & Cie, Paris, 1–22, pl. 1.
  26. Richardson, M.D., Hedgpeth, J.W., 1977. Antarctic soft-bottom, macrobenthic community adaptations to a cold, stable, highly productive, glacially affected environment. In: Llano, G.A. (ed.). Adaptations Within Antarctic Ecosystems. Proceedings of the Third SCAR Symposium on Antarctic Biology. Smithsonian Institution: Washington, D.C., 181–196.
  27. Schmidt, A., Brandt. A., 2001. The tanaidacean fauna of the Beagle Channel (southern Chile) and its relationship to the fauna off the Antarctic continental shelf. Antarctic Science, 13, 420–429.
  28. Shiino, S.M., 1970. Paratanaidae collected in Chile Bay, Greenwich Island by the XXII Chilean Antarctic Expedition, with an Apseudes from Porvenir Point, Tierra del Fuego Island. Instituto Antarctico Chileno (Ser. Cient.), 1, 77–122.
  29. Shiino, S.M., 1979. Tanaidacea collected by French Scientists on board the survey ship “Marion- Dufresne” in the regions around the Kerguelen Islands and other subantarctic islands in 1972, ‘74, ‘75, ‘76. Science Report of Shima Marineland, 5, 1–122.
  30. Siciński, J., Różycki, O., Kittel, W., 1997. Zoobenthos and zooplankton of Herve Cove (King George Island, South Shetland Islands, Antarctic). Polish Polar Research, 17(3–4), 221–238.
  31. Sieg, J., 1977. Taxonomische Monographie der familie Pseudotanaidae (Crustacea, Tanaidacea). Mitteilungen aus dem Zoologischen Museum in Berlin, 53, 1–109.
  32. Sieg, J., 1983. Tanaidomorpha (Crustacea: Tanaidacea) from the Ross Sea, Antarctica. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 13, 395–418.
  33. Sieg, J., 1984. Tanaidacea of the United States Navy’s 1947–1948 Antarctic Expedition (Crustacea). Journal of Crustacean Biology, 4, 298–306.
  34. Sieg, J., 1986a. Crustacea Tanaidacea of the Antarctic and the Subantarctic. 1. On material collected at Tierra del Fuego, Isla de los Estados, and the west coast of the Antarctic Peninsula. In: Korniker, L.S. (ed.). Biology of the Antarctic Seas XVIII. Antarctic Research Series 45. American Geophysical Union: Washington, D.C., pp. 1–180.
  35. Sieg, J., 1986b. Tanaidacea (Crustacea) von der Antarktis und Subantarktis. II. Tanaidacea gesammelt von Dr. J.W. Wägele während der Deutschen Antarktis Expedition 1983. Mitteilungen aus der Zoologischen Museum der Universität Kiel, 2(4), 1–80.
  36. Stebbing, T.R.R., 1914. Crustacea from the Falkland Islands collected by Mr. Rupert Vallentin, F.L.S. Part II. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 1914, 341–378, pls. 1–9.
  37. Stephensen, K., 1947. Tanaidacea, Isopoda, Amphipoda, and Pycnogonida. Det Norske Videnskaps-Akademi i Oslo. Scientific Results of the Norwegian Antarctic Expeditions 1927–1928 et sqq., 27, 1–90.
  38. Studer, T., 1884. Isopoden, gesammelt während der Reise S.M.S Gazelle um die Erde, 1874–76. Abhandlungen der Königlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin 1883, 1–28.
  39. Tucker, M.J., 1988. Temporal distribution and brooding behaviour of selected benthic species from the shallow marine waters off the Vestfold Hills, Antarctica. Hydrobiologia, 165, 151–159.
  40. De Broyer C., Koubbi P., Griffiths H.J., Raymond B., Udekem d’Acoz C. d’, Van de Putte A.P., Danis B., David B., Grant S., Gutt J., Held C., Hosie G., Huettmann F., Post A., Ropert-Coudert Y. (eds.), 2014. Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean. Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research, Cambridge, XII + 498 pp.

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