Publications by authors named "Nicole Joy de Voogd"

With declining biodiversity worldwide, a better understanding of species diversity and their relationships is imperative for conservation and management efforts. Marine sponges are species-rich ecological key players on coral reefs, but their species diversity is still poorly understood. This is particularly true for the demosponge order Haplosclerida, whose systematic relationships are contentious due to the incongruencies between morphological and molecular phylogenetic hypotheses.

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Article Synopsis
  • Marine sponges play a critical ecological role in coral reefs and can have varying microbial densities, especially when looking at archaeal communities among different sponge species.
  • The study analyzes the archaeal community composition of several sponge species in Mayotte, comparing known high microbial abundance (HMA) and low microbial abundance (LMA) sponges, revealing distinct clustering patterns and similarities with bacterial communities.
  • The findings indicate that while there is a general HMA-LMA dichotomy in sponge microbiomes, characteristics like evenness and richness can vary by geographical location and sponge type.
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Extracts of the sponge Hyattella aff. intestinalis showed moderate inhibition against adenovirus. Chromatographic separation of the extracts followed by analysis of spectroscopic data allowed us to elucidate the structures of three new metabolites as 2α-hydroxyspongia-13(16),14-diene-3-one (4), 3β-hydroxyspongia-13(16),14-diene-2-one (7), and 2α,3α-diacetoxy-17,19-dihydroxyspongia-13(16),14-diene (8) and to identify six known ones 1-3, 5, 6 and 9.

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Most existing coral reef studies have focused on a single biotope and a single domain (Archaea or Bacteria). Few coral reef studies have explored the archaeal and bacterial community simultaneously. In this study, we compare the diversity and composition of archaeal and bacterial communities in seawater and two closely related sponge species (Stylissa carteri and Stylissa massa) in the Berau reef system, Indonesia.

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Assemblages of corals, sponges, foraminifera, sediment bacteria and sediment archaea were assessed at two depths in the Spermonde Archipelago. Our goal was to assess to what extent variation in composition could be explained by habitat and water quality variables. The habitat variables consisted of depth, substrate type and scleractinian coral cover while water quality variables were derived from ocean color satellite imagery, including the colored dissolved organic matter index (CDOM), chlorophyll-a (Chlor-a) and remote sensing reflectance at 645n m (Rrs_645).

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Chemical investigations on a sponge Haliclona sp. found a meroditerpene 1 having a new carbon skeleton. By analyzing spectroscopic data, the structure was elucidated to comprise a substituted hydroquinone, a tetrahydrooxepine, and a cyclohexene, and these components were united with C1 and C2 units.

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