AI Article Synopsis

  • Epizoic diatoms are crucial micro-epibiota found on marine vertebrates like loggerhead sea turtles, and a study assessed their diversity across different regions: Adriatic Sea, Ionian Sea, South Africa, and Florida Bay.
  • The research identified nearly 400 diatom taxa across more than 100 genera, revealing significant similarities between Greece and Croatia, while South Africa and Florida showed distinct differences, influenced by geography and sampling techniques.
  • The study found that skin samples from the turtles contained a unique diatom composition compared to carapace samples, suggesting that the diatom communities vary by location and the type of substrate, which could reflect the turtles' habitat preferences and behavior.

Article Abstract

Epizoic diatoms form an important part of micro-epibiota of marine vertebrates such as whales and sea turtles. The present study explores and compares the diversity and biogeography of diatom communities growing on the skin and shell of loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) from four different localities: Adriatic Sea (Croatia), Ionian Sea (Greece), South Africa and Florida Bay (USA) using both light and scanning electron microscopy. We observed almost 400 diatom taxa belonging to more than 100 genera. Diatom communities from Greece and Croatia showed the highest similarity and were statistically different from those recorded from South Africa and Florida. Part of this variation could be attributed to differences in sampling techniques; however, we believe that geography had an important role. In general, contrary to several previous observations from sea turtles, the presumably exclusively epizoic diatoms contributed less than common benthic taxa to the total diatom flora, which might have been related to the loggerhead feeding behavior. Moreover, skin samples differed from carapace samples in having a distinct diatom composition with a higher proportion of the putative true epizoonts. Our results indicate that epizoic diatom communities differ according to loggerhead geographical location and substrate (skin vs. carapace). The relative abundances of common benthic diatoms and putative exclusive epizoic taxa may inform about sea turtle habitat use or behavior though detailed comparisons among different host species have yet to be performed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7390603PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0236513PLOS

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