Distribution of haploniscids (Isopoda, Asellota, Haploniscidae) in Icelandic waters, with description of Haploniscus astraphes n. sp. from the Iceland basin and the Southeast Atlantic Ocean
Author
Brökeland, Wiebke
Author
Svavarsson, Jörundur
text
Zootaxa
2017
4231
3
301
326
journal article
36570
10.11646/zootaxa.4231.3.1
54fadd65-1fd2-4367-a62d-2efdc83b3ed4
1175-5326
291346
1226613C-0001-4369-93C9-3D0B1A40BE99
Distribution of
Haploniscidae
at the Greenland-Iceland-Faeroe Ridge
Ten species of the
Haploniscidae
were sampled during the BIOICE expeditions in the GIF area (
Table 1
,
Figs 10– 12
), eight species of
Haploniscus
and one species each of genera
Antennuloniscus
and
Chauliodoniscus
. By far the most frequent species was
Haploniscus bicuspis
with 11,410 specimens sampled at 136 stations (
Table 1
).
H
.
foresti
and
A. simplex
were also fairly frequent, occurring at 19 and 12 stations, with
1375 and 1816
specimens, respectively.
Haploniscus aduncus
occurred at ten stations, while
Chauliodoniscus armadilloides
was reported from 7 stations. The remaining species were found at one to four stations only, i.e.
Haploniscus astraphes
,
H. ampliatus
,
H. angustus
,
H. hamatus
, and
H. spinifer
.
The only species occurring north of the Greenland-Iceland-Faeroe Ridge were
Haploniscus bicuspis
and
H. angustus
.
Haploniscus ingolfi
is the only other haploniscid species previously reported from the Nordic Seas (
Wolff 1962
;
Svavarsson 1988
), but was not found is this study.
H. bicuspis
and
H. angustus
were the only haploniscid species occurring at depths shallower than the saddle depth at
840 m
on the
Ridge
and seem to be able to cross the shallow sills of the Greenland-Iceland-Faeroe
Ridge
and thus colonize the waters all around
Iceland
.
Haploniscus bicuspis
has been reported to be adapted to cold conditions around 0°C (
Hansen 1916
;
Wolff 1962
), and was here reported in many instances from temperatures below zero (as low as -0.86°C), but even at temperatures as high as 7.11°
C. Accordingly
, the species was found in a variety of water masses, such as the warm
Modified
North Atlantic Water
(
MNAW
), the deep Labrador Sea Water (LSW) and the
Iceland
Sea Overflow Water (
ISOW
) south of
Iceland
, and even in the cold Norwegian Sea Deep Water (
NSDW
) in the deep north.
The remaining species are confined to areas south of the Greenland-Iceland-Faeroe Ridge (
Figs 10
–
12
) and also to depths greater than
1200 m
, holding higher (>2°C) bottom temperatures (
Table 1
).
H. astraphes
and
H. ampliatus
occurred only in the LSW, while
H. hamatus
and
H. spinifer
occurred only in the ISOW.
Haploniscus aduncus
,
H. foresti
,
Antennuloniscus simplex
and
Chauliodoniscus armadilloides
occurred, however, in both ISOW and LSW.
The
Greenland-Iceland-Faeroe
Ridge
is presumably one of the most pronounced barriers of species distribution in the world oceans.
This
is the only extensive, shallow ridge crossing the
Atlantic Ocean
in an easterly-westerly direction, separating the
Nordic Seas
and the
Arctic Ocean
from the
North Atlantic
proper.
The
deepest connections between these oceans are the
Denmark
Strait (~
620 m
) in the Greenland-Iceland Ridge and the Faroe Bank Channel (~
840 m
) southwest of the
Faeroe Islands
(
Hansen & Østerhus 2000
). North of the ridge bottom temperatures are low, being nearly -0.9°C in the deepest parts. The cold overflow water passing the ridge mixes with warmer water masses resulting in higher bottom temperatures south of the ridge.
Most commonly benthic species living in the area have their distributional limits at the ridge, e.g. desmosomatid and nannoniscoid asellote isopods (
Brix & Svavarsson 2010
); anthuridean isopods (
Negoescu & Svavarsson 1997
), valviferan isopod (
Stransky & Svavarsson 2006
), amphipods (
Weisshappel 2001
) and pectinoid bivalve molluscs (
Dijkstra
et al
. 2009
). It is still poorly known how the ridge and the different associated water masses shape the distribution of the species in question; whether this is by the strong thermal gradient, by the presence of water masses of subzero temperatures being difficult to adapt to, or simply by the physical presence of the ridge itself.
Svavarsson
et al
. (1993)
concluded that the diversity of the Arctic deep-water fauna was low due to the isolating effects of the ridge and the associated water masses.
Although haploniscid isopods are known throughout the world oceans, the Nordic Seas and the Arctic Ocean are poor of haploniscid species (
Svavarsson
et al
. 1993
). Apparently, the physical presence of the ridge limits the distribution of most of the haploniscid species towards the north, due to the deep occurrence of most of the species seen here.
FIGURE 10.
Distribution of haploniscid species around Iceland (BIOICE localities): A,
Haploniscus astraphes
n. sp.
(dot),
H. ampliatus
(triangle) and
H. hamatus
(square); B,
H. aduncus
; C,
H. angustus
.
FIGURE 11.
Distribution of haploniscid species around Iceland (BIOICE localities): A,
H. bicuspis
; B,
H. foresti
; C,
H. spinifer
.
FIGURE 12.
Distribution of haploniscid species around Iceland (BIOICE localities): A,
Antennuloniscus simplex
; B,
Chauliodoniscus armadilloides
.
Most of the haploniscids listed here have been found in the northernmost part of the Atlantic Ocean.
Haploniscus astraphes
n. sp
.
, however, shows an extensive distribution, from the south side of the Greenland-
Iceland
Ridge to the
Guinea
Basin, South Atlantic and the
Angola
Basin. Whether these really belong to the same species remains to be evaluated using molecular methods.