TY - JOUR
T1 - TerrANTALife 1.0 Biodiversity data checklist of known Antarctic terrestrial and freshwater life forms
AU - Pertierra, Luis R.
AU - Varliero, Gilda
AU - Barbosa, Andrés
AU - Biersma, Elisabeth M.
AU - Convey, Peter
AU - Chown, Steven L.
AU - Cowan, Don
AU - De Los Rios, Asunción
AU - Escribano-Alvarez, Pablo
AU - Fontaneto, Diego
AU - Fraser, Ceridwen
AU - Harris, Mathew
AU - Hughes, Kevin
AU - Griffiths, Huw
AU - le Roux, Peter
AU - Liu, Xiaoyue P.
AU - Lynch, Heather
AU - Majewska, Roksana
AU - Martinez, Pablo A.
AU - Molina-Montenegro, Marco
AU - Olalla-Tarraga, Miguel A.
AU - Peck, Lloyd
AU - Quesada, Antonio
AU - Ronquillo, Cristina
AU - Ropert-Coudert, Yan
AU - Sancho, Leopoldo
AU - Terauds, Aleks
AU - Vianna, Juliana
AU - Wilmotte, Annick
AU - Hortal, Joaquín
AU - Greve, Michelle
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Pertierra L et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Background Incomplete species inventories for Antarctica represent a key challenge for comprehensive ecological research and conservation in the region. Additionally, data required to understand population dynamics, rates of evolution, spatial ranges, functional traits, physiological tolerances and species interactions, all of which are fundamental to disentangle the different functional elements of Antarctic biodiversity, are mostly missing. However, much of the fauna, flora and microbiota in the emerged ice-free land of the continent have an uncertain presence and/or unresolved status, with entire biodiversity compendia of prokaryotic groups (e.g. bacteria) being missing. All the available biodiversity information requires consolidation, cross-validation, re-assessment and steady systematic inclusion in order to create a robust catalogue of biodiversity for the continent. New information We compiled, completed and revised eukaryotic species inventories present in terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems in Antarctica in a new living database: terrANTALife (version 1.0). The database includes the first integration in a compendium for many groups of eukaryotic microorganisms. We also introduce a first catalogue of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) of prokaryotic biodiversity. Available compendia and literature to date were searched for Antarctic terrestrial and freshwater species, integrated, taxonomically harmonised and curated by experts to create comprehensive checklists of Antarctic organisms. The final inventories comprises 470 animal species (including vertebrates, freeliving invertebrates and parasites), 306 plants (including all Viridiplantae: embryophytes and green algae), 997 fungal species and 434 protists (sensu lato). We also provide a first account for many groups of microorganisms, including non-lichenised fungi and multiple groups of eukaryotic unicellular species (Stramenophila, Alveolata and Rhizaria (SAR), Chromists and Amoeba), jointly referred to as "protists". In addition, we identify 1753 bacterial (obtained from 348117 ASVs) and 34 archaeal genera (from 1848 ASVs), as well as, at least, 14 virus families. We formulate a basic tree of life in Antarctica with the main lineages listed in the region and their “known-accepted-species” numbers.
AB - Background Incomplete species inventories for Antarctica represent a key challenge for comprehensive ecological research and conservation in the region. Additionally, data required to understand population dynamics, rates of evolution, spatial ranges, functional traits, physiological tolerances and species interactions, all of which are fundamental to disentangle the different functional elements of Antarctic biodiversity, are mostly missing. However, much of the fauna, flora and microbiota in the emerged ice-free land of the continent have an uncertain presence and/or unresolved status, with entire biodiversity compendia of prokaryotic groups (e.g. bacteria) being missing. All the available biodiversity information requires consolidation, cross-validation, re-assessment and steady systematic inclusion in order to create a robust catalogue of biodiversity for the continent. New information We compiled, completed and revised eukaryotic species inventories present in terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems in Antarctica in a new living database: terrANTALife (version 1.0). The database includes the first integration in a compendium for many groups of eukaryotic microorganisms. We also introduce a first catalogue of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) of prokaryotic biodiversity. Available compendia and literature to date were searched for Antarctic terrestrial and freshwater species, integrated, taxonomically harmonised and curated by experts to create comprehensive checklists of Antarctic organisms. The final inventories comprises 470 animal species (including vertebrates, freeliving invertebrates and parasites), 306 plants (including all Viridiplantae: embryophytes and green algae), 997 fungal species and 434 protists (sensu lato). We also provide a first account for many groups of microorganisms, including non-lichenised fungi and multiple groups of eukaryotic unicellular species (Stramenophila, Alveolata and Rhizaria (SAR), Chromists and Amoeba), jointly referred to as "protists". In addition, we identify 1753 bacterial (obtained from 348117 ASVs) and 34 archaeal genera (from 1848 ASVs), as well as, at least, 14 virus families. We formulate a basic tree of life in Antarctica with the main lineages listed in the region and their “known-accepted-species” numbers.
KW - Antarctica
KW - biodiversity
KW - polar fauna
KW - polar flora
KW - polar microorganisms
KW - species inventories
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85185962090
U2 - 10.3897/BDJ.12.e106199
DO - 10.3897/BDJ.12.e106199
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85185962090
SN - 1314-2836
VL - 12
JO - Biodiversity Data Journal
JF - Biodiversity Data Journal
M1 - e106199
ER -