Delineation of the Indo-Malayan Centre of Maximum Marine Biodiversity: The Coral Triangle

  • Hoeksema B
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Abstract

The ranges of many tropical marine species overlap in a centre of maximum marine biodiversity, which is located in the Indo-Malayan region. Because this centre includes Malaysia, the Philippines, Indonesia, and Papua New Guinea, it has been named the East Indies Triangle. Due to its dependence on the presence of coral reefs, it has recently been referred to as the Coral Triangle. Because these reefs are severely threatened by human activities, large-scale nature conservation efforts involve the establishment of a network of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs), for which it is important to know the position of this diversity hotspot. Although it is recognized where this centre is located approximately, it is unclear where its exact boundaries are. Only in a limited number of biogeographical studies, ranges and diversity centres of Indo-West Pacific (IWP) taxa have been presented. In this regard, tropical corals, marine fishes, and molluscs have received most attention. However, just for reef cor- als alone several different diversity centres have been proposed. The boundaries of the centre are important for reconstructing the processes that were responsible for its present shape. They may relate to the area’s climatic and geological past or to the dispersal of larvae by currents in combination with ecological constraints that may prevent their settlement. Especially, in brooding organisms, without larvae or other propagules performing long-distance dispersal, isolation mechanisms may have been important for speciation and species diversity. Information on sea-level fluctuation and the past position of coastlines and data on molecular variation between and within species may help to support models that explain the present position of the centre of marine biodiversity. A detailed biogeographical study of the Fungiidae, a family of corals that disperse through larvae, is used to present a model for a diversity centre and the processes that may have caused its present position. For each species,

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Hoeksema, B. W. (2007). Delineation of the Indo-Malayan Centre of Maximum Marine Biodiversity: The Coral Triangle (pp. 117–178). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6374-9_5

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