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Research Article

Hidden under ice and mud: diversity of shell-bearing microgastropods in the eastern Arctic seas

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Pages 794-809 | Published online: 17 Jul 2020
 

Abstract

The arctic environment continues to undergo a rapid transformation due to climatic shifts, human activities, and invasive species. Revealing ecosystem responses to these stressors requires extensive knowledge about the diversity of the Arctic fauna and flora. Gastropoda is one of the most diverse invertebrate groups within the marine benthos. Shell-bearing microgastropods (snails no larger than 5 mm) represent a significant part of gastropod diversity but remain among the most poorly studied marine animals worldwide. The aim of the present review is to summarize the existing data on diversity and distribution of shell-bearing microgastropods in the eastern Arctic seas. Currently, 66 species of shell-bearing microgastropods belonging to 17 families are known from the region. The taxonomy of snails is still based mainly on shell characters. Molecular phylogenetic analysis still has not been used in the taxonomy of microgastropods from the eastern Arctic. The Barents Sea is the most species-rich region with 51 microgastropod species. The diversity in the other seas is significantly lower, from 10–20 species, and only 9 species in the case of the open Arctic basin. Analysis of functional traits revealed three groups of microgastropods: coastal species feeding on algae and detritus, shelf species feeding on foraminiferans, and parasitic/symbiotic species. Abundance of shell-bearing microgastropods can be high, especially in coastal environments, where micromolluscs may be the most numerous among all the macroinvertebrates. Some limitations for studies of microgastropods in the Arctic are reviewed.

Acknowledgements

We are grateful to Dr Boris Sirenko and Alexey Merkuliev (Saint Petersburg Russia), Dr Tom Schiøtte (Copenhagen, Denmark), Dr Manuel Malaquias, Dr Trond Oskars (Bergen, Norway), Dr Anders Warén, Mrs Anna Persson (Stokholm, Sweden), and Mrs Ann-Helen Rønning (Oslo, Norway) for their assistance during the study of museum collections. We also thank Alexandra Lisenkova for the language editing.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Supplemental data

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed here: https://doi.org/10.1080/14772000.2020.1785577.

Associate Editor: Barna Pall-Gergely

Additional information

Funding

The study was supported by the Russian Science Foundation under grant No. 18-74-00010.

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