BIOLOGY AND ZOOGEOGRAPHY OF THE VEMA SEAMOUNT: A REPORT ON THE FIRST BIOLOGICAL COLLECTION MADE ON THE SUMMIT
- 1 January 1969
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa
- Vol. 38 (4) , 387-398
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00359196909519099
Abstract
A collection of marine organisms, made in 1964 on the summit region of the volcanic Vema Seamount, situated some 450 miles off the west coast of South Africa, is discussed. The general terrain of the summit was rocky, and kelp, lesser algae and encrusting animals were dominant. The collection consisted of some 22 species of algae and over 105 species of benthic invertebrates. The three largest zoogeographical groups of animals on the Seamount were (a) the endemic species (28%, of which the majority belonged to the little known Porifera and Ascidiacea), (b) the cosmopolitan, and those species with a scattered distribution (27%) and (c) those species found only on the Seamount and in South Africa (25%). Species found on the Seamount whose distribution was limited to the Indo-Pacific region, and to West Africa and Europe with some overlapping into South Africa, amounted each to about 10% of the fauna. Only one species, the rock lobster, Jasus tristani, is confined to the Seamount and the relatively close Tristan da Cunha group of islands.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- A COLLECTION OF ASCIDIANS FROM THE VEMA SEAMOUNTTransactions of the Royal Society of South Africa, 1968
- A collection of Sipuncula taken on the summit of the Vema sea-mount, South Atlantic OceanAnnals and Magazine of Natural History, 1966
- Vema SeamountNature, 1965