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      Biogeography and ecological setting of Indian Ocean hydrothermal vents.

      Science (New York, N.Y.)
      Animals, Bacteria, classification, isolation & purification, Bacterial Physiological Phenomena, Biological Evolution, Biomass, Decapoda (Crustacea), physiology, Ecosystem, Euryarchaeota, Geography, Geologic Sediments, microbiology, Hot Temperature, Invertebrates, Molecular Sequence Data, Mollusca, Oceans and Seas, Seawater, Symbiosis

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          Abstract

          Within the endemic invertebrate faunas of hydrothermal vents, five biogeographic provinces are recognized. Invertebrates at two Indian Ocean vent fields (Kairei and Edmond) belong to a sixth province, despite ecological settings and invertebrate-bacterial symbioses similar to those of both western Pacific and Atlantic vents. Most organisms found at these Indian Ocean vent fields have evolutionary affinities with western Pacific vent faunas, but a shrimp that ecologically dominates Indian Ocean vents closely resembles its Mid-Atlantic counterpart. These findings contribute to a global assessment of the biogeography of chemosynthetic faunas and indicate that the Indian Ocean vent community follows asymmetric assembly rules biased toward Pacific evolutionary alliances.

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