Joan J. Soto-Angel

Joan J. Soto-Angel
University of Bergen | UiB · Department of Natural History, University Museum of Bergen

PhD

About

28
Publications
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222
Citations

Publications

Publications (28)
Article
Full-text available
The biogeography of the Southern Ocean and its subdivisions has attracted the interest of the scientific community for many years, especially for those border regions with great sub-Antarctic influence. The Scotia Arc, located between the Antarctic Peninsula and the Magellan region, has been considered as a biogeographic bridge and hence widely dis...
Article
Hydrozoans are a ubiquitous component of the marine benthos which may occur associated with a wide range of taxa. Some of these associations have been recently reviewed, while others remain mostly unexplored, such as the case of hydrozoans and brachyuran crabs. The present study describes a novel association between the ptilocodiid Hydrichthella ep...
Article
Full-text available
The Arctic and Antarctic share many oceanographical features but differ greatly in their geological histories. These divergent aspects lead to similarities and differences between the sets of species inhabiting the poles. However, the patterns are not unambiguously homogenous throughout the tree of life. For the first time, Hydrozoa (Leptothecata a...
Article
Hydrozoans are a conspicuous component of Antarctic benthic communitites. Recent taxonomic effort has led to a substantial increase in knowledge on the diversity of benthic hydroids from some areas of the Southern Ocean, including the Weddell Sea, the largest sea in the Antarctic region. However, the study of many hydrozoan taxa are still pending,...
Article
Full-text available
Reverse development, or the ability to rejuvenate by morphological reorganization into the preceding life cycle stage is thought to be restricted to a few species within Cnidaria. To date, Turritopsis dohrnii is the only known species capable of undergoing reverse development after the onset of sexual reproduction. Here, we demonstrate that the cte...
Article
Full-text available
Gelatinous zooplankton (GZ), play a crucial role in marine food webs, nutrient cycling, and carbon sequestration, however, quantifying their abundances remains challenging due to their delicate body structure, complex life cycles and variable population dynamics. Their tendency to form sporadic, large-scale aggregations further complicate the diffe...
Preprint
Full-text available
Reverse development, or the ability to rejuvenate by morphological reorganization into the preceding life cycle stage is thought to be restricted to a few species within Cnidaria. To date, the cnidarian Turritopsis dohrnii is the only known species capable of undergoing reverse development after the onset of sexual reproduction. Here, we demonstrat...
Article
Ctenophores are marine organisms attracting significant attention from evolutionary biology, molecular biology, and ecological research. Here, we describe an easy and affordable setup to maintain a stable culture of the ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi. The challenging delicacy of the lobate ctenophores can be met by monitoring the water quality, provi...
Article
Full-text available
The Southern Ocean harbours rich deep-sea ecosystems with local hotspots of benthic biodiversity. Still, many species, including deep-water octocorals, remain undescribed despite the fact that the exploration of the deep-sea has improved thanks to recent technological advances. In this context, a new species of golden gorgonian has been collected a...
Article
A fundamental breakthrough in neurobiology has been the formulation of the neuron doctrine by Santiago Ramón y Cajal, which stated that the nervous system is composed of discrete cells. Electron microscopy later confirmed the doctrine and allowed the identification of synaptic connections. In this work, we used volume electron microscopy and three-...
Article
Full-text available
Knowledge of life histories is crucial for understanding ecological and evolutionary processes, but for many hydrozoan species only incomplete life cycles have been described due to challenges in linking hydromedusae with their polyp stages. Using a combination of DNA barcoding, morphology, and ecological information, we describe for the first time...
Preprint
Full-text available
A fundamental breakthrough in neurobiology has been the formulation of the neuron doctrine by Santiago Ramon y Cajal, which states that the nervous system is composed of discrete individual cells. Electron microscopy later confirmed the doctrine and allowed the identification of synaptic connections. Here we use volume electron microscopy and 3D re...
Preprint
Full-text available
Ctenophores are marine organisms attracting significant attention from evolutionary, molecular biology and ecological research. Here we describe an easy and affordable setup to maintain a stable culture of the ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi. The challenging delicacy of the lobate ctenophores can be met by monitoring the water quality, providing the r...
Article
Ctenophores are gelatinous marine animals famous for locomotion by ciliary combs. Due to the uncertainties of the phylogenetic placement of ctenophores and the absence of some key bilaterian neuronal genes, it has been hypothesized that their neurons evolved independently. Additionally, recent whole-body, single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) anal...
Preprint
Full-text available
The ctenophore nerve net represents one of the earliest evolved nervous system of animals. Due to the uncertainties of their phylogenetic placement of ctenophores and the absence of several key bilaterian neuronal genes, it has been hypothesized that their neurons have evolved independently. Whether this is indeed the case remains unclear, and thus...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
The Arctic and Antarctic, located at the opposite poles are the two coldest regions on Earth, sharing similarly extreme environment but differing in their geological histories, geomorphology and connectivity. The main aim of the present study is to examine whether and how the divergent features of both polar regions influence Hydrozoa (here Leptoth...
Article
Full-text available
This work is the first attempt to assess the biodiversity of the Hydrozoa in the Archipiélago de Bocas del Toro (Panamá, Caribbean Sea) using morphology and molecular taxonomy, and to produce field identification tools to help future identification and monitoring efforts in the area. We sampled, identified, vouchered, and barcoded 112 specimens of...
Article
Full-text available
Benthic hydroids are an important component of the Antarctic benthic ecosystem. They have been studied since the first Antarctic expeditions, and in recent years, there has been an important increase in biodiversity studies. In order to analyse the relationship among different areas and validate/dismiss previous biogeographical hypotheses, we have...
Article
Benthic hydrozoans are one of the most speciose and characteristic taxa from the Antarctic region, with a high number of endemic species, but diversity at the genus level is low and some families with world wide distribution are unrepresented. This is the case of the family Aglaopheniidae. A new species to science of the genus Aglaophenia Lamouroux...
Article
The Scotia Arc, located between the Antarctic Peninsula and the southern tip of South America, is an important zone from the biogeographic point of view. Its benthic biodiversity has been extensively documented with a few exceptions, among others, the hydroid fauna, which constitutes one of the major components of the benthic Antarctic communities....
Article
Forty species of benthic hydroids, belonging to 15 families and 21 genera, were found in a collection, obtained by SCUBA diving, from the Maltese Islands. Paradoxically for the well studied Mediterranean region, the hydroid fauna of these islands is virtually unexplored. Of 40 species, 33 were identified to species level, with 28 of them reported f...

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