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      Fauna Europaea: Gastrotricha

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          Abstract

          Abstract

          Fauna Europaea provides a public web-service with an index of scientific names (including important synonyms) of all living European land and freshwater animals, their geographical distribution at country level (up to the Urals, excluding the Caucasus region), and some additional information. The Fauna Europaea project covers about 230,000 taxonomic names, including 130,000 accepted species and 14,000 accepted subspecies, which is much more than the originally projected number of 100,000 species. This represents a huge effort by more than 400 contributing specialists throughout Europe and is a unique (standard) reference suitable for many users in science, government, industry, nature conservation and education.

          Gastrotricha are a meiobenthic phylum composed of 813 species known so far (2 orders, 17 families) of free-living microinvertebrates commonly present and actively moving on and into sediments of aquatic ecosystems, 339 of which live in fresh and brackish waters. The Fauna Europaea database includes 214 species of Chaetonotida (4 families) plus a single species of Macrodasyida incertae sedis. This paper deals with the 224 European freshwater species known so far, 9 of which, all of Chaetonotida , have been described subsequently and will be included in the next database version. Basic information on their biology and ecology are summarized, and a list of selected, main references is given. As a general conclusion the gastrotrich fauna from Europe is the best known compared with that of other continents, but shows some important gaps of knowledge in Eastern and Southern regions.

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          Fauna Europaea – all European animal species on the web

          Abstract Fauna Europaea is Europe's main zoological taxonomic index, making the scientific names and distributions of all living, currently known, multicellular, European land and freshwater animals species integrally available in one authoritative database. Fauna Europaea covers about 260,000 taxon names, including 145,000 accepted (sub)species, assembled by a large network of (>400) leading specialists, using advanced electronic tools for data collations with data quality assured through sophisticated validation routines. Fauna Europaea started in 2000 as an EC funded FP5 project and provides a unique taxonomic reference for many user-groups such as scientists, governments, industries, nature conservation communities and educational programs. Fauna Europaea was formally accepted as an INSPIRE standard for Europe, as part of the European Taxonomic Backbone established in PESI. Fauna Europaea provides a public web portal at faunaeur.org with links to other key biodiversity services, is installed as a taxonomic backbone in wide range of biodiversity services and actively contributes to biodiversity informatics innovations in various initiatives and EC programs.
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            A Transcriptomic-Phylogenomic Analysis of the Evolutionary Relationships of Flatworms

            Summary The interrelationships of the flatworms (phylum Platyhelminthes) are poorly resolved despite decades of morphological and molecular phylogenetic studies [1, 2]. The earliest-branching clades (Catenulida, Macrostomorpha, and Polycladida) share spiral cleavage and entolecithal eggs with other lophotrochozoans. Lecithoepitheliata have primitive spiral cleavage but derived ectolecithal eggs. Other orders (Rhabdocoela, Proseriata, Tricladida and relatives, and Bothrioplanida) all have derived ectolecithal eggs but have uncertain affinities to one another. The orders of parasitic Neodermata emerge from an uncertain position from within these ectolecithal classes. To tackle these problems, we have sequenced transcriptomes from 18 flatworms and 5 other metazoan groups. The addition of published data produces an alignment of >107,000 amino acids with less than 28% missing data from 27 flatworm taxa in 11 orders covering all major clades. Our phylogenetic analyses show that Platyhelminthes consist of the two clades Catenulida and Rhabditophora. Within Rhabditophora, we show the earliest-emerging branch is Macrostomorpha, not Polycladida. We show Lecithoepitheliata are not members of Neoophora but are sister group of Polycladida, implying independent origins of the ectolecithal eggs found in Lecithoepitheliata and Neoophora. We resolve Rhabdocoela as the most basally branching euneoophoran taxon. Tricladida, Bothrioplanida, and Neodermata constitute a group that appears to have lost both spiral cleavage and centrosomes. We identify Bothrioplanida as the long-sought closest free-living sister group of the parasitic Neodermata. Among parasitic orders, we show that Cestoda are closer to Trematoda than to Monogenea, rejecting the concept of the Cercomeromorpha. Our results have important implications for understanding the evolution of this major phylum.
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              Meiobenthology: The microscopic fauna in aquatic sediments

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Biodivers Data J
                Biodivers Data J
                Biodiversity Data Journal
                Biodiversity Data Journal
                Biodiversity Data Journal
                Pensoft Publishers
                1314-2836
                1314-2828
                2015
                14 August 2015
                : 3
                : e5800
                Affiliations
                []Università di Urbino, Urbino, Italy
                [§ ]Museum National d`Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France
                [| ]Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland
                []Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia, Modena, Italy
                [# ]University of Amsterdam - Faculty of Science, Amsterdam, Netherlands
                [¤ ]Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin, Germany
                Author notes
                Corresponding authors: Maria Balsamo ( maria.balsamo@ 123456uniurb.it ), Yde de Jong ( mail@ 123456yjong.net ).

                Academic editor: Pavel Stoev

                Article
                Biodiversity Data Journal 2404
                10.3897/BDJ.3.e5800
                4563153
                076b678d-f13e-45a7-93d9-b91b9a1726ed
                Maria Balsamo, Jean-Loup d`Hondt, Jacek Kisielewski, M. Antonio Todaro, Paolo Tongiorgi, Loretta Guidi, Paolo Grilli, Yde de Jong

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC-BY), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 03 August 2015
                : 12 August 2015
                Page count
                Figures: 4, Tables: 2, References: 38
                Funding
                Funded by: Fauna Europaea was funded by the European Commission under the Fifth Framework Programme and contributed to the Support for Research Infrastructures work programme with Thematic Priority Biodiversity (EVR1-1999-20001) for a period of four years (1 March 2000 - 1 March 2004), including a short 'NAS extension', allowing EU candidate accession countries to participate. Follow-up support was given by the EC-FP6 EDIT project (GCE 018340), by the EC-FP7 PESI project (RI-223806), by the EC-FP7 ViBRANT project (RI-261532) and by the EC-FP7 EU BON project (RTD 308454). For preparing the Gastrotricha data set additional support was received from MIUR (Italian Ministry of University and of Scientific and Technological Research).
                Categories
                Data Paper
                Animalia
                Invertebrata
                Gastrotricha
                Faunistics & Distribution
                Taxonomy
                Catalogues and Checklists
                Data Management
                Systematics
                Nomenclature
                Bioinformatics
                Neogene
                Europe

                fauna europaea,biodiversity informatics,europe,taxonomic indexing,zoology,biodiversity,taxonomy, gastrotricha ,fresh waters

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