Abstract
The biogeography of the South Atlantic was investigated using presence/absence data for euphausiids. Records were taken from recent and historic, as well as published and unpublished data sets. The resulting biogeography is the most complete to date and can be usefully compared with the biogeochemical provinces for the region. A total of six biogeographic provinces were identified from similarity analyses of the 246 five-degree grid squares. These correspond to Antarctic, sub-Antarctic, cold temperate, warm temperate (subtropical) and tropical waters, as well as the Agulhas Current. Congruence with the biogeochemistry of the region is good in the south and emphasises the important determinate role of temperature. However, the biogeography fails to identify coastal and tropical biogeochemical provinces. This can be attributed to the fact that while adjoining areas may share many species in common, their assemblages differ in their quantitative composition. This serves to emphasise differences in provincial functioning.
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Received: 28 May 1997 / Accepted: 15 July 1997
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Gibbons, M. Pelagic biogeography of the South Atlantic Ocean. Marine Biology 129, 757–768 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002270050218
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002270050218