Browse > Article
http://dx.doi.org/10.9710/kjm.2014.30.3.281

Biogeography of marine bivalve mollusks of eastern Korea  

Lutaenko, Konstantin A. (A.V. Zhirmunsky Institute of Marine Biology, Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences)
Noseworthy, Ronald G. (Faculty of Marine Biomedical Sciences, Jeju National University)
Publication Information
The Korean Journal of Malacology / v.30, no.3, 2014 , pp. 281-293 More about this Journal
Abstract
The biogeography and diversity patterns of the marine bivalve molluscan fauna of the East Sea coast of South Korea are analyzed. The total species richness of the continental Korean bivalve fauna, excluding insular regions (Dok-do and Ullung-do), is 304, and from north to south the species richness of bivalves increases showing a clear gradient: Gangwon, 143 species ${\rightarrow}$ Gyeongbuk, 131 ${\rightarrow}$ Gyeongnam, 183. A zonal-geographical analysis of the entire fauna shows that the great majority are warm-water mollusks, constituting 77% (subtropical, 37%, tropical-subtropical, 30%, subtropical-boreal, 10%), The number of boreal (low-boreal, widely distributed boreal and circumboreal) species is lower, 19%, whereas boreal-arctic mollusks have only 4%. This demonstrates that the bivalve molluscan fauna of the eastern coast of Korea is subtropical, and has more affinities to the fauna of the East China Sea than to the northern East Sea. Separate analysis by provinces shows the increasing role of warm-water mollusks from north to south. While tropical-subtropical and subtropical species constitute 47% (68 species) in Gangwon, their dominance increases to 71% (93 species) in Gyeongbuk, and to 80% (148 species) in Gyeongnam. The Gyeongnam bivalve fauna is the most diverse in species composition and has the largest number of "endemics" (species known only from this province), 46%. The Gangwon fauna also contains many "endemics", up to 40%, while Gyeongbuk is an intermediate zone with low "endemicity", only at one-fifth of the regional fauna, and has the most species in common among the three provinces.
Keywords
bivalve mollusks; species richness; biogeography; zonation; Korea; East Sea;
Citations & Related Records
Times Cited By KSCI : 5  (Citation Analysis)
연도 인용수 순위
1 Amano K. (2005) Migration and adaptation of late Cenozoic cold-water molluscs in the North Pacific. In: Migrations of Organisms. Climate, Geography, Ecology (ed. by Eleva, A.M.T.). Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. P. 127-150.
2 Briggs, J.C. (1974) Marine Zoogeography. 475 pp. McGraw-Hill Book Co., New York, etc.
3 Golikov, A.N. and Scarlato, O.A. (1967) Molluscs of the Possjet Bay (the Sea of Japan) and their ecology. Proceedings of the Zoological Institute, USSR Academy of Sciences, 42: 5-154. [in Russian].
4 Hall, C.A. (1964) Shallow-water marine climates and molluscan provinces. Ecology, 45: 226-234.   DOI
5 Higo, S., Callomon, P. and Goto, Y. (1999) Catalogue and Bibliography of the Marine Shell-bearing Mollusca of Japan. 749 pp. Elle Scientific Publications, Osaka.
6 Honma, Y. and Kitami, T. (1978) Fauna and flora in the waters adjacent to the Sado Marine Biological Station, Niigata University. Annual Report of the Sado Marine Biological Station, Niigata University, 8: 7-81.
7 Honma, Y. and Kitami, T. (1979) Fauna and flora in the waters adjacent to the Sado Marine Biological Station, Niigata University: supplement 1. Annual Report of the Sado Marine Biological Station, Niigata University, 9: 27-36.
8 Kafanov, A.I. (1991) Bivalve Molluscs and Faunistic Biogeography of the Northern Pacific. 195 pp. Far East Branch, USSR Academy of Sciences, Vladivostok. [in Russian with English abstract].
9 Honma, Y. and Kitami, T. (1995) Fauna and flora in the waters adjacent to the Sado Marine Biological Station, Niigata University; supplement 2. Annual Report of the Sado Marine Biological Station, Niigata University, 25: 13-30.
10 Ito, K. (1990) Distribution of molluscan shells in Wakasa Bay, Japan Sea. Bulletin of the Japan Sea National Fisheries Research Institute, 40: 79-211. [in Japanese with English abstract].
11 Ito, K., Matano, Y., Yamada, Y., and Igarashi, S. (1986) Shell species caught [by] S/S Rokko-Maru off the coast [of] Ishikawa Prefecture. Bulletin of the Ishikawa Prefectural Fisheries Experimental Station, 4: 1-179. [in Japanese with English abstract].
12 Kafanov, A.I., Volvenko, I.V., Fedorov, V.V. and Pitruk, D.L. (2000) Ichthyofaunistic biogeography of the Japan (East) Sea. Journal of Biogeography, 27: 915-933.   DOI   ScienceOn
13 Kolpakov, E.V. and Kolpakov, N.V. (2004) Distribution and growth of bivalve mollusc Mercenaria stimpsoni in Inokov Bay (north Primorye). Izvestiya TINRO, 136: 197-204. [in Russian with English abstract].
14 Kuroda, T. (1957) A catalogue of molluscan shells of Sado Island, Sea of Japan. Transactions of the Sado Natural History Society, 1: 13-32. [in Japanese].
15 Kussakin, O.G. (1990) Biogeography of isopod crustaceans in the boreal Pacific. Bulletin of Marine Science, 46: 620-639.
16 Kwon, Y.W. and Lee, J.D. (Eds.). (2010) The Geography of Korea. 432 pp. National Geographic Information Institute (NGII), Suwon.
17 Lee, J.-S. and Min, D.-K. (2002) A catalogue of molluscan fauna in Korea. Korean Journal of Malacology, 18: 93-217. [in Korean with English abstract].   과학기술학회마을
18 Lutaenko, K.A. (2014) Bivalve mollusks in Ulsan Bay (Korea). Korean Journal of Malacology, 30: 57-77.   과학기술학회마을   DOI
19 Lutaenko, K.A. (2006) Bivalve mollusks of Ussuriysky Bay (Sea of Japan). Part 2. Bulletin of the Russian Far East Malacological Society, 10: 46-66.
20 Lutaenko, K.A. (2010) Bivalve molluscan biogeography of the Japan Sea: an overview. In: Proceedings of China-Russia Bilateral Symposium on "Comparison on Marine Biodiversity in the Northwest Pacific Ocean", 10-11 October 2010, Qingdao, China. IOCAS, Qingdao. P. 1-6.
21 Lutaenko, K.A. (2012) Zonal-biogeographical analysis of bivalve molluscan faunas in three major areas of the western Sea of Japan. In: Proceedings of the Russia-China Bilateral Symposium on Marine Ecosystems under the Global Change in the Northwestern Pacific, Vladivostok, Russia, October 8-9, 2012 (ed. by Lutaenko, K.A.). Dalnauka, Vladivostok. P. 89-94.
22 Lutaenko, K.A., Je, J.-G. and Shin, S.-H. (2006) Bivalve mollusks in Yeongil Bay, Korea. 2. Faunal analysis. Korean Journal of Malacology, 22: 63-86.   과학기술학회마을
23 Lutaenko, K.A. and Noseworthy, R.G. (2012) Catalogue of the Living Bivalvia of the Continental Coast of the Sea of Japan (East Sea). 247 pp. Dalnauka, Vladivostok.
24 Lutaenko, K.A. and Noseworthy, R.G. (2014) Biodiversity and biogeographical patterns of bivalve mollusks in the Sea of Japan. In: Marine Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics of the North-Western Pacific Ocean (ed. by Sun, S., Adrianov, A.V., Lutaenko, K.A., Sun X. Science Press, Beijing. P. 160-188.
25 Lutaenko, K.A. and Pretsiniek, I.P. (2014) On the bivalve molluscan fauna of North Hamgyong Province (North Korea). Bulletin of the Russian Far East Malacological Society, 18: 63-78. [in Russian with English abstract].
26 Min, D.-K., Lee, J.-S., Koh, D.-B. and Je, J.-G. (2004) Mollusks in Korea. 566 pp. Min Molluscan Research Institute, Seoul. [in Korean].
27 Nishimura, S. (1965) The zoogeographical aspects of the Japan Sea. Part I. Publications of the Seto Marine Biological Laboratory, 13: 35-79.
28 Rex, M.A., Crame, J.A., Stuart, C.T. and Clarke, A. (2005) Large-scale biogeographic patterns in marine mollusks: a confluence of history and productivity? Ecology, 86: 2288-2297.   DOI
29 Ryu, S.-H., Jang, K.-H., Choi, E.-H., Kim, S.-K., Song, S.-J., Cho, H.-J., Ryu, J.-S., Kim, Y.-M., Sagong, J., Lee, J.-H., Yeo, M.-Y., Bahn, S.-Y., Kim, H.-M., Lee, G.-S., Lee, D.-H., Choo, Y.-S., Pak, J.-H., Park, J.-S., Ryu, J.-S., Khim, J.-S. and Hwang, U.-W. (2012) Biodiversity of marine invertebrates on rocky shores of Dokdo, Korea. Zoological Studies, 51(5): 710-726.
30 Noseworthy, R.G., Lim, N.-R. and Choi, K.-S. (2007) Catalogue of the mollusks of Jeju Island, South Korea. Korean Journal of Malacology, 23: 65-104.   과학기술학회마을
31 Rho, B.J., Choe, B.L., Song, J.-I., Park, K.S., Lee, I.-S. and Park, J.-K. (1997) An analysis of invertebrate community at the tidal and subtidal zone in Onsan Bay with regard to the effect of pollution. Korean Journal of Environmental Biology, 15: 79-88. [in Korean with English abstract].
32 Scarlato, O.A. (1981) Bivalve mollusks of temperate latitudes of the western portion of the Pacific Ocean. Guide-Books on the Fauna of the USSR Published by the Zoological Institute, USSR Academy of Sciences, 126: 1-479. [In Russian].
33 Sedova, L.G. and Sokolenko, D.A. (2008) Stock and distribution of the scallop Mizuhopecten yessoensis in the southwestern part of Peter the Great Bay. Izvestiya TINRO, 155: 76-87. [in Russian with English abstract].
34 Sedova, L.G., Sokolenko, D.A., Borisovets, E.E., Afeichuk, L.S. and Bratishchev, V.S. (2007) Resources of commercial bivalve molluscs in Peter the Great Bay. Trudy VNIRO, 147: 320-334. [in Russian].
35 Yi, S.K., Hong, J.-S., and Lee, J.H. (1982) A study on the subtidal benthic community in Ulsan Bay, Korea. Bulletin of Korea Ocean Research and Development Institute, 4: 17-26.
36 Willig, M.R., Kaufman, D.M. and Stevens, R.D. (2003) Latitudinal gradients of biodiversity: pattern, process, scale, and synthesis. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, 34: 273-309.   DOI   ScienceOn
37 Xu, F. (1997) Bivalve Mollusca of China Seas. 333 pp. Science Press, Beijing. [in Chinese].
38 Xu, F. and Zhang, J. (2011) Characteristics of bivalve diversity in typical habitats of China seas. Biodiversity Science, 19(6): 716-722. [in Chinese with English abstract].
39 Yoo, S.K. and Park, K.Y. (1979) Distribution of drifting larvae of scallop, Patinopecten yessoensis, in the Yeong-il Bay. Journal of the Oceanological Society of Korea, 14: 54-60.