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EDITORIAL article
Front. Mar. Sci.
Sec. Marine Biology
Volume 11 - 2024 |
doi: 10.3389/fmars.2024.1529867
This article is part of the Research Topic Advances in crustacean research from the 10th International Crustacean Congress View all 12 articles
Editorial: Advances in crustacean research from the 10th International Crustacean Congress
Provisionally accepted- National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA), Auckland, New Zealand
Crustaceans are among the most abundant and diverse organisms on Earth. Due to their diversity and abundance and their occurrence in the terrestrial, freshwater, groundwater, marine and fossil environments, crustaceans are an integral part of ecosystems and ecosystem functioning. They are at the forefront of international studies of neurobiology, aquaculture, toxicology, biosecurity, biodiversity evolution and many more. Crustaceans can also provide a signal for coming and present environmental change aiding the management of fisheries and anthropogenic activity.Every four years, the Crustacean Society (TCS) hosts an International Crustacean Congress (ICC), where international delegates share research covering a broad range of disciplines related to our world's Crustacea. In May 2023, the International Society of Invertebrate Reproduction and Development (ISIRD) and TCS jointly held the 10th ICC for the first time in Aotearoa New Zealand, hosted by the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and the National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research (NIWA). The program was dedicated to the dissemination of all aspects of crustacean research and to promoting the exchange of information and ideas related to carcinology. This Research Topic hosts some of the general proceedings of the conference and the results highlight the significance and importance of understanding the diversity and function of a globally critical group of organisms.In this Research Topic, 11 papers by 42 authors collaboratively address issues related to a variety of crustacean topics. The papers published covered a number of different groups of crustaceans; from peracarids to decapods and in a range of habitats, from freshwater to the deep-sea. Questions address the understanding of environmental/climate factors such as the Southern Oscillation Index as drivers of macrobenthic crustacean distribution, abundance and species richness in New Zealand estuaries (Lam-Gordillo et al., 2023). Climate change as a driver of habitat change is also considered by Katharoyan et al., (2024) who examine its effects Formatted: Font: Not Italic on South African mangrove and salt marsh crab populations. Freshwater prawns are considered in a study examining the cell metabolism of freshwater prawns providing a baseline for further cell culturing of crustaceans, with implications for fisheries and population sustainability (Sudarshan et al. 2024). Aspects of crustacean larval biology are considered in an examination of how even at a larval stage the presence of marine protected areas can influence the abundance and resilience of crustacean communities (Landeira et al., 2024). The influence of the immediate environment around crustaceans on their behaviour is examined concluding that fiddler crabs can reduce errors and learn complex routes in returning to their homebases (Chatterji & Layne, 2024). Fishery associated crustacean research wais covered in the ICC10 congress proceedings, represented here by a study of artisanal fisheries in Northern Patagonia, concluding that there is a necessity to monitor the effects of seasonal variations on the reproductiveon cycle of crabs used in this example of a small-scale fisheries (Hamamé et al., 2024). Bridging studies from the shallow to the deep water, and for the first time presenting molecular probes (ultraconserved elements) for crustaceans, Geburzi et al. (2024) discuss crustacean the use of crustacean specific molecular probes (ultraconserved elements) in conservation genetics and evolutionary studies in both the shallow water and deep-sea environments., as Tthis approach provides opportunities to include poorly preserved and rare specimens in these types of studies. Different aspects of the deep-sea crustacean biology are also considered by examining the connectivity between deep-sea biogeographic provinces (e.g. by theby study ofing the tanaid superfamily Neotanaoidea), highlighting complex and generally understudied processes in the deep-sea (Theil & Błaż ewicz, 2024). Continuing the deep-sea focus, Casaubon & Riehl (2024) describe specific morphological measurement techniques to help understand functional morphology of deep-sea isopods collected from Icelandic waters. This Special Research Topic concludes with taxonomic descriptions of two new species: a ghost shrimp of the family Callianopsidae which is recorded for the first time from the waters off Aotearoa New Zealand (Schnabel & Peart, 2024), and a new species of Pentaceration isopod from the family Paramunnidae, also from the waters off Aotearoa New Zealand (Peart & Schnabel, 2024). The global importance of the rich, unique and valuable biodiversity of crustaceans in ecosystems and global fisheries is undeniable. Unfortunately, it is this abundance, diversity and complexity that causes the most difficulties in studying these environments. Proportionally we know so little of the cell structure, functional morphology, biochemical responses, ecotoxicology and systematics of the crustaceans. It is essential to continually have conferences such as the International Crustacean Congress to inform and promote the world of crustacean research to try and fill these gaps.
Keywords: Editorial, Crustacea, New Zealand, international, congress
Received: 18 Nov 2024; Accepted: 03 Dec 2024.
Copyright: © 2024 Peart and Schnabel. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
* Correspondence:
Rachael A Peart, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA), Auckland, New Zealand
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