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Featured researches published by Fran Ramil.


Marine Biodiversity Records | 2008

New report of the Antarctic ascidian Corella eumyota (Tunicata: Ascidiacea) on the Galician coast (north-west Spain)

M. Varela; S.S. de Matos-Pita; Fran Ramil; Alfonso A. Ramos-Esplá

The first record of the non-indigenous Corella eumyota in the Galicia coast (north-west Spain) is reported. One hundred and forty-one specimens of this solitary ascidian were found on soft bottoms at 12 m depth in the inner part of the Ria de Vigo. This is a species from cooler waters of the southern hemisphere and was recorded for the first time in the northern hemisphere in 2002, in France (Lambert, 2004). The specimens have been compared with Antarctic and South American museum samples. Some intraspecific variability was noted.


Zootaxa | 2015

Additions to thalassinidean fauna (Crustacea: Decapoda) off Mauritania (NW Africa) with the description of a new genus and a new species.

Susana S. De Matos-Pita; Fran Ramil

The Maurit surveys along the Mauritanian coast revealed the small collection of thalassinideans examined in this work. A total of four species were identified, of which Ezaxius ferachevali n. gen., n. sp. is described and figured here. Calocaris macandreae Bell, 1853 is the most abundant species, while the presence of Calocarides coronatus (Trybom, 1904) is confirmed on the West African coast. Trypaea oblonga n. comb. is proposed for Callianassa oblonga Le Loeuff & Intès, 1974 and it has been recaptured for the first time since its original description, with the addition of a female specimen. We also include remarks on the current status of thalassinidean systematics.


The Poster | 2017

Deep-Sea Ecosystems Off Mauritania

A. Ramos; Fran Ramil; S. M. Mohamed Moctar

The waters surrounding the Islamic Republic of Mauritania, located in the Northwest African region, harbour one of the four major upwelling systems and productive areas of the world’s oceans. Along 754 km of the desert coastline, the permanent upwelling phenomena and seasonal shifting of the oceanographic front strongly influence the water mass structures, climate and species distribution in the Mauritanian EEZ . Despite oceanographic and faunistic interest and the threats of demersal deep˗sea fisheries andoil exploration, for the past fewdecades,marine research inMauritaniawas performed to obtain information on the Banc d’Arguin and other coastal ecosystems; only recently, research is being focused on the study of slope habitats. Between 2007 and 2010, the SpanishOceanographic Institute launched a partnership programwith the Mauritanian Institute for Oceanographic Research and Fisheries and the University of Vigo (Spain) to study the resources and ecosystems in Mauritanian deep waters. Four multidisciplinary expeditions were conducted using the Spanish R/V Vizconde de Eza, and geomorphological prospection and oceanographic and biological sampling were performed. Special efforts were made to characterize the Banc d’Arguin canyon systems, the giant coral carbonatemounds barrier and a newly discovered seamount. In this monograph,we tried to compile, in one volume, themainfindings of theMaurit surveys and provide a detailed description of the bathymetry, geomorphology and oceanography, and biodiversity and structure of demersal fishes and benthic communities that inhabit the soft˗ and hard˗bottom habitats of the Mauritanian slope.


Archive | 2017

An Overview on Bathyal Soft-Bottoms Megabenthos Off Mauritania

Fran Ramil; Ana Ramos

The composition and structure of megabenthic communities of bathyal soft-bottoms off Mauritania were analysed, based on data and material collected at 291 trawling stations accomplished during the four Maurit surveys carried out in November–December of 2007–2010. A total of 551,281 specimens with a corresponding wet weight of 2.2 tons were recorded and more than 700 species of benthic invertebrates belonging to 37 high-range taxa were identified. The best-represented group in terms of specific richness was Decapoda with 118 species, followed by Polychaeta , Porifera and Hydrozoa (74–63 species). In terms of biomass , Holothuroidea clearly dominates the megabenthic communities representing the 83% of the total, while in numerical abundance the dominance was shared by Decapoda (39%) and Holothuroidea (34%). The distribution of megabenthos showed latitudinal patterns along the Mauritanian coast, with a decreasing trend southwards for specific richness , Shannon and Pielou indexes , but with a reverse figure for abundance and biomass that reached their maximum values in the southern area. The bathymetric distribution showed a decreasing trend with depth only for Shannon and Pielou but species richness, abundance and biomass reached their highest values in deep waters. Multivariate analysis identified four megabenthic assemblages structured by depth. The giant coral mounds barrier together with the minimum oxygen values obtained at the same depths seems to perform the main faunistic discontinuity separating the shelf and upper slope assemblages from those located at middle and lower slope .


Archive | 2017

Composition and Distribution of Epibenthic and Demersal Assemblages in Mauritanian Deep-Waters

Sara Castillo; Fran Ramil; Ana Ramos

Quantitative data were collected with a 3.5 m beam-trawl gear at 25 stations along five latitudinal transects , covering five bathymetric strata from 100 to 2000 m depth. More than 500 species belonging to 35 epibenthic high-range taxa are present in Mauritanian deep-sea bottom s. Pisces , Decapoda and Polychaeta , represented by 111, 80 and 56 species, respectively, constituted the richest groups, being the first two collected at all stations. Decapoda were dominant in abundance (55.8% of the total), although in biomass they shared their dominance with Actinopterygii and Holothuroidea (29.4, and 26.0%, respectively). Although suspension feeders were represented by 131 species (25.7%), they only accounted for 9% of the abundance and 1% of biomass (small-sized species). Low diversity indices varied widely between localities but showed no latitudinal pattern . Richness and densities decreased with increasing depth, a strongly marked trend in the case of densities, which peaked on the deep shelf and upper slope (150–300 m), while the biomass remain standing showing only minimum values at 500 m depth. Depth seems to be the strongest factor determining the structure and composition of the four main epibenthic assemblages identified on the deep shelf (150 m), upper slope (300–550 m), middle slope (1000 m) and deep slope (1600 m). The two shallowest assemblages were clearly separated from the deeper ones and were typified by different decapods and fish species , while the two deepest assemblages were characterized by echinoderms and fishes.


Deep-Sea Ecosystems Off Mauritania: Research of Marine Biodiversity and Habitats in the Northwest African Margin, 2017, ISBN 978-94-024-1021-1, págs. 481-525 | 2017

The Giant Cold-Water Coral Mounds Barrier Off Mauritania

Ana Ramos; José Luis Sanz; Fran Ramil; Luis Miguel Agudo; Carmen Presas-Navarro

This chapter describes the main features of the giant mounds structure running parallel to the shelf break along the Mauritanian slope between the Senegalese border and Cape Timiris. At over 580 km long, it is the world’s largest identified cold-water coral mounds barrier and, in our opinion, conforms to a single province, the Mauritanian Province . The Maurit series of Spanish-Mauritanian oceanographic surveys collected multibeam echosounder data, performed 16 conductivity-temperature-depth (CTD) profiles and 13 rock dredge samplings , which led to the mapping of the reef complex , oceanographic characterization of water masses and faunistic studies. The reef framework is mostly composed of dead coral, mainly Lophelia pertusa , with a minor fraction of Madrepora oculata . Associated fauna mainly consists of Acesta excavata and other bivalve and prosobranch molluscs, soaked in abundant, fine compacted mud . At least 150 macrobenthic species of 27 high-range taxa inhabit this reef. The coral surface is either almost devoid of sessile fauna or poorly colonized by small encrusting epifaunal species. We only found fragments of living L. pertusa in the four southernmost stations. The multivariate analysis clearly groups some areas where corals and other suspension-feeders exhibit the highest diversity. Despite their small size, the 17 taxa of suspension-feeders represent 75% of abundance and biomass . Surprisingly, despite the unfavourable history of climatic change episodes, current environmental conditions, deterioration and overall faunistic poverty of the mounds, Lophelia specimens still survive in some areas , sheltering communities of apparently similar structure to those on well-developed cold-water coral reefs in Northern Atlantic latitudes.


Zoosystema | 2009

Hydroids of the family Halopterididae (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) collected in the western pacific by various French expeditions

José Ansín Agís; W. Vervoort; Fran Ramil

Ansín Agís J., Vervoort W. & Ramil F. 2009. — Hydroids of the family Halopterididae (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) collected in the western pacific by various French expeditions. Zoosystema 31 (1): 33-61. ABSTRACT This paper is the second result of the study of large collections of Plumularioidea (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa, Leptolida), collected in the seas surrounding New Caledonia, in the Philippines and in Indonesian waters by French expeditions. A total of 13 species belonging to the genera Antennella (five species), Cladoplumaria (one species), Halopteris (four species), Monostaechas (two species) and Corhiza (one species) are described or mentioned in the present report; most of which are illustrated. Three new species, Antennella sinuosa n. sp., Antennella megatheca n. sp. and Corhiza pauciarmata n. sp. are described and another, Halopteris concava (Billard, 1911) is recorded for the first time since the original description. Two species, Antennella sp. and Monostaechas sp. are only identified to the genus level.


Archive | 2017

Echinoderms of the Mauritanian Deep-Sea Waters

Belén Calero; Fran Ramil; Ana Ramos

Echinoderms are the most important taxa of megabenthic invertebrates on the Mauritanian deep-sea floor, both in density and biomass . The phylum is represented by approximately 82 species, Ophiuroidea and Asteroidea being the most diverse classes (25 and 23 species, respectively), followed by Holothuroidea and Echinoidea (19 and 12 species, respectively). Crinoidea is poorly represented by only three species. Holothuroidea (sea cucumbers) are, undoubtedly, the main component of deep Mauritanian echinoderms, accounting for 85.5% of numerical abundance and 96.0% of biomass. Species belonging to Echinothurioida are dominant among the sea urchins . The most common echinoderm species are Phormosoma placenta , Enypniastes eximia , Psilaster cassiope , Benthothuria funebris, Ophiernus alepidotus , Pseudarchaster gracilis gracilis and Ophiura flagellata . The Mauritanian echinoderm fauna are mostly composed of species with Atlantic distribution (80.5%) and a smaller group of wide distribution species (19.5%). Only three species, two sea stars and one ophiuroid, could be considered as endemic to Macaronesian African waters : Hymenaster roseus , Dyptaster mollis and Ophiothrix maculata . The bathymetric distribution of species and multivariate analysis clearly identify two main assemblages : the first groups the stations located on the deep shelf and upper slope (<400 m), and the second stations group located at greater depths along the continental slope .


Archive | 2017

Cephalopods in Mauritanian Waters

Francisco Rocha; Raquel Fernández-Gago; Fran Ramil; Ana Ramos

A total of 16,036 cephalopods belonging to 48 species were caught on the Mauritanian continental shelf and slope, between 80 and 2000 m depth, in November–December of 2007–2010 during the joint Spanish-Mauritanian surveys . Samples were collected using a commercial bottom trawl . Ommastrephidae was the most abundant family (71.1%) in number and weight. Neritic and benthic species of Loliginidae , Octopodidae and Sepiidae represented 7.3, 6.2 and 5.3% of the total number, respectively. A checklist of 132 Mauritanian species is shown. The geographical and bathymetric distribution of species sampled in the area is discussed. Eight species, Mastigoteuthis flammea , Cycloteuthis akimushkin i, Muusoctopus fuscus , M. janarii, Bathypolypus arctic us, B. biardii, B. valdiviae and Graneledone verrucosa are recorded for the first time in Mauritanian waters. This is the first time that M. fuscus is cited in Atlantic waters and that B. valdiviae is observed in the northern hemisphere. Two main cephalopods assemblages , Shelf and Slope, were identified in the zone. Both are largely dominated by ommastrephid species which could constitute an important resource not currently exploited in the area. This work provides the first data on benthic octopods species that inhabit the deep waters of Northwest Africa.


Deep-Sea Ecosystems Off Mauritania: Research of Marine Biodiversity and Habitats in the Northwest African Margin, 2017, ISBN 978-94-024-1021-1, págs. 561-591 | 2017

Wolof’s Knoll: A Small Seamount on the Mauritanian Continental Slope

José Luis Sanz; Fran Ramil; Luis Miguel Agudo; Ana Ramos

One of the objectives of the Maurit˗1011 survey was the environmental and faunistic characterization of a small seamount of 200 m in height, discovered during the Maurit˗0911 expedition, on the upper continental slope south of Nouakchott, at 17°08′ 50″N and 16°46′ 38.1″W. It is an isolated conical structure with small ridges, almost parallel to the edge of the continental shelf and not connected to nearby coral mounds barrier. The geomorphology of this submarine elevation, as well as the debris from a hydrothermal vents or cold seeps discovered in the rock dredge samples suggests a diapiric association because no hydrothermal benthic fauna was found. The summit of the seamount was covered with sponges belonging mainly to the family Geodiidae, and ophiuroids belonging to the suspension-feeders family Ophiotrichidae. We also found accompanying fauna comprising about 50 species, mainly consisting of molluscs and decapods. Despite its small size but taking into account the richness of the suspension-feeders community living on it, this Wolof’s Seamount (so called to honour the artisanal fishermen who first discovered it) could be promoted as a marine protected area in the Mauritanian continental margin.

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Ana Ramos

Rio de Janeiro State University

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