Enhancing knowledge of freshwater microcrustaceans of Hispaniola: new records and potential as biological control agents
Abstract
Some species of freshwater microcrustaceans have been widely used for biological control of mosquito larval populations. These zooplankton communities play an important role against some species of mosquitoes by exerting competitive pressure or predation. However, zooplankters are scarcely studied in many Caribbean islands such as Hispaniola. The goal of this study was to improve the knowledge of these microcrustaceans in order to better understand the biodiversity and ecology of this Antillean island. Samples of zooplankton were taken from 28 ponds in the northern Dominican Republic, during 2020. The total richness of microcrustaceans was 25 species, comprising 17 copepods and eight cladoceran species. Most of the collected species were previously described for the island, and some of them are recorded as potential biological controllers of mosquito larvae populations. Five genera (including six species) of microcrustaceans that inhabit the ponds are provided for the first time for Hispaniola: Simocephalus Schoedler, 1858; Pleuroxus Baird, 1853; Ilyocrytus G.O. Sars, 1861; Apocyclops Lindberg, 1942; and Diacyclops Kiefer, 1927. Here, we discuss these new findings in relation to the competitive and/or predatory potential of these species against mosquito larvae. The present study contributes to improving the knowledge of biodiversity in ponds in the Dominican Republic.
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