TL;DR: The first phylogeny of the Holothuriidae is presented, using 8 species from the 5 currently recognized genera and based on approximately 540 nucleotides from a polymerase chain reaction–amplified and conserved 3′ section of 16S mitochondrial ribosomal DNA.
Abstract: Members of the Holothuriidae, found globally at low to middle latitudes, are often a dominant component of Indo–West Pacific coral reefs. We present the first phylogeny of the group, using 8 species from the 5 currently recognized genera and based on approximately 540 nucleotides from a polymerase chain reaction–amplified and conserved 3′ section of 16S mitochondrial ribosomal DNA. Parsimony and likelihood analyses returned identical topologies, permitting several robust inferences to be drawn. Several points corroborated the Linnean classification. Actinopyga and Bohadschia each appear monophyletic and Pearsonothuria is sister to Bohadschia. Other aspects of our phylogeny, however, were not in accord with the taxonomy of Holothuriidae or previous speculations about the group’s evolutionary history. Most notably, the genus Holothuria appears paraphyletic. Actinopyga and Bohadschia, sometimes held to be closely related to one another because of certain morphologic similarities, are only distantly related. The morphologically distinct Labidodemas, even thought to warrant separation at the family level, is nested well within Holothuria. A maximum parsimony reconstruction of ancestral ossicle form on the phylogeny indicated that, in addition to a probable bout of elaboration in ossicle form (the modification of rods or rosettes to holothuriid-type buttons), at least 2 rounds of ossicle simplification also transpired in which buttons reverted to rods or rosettes. Cuvierian tubules, defensive organs unique to numerous members of Holothuriidae, were probably present before the initial radiation of the family, but the reconstruction is ambiguous as to their ancestral function.
TL;DR: This study examines the potential sea cucum-ber fishery in Turkey and examines existing sea cucumber stocks and fishery activities in Tur-key.
Abstract: Commercial sea cucumber species in the Aegean Sea, Mediterranean Sea and the Sea of Marmara in Turkey are not consumed domestically but are exported to Asian countries. It is thought that 37 species in the family Holothuriidae are found in the Mediterranean (Fischer et al. 1987). Prior to 2002, there was no regulation regarding the harvesting of commercial sea cucumbers. In 2002, a regulation was established prohibiting sea cucumber fishing during the reproduction period in order to protect sea cucumber stocks (Anonymous 2002). However, there is very little information concerning existing sea cucumber stocks and fishery activities in Tur-key. This study examines the potential sea cucum-ber fishery in Turkey.
TL;DR: This work investigates the systematics of the genus Holothuria in the Mediterranean Sea and Northeastern Atlantic in the light of a wider molecular phylogenetic hypothesis of Holothuriidae, and provides a time-scale for the family diversification using mitochondrial markers and the molecular clock hypothesis.