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Located in the heart of the South Pacific Ocean, the French Polynesian islands represent a remarkable setting for biological colonization and diversification, because of their isolation. Our knowledge of this region's biodiversity is nevertheless still incomplete for many groups of organisms. In the late 1990s and 2000s, a series of publications provided the first checklists of French Polynesian marine algae, including the Chlorophyta, Rhodophyta, Ochrophyta, and Cyanobacteria, established mostly on traditional morphology-based taxonomy. We initiated a project to systematically DNA barcode the marine flora of French Polynesia. Based on a large collection of ~2452 specimens, made between 2014 and 2023, across the five French Polynesian archipelagos, we re-assessed the marine floral species diversity (Alismatales, Cyanobacteria, Rhodophyta, Ochrophyta, Chlorophyta) using DNA barcoding in concert with morphology-based classification. We provide here a major revision of French Polynesian marine flora, with an updated listing of 702 species including 119 Chlorophyta, 169 Cyanobacteria, 92 Ochrophyta, 320 Rhodophyta, and 2 seagrass species-nearly a two-fold increase from previous estimates. This study significantly improves our knowledge of French Polynesian marine diversity and provides a valuable DNA barcode reference library for identification purposes and future taxonomic and conservation studies. A significant part of the diversity uncovered from French Polynesia corresponds to unidentified lineages, which will require careful future taxonomic investigation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology12081124 | DOI Listing |
Med Trop Sante Int
July 2025
Unité des maladies infectieuses et tropicales et CIC Inserm 1424, Centre hospitalier de Cayenne, Cayenne, Guyane.
Tahiti or the "myth of Paradise", Bora Bora, "the Pearl of the Pacific". Who has never wanted to take a plane and come and land on the heavenly beaches of Polynesia, a French territory at the antipodes of mainland France lost in the middle of the Pacific? However, we do not imagine that 60% of Polynesians live below the metropolitan low-income threshold or that life expectancy is lower than that of the mainland due to the high prevalence of cardiovascular diseases with three quarters overweight population.In addition to non-transmissible metabolic diseases, various pathologies common to temperate countries present specificities in Polynesia, leading to sometimes different management and medical reasoning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZookeys
July 2025
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California Santa Cruz, 115 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz, CA 95060, USA.
Anemonefishes (Teleostei, Pomacentridae) comprise approximately 28 species of damselfishes that exclusively live symbiotically with sea anemones. Distribution ranges vary, with some species only found in few isolated islands and others with ranges that span almost the entire Indo-Pacific. The orange-fin anemonefish, shows a wide distribution, from Australia to French Polynesia, extending north to Micronesia and the Marshall Islands.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetologia
September 2025
Department of Nephrology, Université de Lorraine, CHRU-Nancy, Nancy, France.
Aims/hypothesis: Māori, a Polynesian population, have an earlier age of onset of type 2 diabetes and higher risk of diabetes-related complications compared with New Zealanders of European descent, and an increased incident rate ratio for end stage kidney disease. No data are available regarding the evolutive characteristics of diabetic kidney disease (DKD) in individuals living in French Polynesia.
Methods: We aimed to compare the retrospectively collected characteristics and outcomes of 92 and 63 individuals from French Polynesia and mainland France, respectively, presenting type 2 diabetes and biopsy-confirmed DKD, focusing on kidney survival, analysis of the Renal Pathology Society (RPS) score and participant survival.
Science
June 2025
Instituto de Física Interdisciplinar y Sistemas Complejos (IFISC), CSIC-UIB, Palma de Mallorca, Spain.
The recent Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) sets ambitious goals but no clear pathway for how zero loss of important biodiversity areas and halting human-induced extinction of threatened species will be achieved. We assembled a multi-taxa tracking dataset (11 million geopositions from 15,845 tracked individuals across 121 species) to provide a global assessment of space use of highly mobile marine megafauna, showing that 63% of the area that they cover is used 80% of the time as important migratory corridors or residence areas. The GBF 30% threshold (Target 3) will be insufficient for marine megafauna's effective conservation, leaving important areas exposed to major anthropogenic threats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Biol Rep
May 2025
PSL Research University, CNRS-EPHE-UPVD, UAR3278 CRIOBE, Perpignan, 66860, France.
Background: Atrina vexillum (Born, 1778) is a bivalve mollusk indigenous to the Indo-Pacific coastal regions. Despite being a species of high ecological and economic value, it remains largely understudied and estimates of population genetic diversity and structure are urgently needed. Microsatellite markers are useful for assessing population genetic structure due to their high polymorphism.
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