4 results on '"Marzia Bo"'
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2. Distribution and population structure of deep-dwelling red coral in the Northwest Mediterranean
- Author
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Simonepietro Canese, Andrea Gori, Fabrizio Erra, Michela Angiolillo, Michael Greenacre, Marzia Bo, Giorgio Bavestrello, Giovanni Santangelo, Cristina Priori, Eva Salvati, Angiolillo, Michela, Gori, Andrea, Canese, Simonepietro, Bo, Marzia, Priori, Cristina, Bavestrello, Giorgio, Salvati, Eva, Erra, Fabrizio, Greenacre, Michael, and Santangelo, Giovanni
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Mediterranean climate ,Range (biology) ,Corallium rubrum ,deep sublittoral zone ,demographic structure ,Mediterranean Sea ,precious corals ,ROV imaging ,Corallium rubrum, deep sublitoral zone, demographic structure, precious corals, ROV ,Coral ,Population ,Aquatic Science ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Mediterranean sea ,Deep sublittoral zone ,Demographic structure ,Bathymetry ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,deep sublitoral zone ,Sediment ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematic ,Oceanography ,Geography ,ROV ,Conservation status ,Precious coral - Abstract
Commercially harvested since ancient times, the highly valuable red coral Corallium rubrum (Linnaeus, 1758) is an octocoral endemic to the Mediterranean Sea and adjacent Eastern Atlantic Ocean, where it occurs on rocky bottoms over a wide bathymetric range. Current knowledge is restricted to its shallow populations (15–50 m depth), with comparably little attention given to the deeper populations (50–200 m) that are nowadays the main target of exploitation. In this study, red coral distribution and population structure were assessed in three historically exploited areas (Amalfi, Ischia Island and Elba Island) in the Tyrrhenian Sea (Western Mediterranean Sea) between 50 and 130 m depth by means of ROV during a cruise carried out in the summer of 2010. Red coral populations showed a maximum patch frequency of 0.20 ± 0.04 SD patches·m−1 and a density ranging between 28 and 204 colonies·m−2, with a fairly continuous bathymetric distribution. The highest red coral densities in the investigated areas were found on cliffs and boulders mainly exposed to the east, at the greatest depth, and characterized by medium percentage sediment cover. The study populations contained a high percentage (46% on average) of harvestable colonies (>7 mm basal diameter). Moreover, some colonies with fifth-order branches were also observed, highlighting the probable older age of some components of these populations. The Ischia population showed the highest colony occupancy, density and size, suggesting a better conservation status than the populations at the other study locations. These results indicate that deep dwelling red coral populations in non-stressed or less-harvested areas may diverge from the inverse size-density relationship previously observed in red coral populations with increasing depth.
- Published
- 2015
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3. The coral assemblages of an off-shore deep Mediterranean rocky bank (NW Sicily, Italy)
- Author
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Marzia Bo, Eva Salvati, Michela Angiolillo, Simonepietro Canese, Giovanni Santangelo, Carlo Cerrano, and Giorgio Bavestrello
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Mediterranean climate ,Deep sea anthozoans, off-shore banks, ROV imaging, Suspension feeders ,Ecology ,biology ,suspension feeders ,Coral ,Fauna ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Black coral ,Deep sea anthozoans ,ROV imaging ,ROV-imaging ,Oceanography ,Gorgonian ,Mediterranean sea ,Habitat ,Benthic zone ,Deep-sea anthozoans ,Mediterranean Sea ,off-shore banks ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Geology - Abstract
In this study we characterized the deep assemblages dwelling at 200–250 m depth on a large shoal off Capo St. Vito Promontory (Northwestern coast of Sicily, South Tyrrhenian Sea) by means of ROV-imaging. Two assemblages of suspension feeders, dominated by the gorgonian Callogorgia verticillata and by the black coral Leiopathes glaberrima, together with a tanatocoenosis of the colonial yellow scleractinian coral Dendrophyllia cornigera, were examined. The three main species were significatively distributed into two areas corresponding to different habitat preferences: a more elevated hardground hosting black corals and a gently sloping, silted rocky bottom hosting the other coral species. The study area is subjected to a heavy pressure from the professional fishery, resulting in the mechanical damage of numerous colonies, some of which are then overgrown by various epibionts including a parasitic bioluminescent zoanthid, new for the Mediterranean fauna, and tentatively identified as Isozoanthus primoidus. In the Mediterranean Sea, these deep off-shore rocky banks are widely known among recreational and professional fishermen due to their rich fish fauna. However, there has been still little effort into quantifying and characterizing the extent of the impact and its consequences on the benthic communities, which may represent, as in this case, only a partial picture of their original structure and extent.
- Published
- 2013
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4. Life history of Cornularia cornucopiae (Anthozoa: Octocorallia) on the Conero Promontory (North Adriatic Sea)
- Author
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Federico Betti, Marzia Bo, Cristina Gioia Di Camillo, and Giorgio Bavestrello
- Subjects
Mediterranean climate ,Ecology ,biology ,Octocorallia ,Stolon ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Mediterranean Basin ,Oceanography ,Mediterranean sea ,Habitat ,Benthic zone ,Anthozoa ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The life cycle of the stoloniferan Cornularia cornucopiae (Pallas, 1766) (Anthozoa: Octocorallia) was studied from March 2009 to October 2010 on the rocky cliff of the Conero Promontory (North Adriatic Sea, 43°34.865′ N, 13°34.320′ E). In this area the species showed unusual high densities never recorded in other sites of the Mediterranean Sea. The density trend of the species showed a marked seasonal cycle, with a winter minimum of about 1000 polyps m−2 and a summer maximum of about 30,000 polyps m−2. In accordance with other Mediterranean literature data, polyps were fertile during spring–summer, from March to August, but the number of eggs per polyp continuously decreased during this span of time. Variations of polyp density were strongly correlated to water temperature, which can be considered the main environmental factor triggering this seasonal behaviour. The possibility, for C. cornucopiae, to face adverse winter conditions is probably related to the presence of a characteristic perisarcal envelope covering the stolon and the calyx of each polyp, which isolates the living tissues from the exterior. During winter, polyps degenerate but the stolons remain dormant inside their envelopes. The perisarc covering represents a morphological convergence of C. cornucopiae with benthic hydrozoans. As the latter, the studied stoloniferans are able to live in habitats characterized by periodic favourable conditions thanks to a seasonal life strategy. A similar trend is shared also by other important components (cnidarians and some sponges) of the filter-feeding community of the North Adriatic Sea. Differently to the Western Mediterranean basin, this area is characterized by high food availability all year around, so benthic organisms are strongly constrained by the very low winter temperatures.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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