10 results on '"Riera, Joan"'
Search Results
2. The optimal sampling design for littoral habitats modelling: A case study from the north-western Mediterranean.
- Author
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Cefalì, Maria Elena, Ballesteros, Enric, Riera, Joan Lluís, Chappuis, Eglantine, Terradas, Marc, Mariani, Simone, and Cebrian, Emma
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SPECIES distribution ,HABITATS ,COASTS ,MARINE ecology ,PREDICTION models - Abstract
Species distribution models (SDMs) have been used to predict potential distributions of habitats and to model the effects of environmental changes. Despite their usefulness, currently there is no standardized sampling strategy that provides suitable and sufficiently representative predictive models for littoral marine benthic habitats. Here we aim to establish the best performing and most cost-effective sample design to predict the distribution of littoral habitats in unexplored areas. We also study how environmental variability, sample size, and habitat prevalence may influence the accuracy and performance of spatial predictions. For first time, a large database of littoral habitats (16,098 points over 562,895 km of coastline) is used to build up, evaluate, and validate logistic predictive models according to a variety of sampling strategies. A regularly interspaced strategy with a sample of 20% of the coastline provided the best compromise between usefulness (in terms of sampling cost and effort) and accuracy. However, model performance was strongly depen upon habitat characteristics. The proposed sampling strategy may help to predict the presence or absence of target species or habitats thus improving extensive cartographies, detect high biodiversity areas, and, lastly, develop (the best) environmental management plans, especially in littoral environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Effective dispersal and density-dependence in mesophotic macroalgal forests: Insights from the Mediterranean species Cystoseira zosteroides.
- Author
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Capdevila, Pol, Linares, Cristina, Aspillaga, Eneko, Riera, Joan Lluís, and Hereu, Bernat
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MARINE algae ,PLANT dispersal ,CYSTOSEIRA ,ALGAL populations ,SPECIES distribution ,MARINE ecology - Abstract
Dispersal and recruitment are fundamental processes for population recovery following disturbances in sessile species. While both processes are well understood for many terrestrial species, they still remain poorly resolved for some macroalgal species. Here we experimentally investigated the effective dispersal and recruit survival of a mesophotic Mediterranean fucoid, Cystoseira zosteroides. In three isolated populations, four sets of settlement collectors were placed at increasing distances (from 0 to 10 m) and different orientations (North, South, East and West). We observed that effective dispersal was restricted to populations’ vicinity, with an average of 6.43 m and not further than 13.33 m, following a Weibull distribution. During their first year of life, survival was up to 50%, but it was lower underneath the adult canopy, suggesting a negative density-dependence. To put our results in a broader context we compared the effective dispersal of other fucoid and kelp species reported in the literature, which confirmed the low dispersal ability of brown algae, in particular for fucoids, with an effective dispersal of few meters. Given the importance of recruitment for the persistence and recovery of populations after disturbances, these results underline the vulnerability of C. zosteroides and other fucoid species to escalating threats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Cartografia bionòmica dels hàbitats de la costa del Montgrí i les illes Medes
- Author
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Hereu Fina, Bernat, Linares Prats, Cristina, Ricart, Aurora M., Rodríguez, Alex, Aspillaga Cuevas, Eneko, Díaz Viñolas, David, Navarro, Laura, and Riera, Joan Lluís
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Ecologia marina ,Medes Islands (Catalonia) ,Medes, Illes (Catalunya) ,Marine ecology - Abstract
Podeu consultar l'informe complet [El fons marí de les illes Medes i el Montgrí: quatre dècades de recerca per a la conservació] a: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/33366, La caracterització dels ecosistemes bentònics i el coneixement de l’estructura i funcionalitat dels ecosistemes és una eina imprescindible per a la gestió i conservació del medi natural. A causa de la seva composició específica i dinàmica, les diferents espècies i les comunitats que formen responen de forma diferent a les pertorbacions que s’hi produeixen, de manera que la gestió del medi natural ha de tenir en compte les particularitats de cada hàbitat...
- Published
- 2012
5. Diversity, structure and spatial distribution of megabenthic communities in Cap de Creus continental shelf and submarine canyon (NW Mediterranean).
- Author
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Dominguez-Carrió, Carlos, Riera, Joan Lluís, Robert, Katleen, Zabala, Mikel, Requena, Susana, Gori, Andrea, Orejas, Covadonga, Lo Iacono, Claudio, Estournel, Claude, Corbera, Guillem, Ambroso, Stefano, Uriz, Maria Jesús, López-González, Pablo J., Sardá, Rafael, and Gili, Josep-Maria
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SUBMARINE valleys , *COMMUNITIES , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *RANDOM forest algorithms , *DEEP-sea corals , *MARINE ecology - Abstract
[Display omitted] • Cap de Creus shelf and submarine canyon host a diverse benthic ecosystem. • Over 165 (morpho)species identified in the images, organized in nine megabenthic communities. • These include CWCs, octocoral gardens, sponge grounds and echinoderm aggregations. • Spatial distribution is mainly determined by depth, substrate type & bottom currents. The continental shelf and submarine canyon off Cap de Creus (NW Mediterranean) were declared a Site of Community Importance (SCI) within the Natura 2000 Network in 2014. Implementing an effective management plan to preserve its biological diversity and monitor its evolution through time requires a detailed characterization of its benthic ecosystem. Based on 60 underwater video transects performed between 2007 and 2013 (before the declaration of the SCI), we thoroughly describe the composition and structure of the main megabenthic communities dwelling from the shelf down to 400 m depth inside the submarine canyon. We then mapped the spatial distribution of the benthic communities using the Random Forest algorithm, which incorporated geomorphological and oceanographic layers as predictors, as well as the intensity of the bottom-trawling fishing fleet. Although the study area has historically been exposed to commercial fishing practices, it still holds a rich benthic ecosystem with over 165 different invertebrate (morpho)species of the megafauna identified in the video footage, which form up to 9 distinct megabenthic communities. The continental shelf is home to coral gardens of the sea fan Eunicella cavolini , sea pen and soft coral assemblages, dense beds of the crinoid Leptometra phalangium , diverse sponge grounds and massive aggregations of the brittle star Ophiothrix fragilis. The submarine canyon off Cap de Creus is characterized by a cold-water coral community dominated by the scleractinian coral Madrepora oculata , found in association with several invertebrate species including oysters, brachiopods and a variety of sponge species, as well as by a community dominated by cerianthids and sea urchins, mostly in sedimentary areas. The benthic communities identified in the area were then compared with habitats/biocenoses described in reference habitat classification systems that consider circalittoral and bathyal environments of the Mediterranean. The complex environmental setting characteristic of the marine area off Cap de Creus likely produces the optimal conditions for communities dominated by suspension- and filter-feeding species to develop. The uniqueness of this ecosystem and the anthropogenic pressures that it faces should prompt the development of effective management actions to ensure the long-term conservation of the benthic fauna representative of this marine area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Effective dispersal and density-dependence in mesophotic macroalgal forests: Insights from the Mediterranean species Cystoseira zosteroides
- Author
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Capdevila, Pol, Linares, Cristina, Aspillaga, Eneko, Riera, Joan Lluís, Hereu, Bernat, Universitat de Barcelona, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), European Commission, and Generalitat de Catalunya
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Census ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,Algae ,Population Dynamics ,lcsh:Medicine ,Forests ,Algues marines ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Phaeophyta ,Ecologia marina ,Zygotes ,Marine ecology ,Population Metrics ,Animal Cells ,Mediterranean Sea ,lcsh:Science ,Ecosystem ,Population Density ,Marine algae ,Survey Research ,Population Biology ,Mediterrània (Mar) ,Plant Dispersal ,Experimental Design ,lcsh:R ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Eukaryota ,Cell Biology ,Plants ,Probability Theory ,Seaweed ,Statistical Dispersion ,Survival Analysis ,Germ Cells ,Research Design ,OVA ,Physical Sciences ,lcsh:Q ,Cellular Types ,Mathematics ,Research Article ,Statistical Distributions - Abstract
Dispersal and recruitment are fundamental processes for population recovery following disturbances in sessile species. While both processes are well understood for many terrestrial species, they still remain poorly resolved for some macroalgal species. Here we experimentally investigated the effective dispersal and recruit survival of a mesophotic Mediterranean fucoid, Cystoseira zosteroides. In three isolated populations, four sets of settlement collectors were placed at increasing distances (from 0 to 10 m) and different orientations (North, South, East and West). We observed that effective dispersal was restricted to populations’ vicinity, with an average of 6.43 m and not further than 13.33 m, following a Weibull distribution. During their first year of life, survival was up to 50%, but it was lower underneath the adult canopy, suggesting a negative density-dependence. To put our results in a broader context we compared the effective dispersal of other fucoid and kelp species reported in the literature, which confirmed the low dispersal ability of brown algae, in particular for fucoids, with an effective dispersal of few meters. Given the importance of recruitment for the persistence and recovery of populations after disturbances, these results underline the vulnerability of C. zosteroides and other fucoid species to escalating threats., Funding was provided by the Spanish MINECO (CGL2012-32194) and the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under grant agreement No 689518 (MERCES). Support for this work was provided by an FI-DRG grant from the Secretaria d’Universitats i Recerca from the Economy and Knowledge Department of the Generalitat de Catalunya to Pol Capdevila and by a Ramon y Cajal research contract (RyC-2011-08134) to Cristina Linares. The authors are part of the Marine Biodiversity Conservation research group (2014SGR1297, www.medrecover.org) from Generalitat de Catalunya.
7. Cartografia bionòmica dels hàbitats de la costa del Montgrí i les illes Medes
- Author
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Hereu Fina, Bernat, Linares Prats, Cristina, Ricart, Aurora M., Rodríguez, Alex, Aspillaga Cuevas, Eneko, Díaz Viñolas, David, Navarro, Laura, Riera, Joan Lluís, and Universitat de Barcelona
- Subjects
Ecologia marina ,Medes Islands (Catalonia) ,Medes, Illes (Catalunya) ,Marine ecology - Abstract
Podeu consultar l'informe complet [El fons marí de les illes Medes i el Montgrí: quatre dècades de recerca per a la conservació] a: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/33366 La caracterització dels ecosistemes bentònics i el coneixement de l’estructura i funcionalitat dels ecosistemes és una eina imprescindible per a la gestió i conservació del medi natural. A causa de la seva composició específica i dinàmica, les diferents espècies i les comunitats que formen responen de forma diferent a les pertorbacions que s’hi produeixen, de manera que la gestió del medi natural ha de tenir en compte les particularitats de cada hàbitat...
8. ROV-based ecological study and management proposals for the offshore marine protected area of Cap de Creus (NW Mediterranean)
- Author
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Dominguez-Carrió, Carlos, Gili, Josep Maria, Riera, Joan Ll., Gili, Josep Maria, 1953, Riera, Joan Lluís, and Universitat de Barcelona. Facultat de Biologia
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Creus, Cap de (Cataluña) ,Creus, Cap de (Catalunya) ,Creus, Cape (Catalonia) ,Ecologia marina ,Ciències Experimentals i Matemàtiques ,Ecología marina ,Marine ecology - Abstract
Memoria de tesis doctoral presentada por Carlos Dominguez Carrió para obtener el título de Doctor por la Universitat de Barcelona (UB), realizada bajo la dirección del Dr. Josep Maria Gili del Institut de Ciències del Mar (ICM-CSIC) y del Dr. Joan Lluís Riera
- Published
- 2018
9. Marine protected areas in a changing ocean: Adaptive management can mitigate the synergistic effects of local and climate change impacts.
- Author
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Zentner, Yanis, Rovira, Graciel·la, Margarit, Núria, Ortega, Júlia, Casals, David, Medrano, Alba, Pagès-Escolà, Marta, Aspillaga, Eneko, Capdevila, Pol, Figuerola-Ferrando, Laura, Riera, Joan Lluís, Hereu, Bernat, Garrabou, Joaquim, and Linares, Cristina
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MARINE parks & reserves , *POPULATION viability analysis , *MARINE heatwaves , *CLIMATE extremes , *CLIMATE change , *MARINE ecology , *OCTOCORALLIA , *ALCYONACEA - Abstract
During the last two decades, several Marine Heatwaves (MHWs) have affected coralligenous assemblages in the Mediterranean Sea, causing catastrophic mass mortalities of several habitat-forming species such as gorgonians, corals, and sponges. Even though Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) are contributing to effectively protect marine ecosystems, the impacts associated to extreme climatic events within MPAs are jeopardizing their protective role. Therefore, minimizing local stressors within MPAs is crucial to minimize interactive effects with global, more difficult to manage, stressors. To address this, we assessed to what extent the regulation of diving frequentation can support more effective protection to climate change, focusing on the case study of the Medes Islands, which has recently suffered the impacts of different global stressors and is one of the most visited MPAs in the Mediterranean Sea. We combined 6 years of demographic data of the red gorgonian Paramuricea clavata with population modelling tools, to explore the long-term viability of this species to different managing schemes and mass mortality events scenarios. Overall, our results show that climate-adaptive management of the recreational diving activity under climate change can enhance the long-term viability of this key Mediterranean habitat-forming octocoral, which is otherwise predicted to go locally extinct at shallow depths (<25 m) within the next 20 years. This study provides one of the few attempts to quantify to what extent an adaptive management scheme may help delay climate change impacts in a Marine Protected Area. • Marine heatwaves are severely impacting key Mediterranean octocorals. • Over-frequentation by divers can be detrimental in no-take marine protected areas. • Interactions between local and global stressors can be synergistic. • Adaptive management on local impacts gives borrowed time to face climate change. • Long-term monitoring and modelling are key to design adaptive management schemes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Movement ecology of coastal fishes in a marine protected area: implications for management and conservation
- Author
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Aspillaga Cuevas, Eneko, Hereu Fina, Bernat, Bartumeus Ferré, Frederic, Universitat de Barcelona. Departament de Biologia Evolutiva, Ecologia i Ciències Ambientals, and Riera, Joan Lluís
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Gestión de ecosistemas ,Protection of nature ,Protecció de la natura ,Protección de la naturaleza ,Ecologia marina ,Ciències Experimentals i Matemàtiques ,Ecosystem management ,Ecología marina ,Gestió dels ecosistemes ,Marine ecology - Abstract
[eng] Animal movement is a key biological process for the maintenance of ecosystem services, and a major concern for the conservation of biodiversity. The aim of movement ecology is to understand the causes and consequences of these movements, including the effect of internal and external factors and its ecological implications. This research field has rapidly grown in the last decades fostered by recent technological and analytical developments, and is making substantial contributions to conservation biology, such as allowing the incorporation of the spatial and temporal scales of movements into management policies to enhance their scope and efficiency. Marine protected areas (MPAs) are the most used tools to face the effects of anthropogenic impacts on marine ecosystems. They play a major role in restoring and conserving overfished fish populations, and also potentially enhancing fisheries yield in adjacent areas through the direct spillover of juvenile and adult individuals. However, in order to be effective and generate such benefits, MPAs must be designed according to the movement attributes of targeted species, but this information is still rarely available, specially in temperate regions. In the last decades, passive acoustic telemetry techniques have demonstrated to be a valuable tool to study the movements and behavior of fishes covering large spatial and temporal scales, but the acoustic nature of the signals and the large amounts of data that they provide entail a series of challenges for their analysis and interpretation. The main objective of this thesis is to characterize the movement ecology of coastal fishes in relation to MPAs. This constitutes a basic information on the biology of species, which is required to understand changes in populations and ecosystems driven by natural or human induced impacts, as well as to correctly evaluate the outcomes of management actions. Specifically, the movements of two species, the white seabream (Diplodus sargus) and the common dentex (Dentex dentex), were monitored using acoustic telemetry in the Medes Islands MPA (Catalonia, NW Mediterranean Sea). Both species play important ecological and economical roles, shaping the structure and functioning of biological communities through top-down controls, and being an important resource for local artisanal and recreational fisheries. Nevertheless, they present a contrasting biology (omnivorous vs. predator), and therefore, different conservation needs. Firstly, we characterized the general movement attributes of the two species, including their habitat requirements and space use and activity patterns, within zones with different protection levels of the MPA. Secondly, we studied the behavioral responses of the two species to environmental fluctuations, by adding environmental information (seawater temperature and wave height) to movement analysis. These behavioral responses provide essential information on the ecology of the species such as their resistance to perturbations. Thirdly, we characterized their movement behavior during the spawning season, describing, for the first time, the formation of spawning aggregations for both species. Finally, this thesis also has an important computational and numerical component. A special effort has been done to adapt and develop new methods to visualize and analyze acoustic telemetry data, specially to improve the space use estimations by incorporating the vertical dimension, in order to provide a more comprehensive view of complex movement patterns. By studying the movement ecology of these species, we provide general mechanistic insights to understand the effects of protection on coastal fish species, as well as to predict future changes in their populations derived from climate change. We specially highlight the importance of studying the movement ecology of diverse species in order to propose integrative and more efficient management actions., [spa] Las áreas marinas protegidas (AMPs), son las herramientas de gestión más utilizadas para contrarrestar los impactos antropogénicos sobre los ecosistemas marinos y juegan un papel fundamental en la protección y restauración de las poblaciones de peces afectadas por la sobrepesca. Sin embargo, para ser efectivas y generar los beneficios que se esperan de ellas, las AMPs deben ser diseñadas en concordancia con los atributos de los movimientos de las especies de peces que se pretenden proteger, pero esta información no suele estar disponible. El principal objetivo de esta tesis es caracterizar, mediante técnicas de telemetría acústica, la ecología del movimiento de especies de peces costeros en relación a AMPs, mediante el estudio del movimiento de dos especies: el sargo común (Diplodus sargus) y el dentón (Dentex dentex), en la reserva marina de las islas Medas (Catalunya, Mediterráneo NO). Específicamente, se han caracterizado los patrones de movimiento y actividad generales de las dos especies, la presencia de respuestas comportamentales a fluctuaciones ambientales (temperatura y oleaje), y su comportamiento reproductor. Además, se ha hecho un esfuerzo especial en adaptar y desarrollar nuevas técnicas de análisis y visualización para datos de telemetría acústica, con el objetivo de mejorar las estimaciones del uso del espacio, incorporando la dimensión vertical, y de proporcionar una visión más exhaustiva de los complejos patrones de movimiento. Toda esta información es de gran aplicabilidad para la gestión de estas y otras especies costeras, así como para entender los cambios en las poblaciones y en los ecosistemas derivados del cambio global.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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