14 results on '"Francesco Denitto"'
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2. Composition and Spatial Distribution of Mesozooplankton along Confinement and Anthropogenic-Impact Gradients in the Gulf of Vlorë (Albania)
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Genuario Belmonte, Irene Vaglio, Salvatore Moscatello, Edmond Hajdëri, Francesco Denitto, Belmonte, Genuario, Moscatello, Salvatore, Hajdëri, Edmond, Vaglio, Irene, and Denitto, Francesco
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East coast ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Ecology ,seasonality ,Biodiversity ,Sampling (statistics) ,010501 environmental sciences ,Seasonality ,Spatial distribution ,medicine.disease ,01 natural sciences ,Zooplankton ,Oceanography ,Mediterranean sea ,Open sea ,Mediterranean Sea ,medicine ,Environmental science ,Coastal zooplankton ,biodiversity ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
The composition of mesozooplankton and their space-time distribution in the Gulf of Vlore¨ (southern Albania, Mediterranean Sea) are described for the first time. Sampling was carried out during two oceanographic cruises (May 2007, January 2008) with two replicates at each of 17 stations at each time, making a total of 68 samples. The study aimed to describe the influence of confinement (defined as distance from the open sea) and anthropogenic impact (defined as vicinity to the east coast of the gulf) on zooplankton composition. A total of 198 taxa were recognised in the whole zooplankton assemblage, with only 136 taxa common to both periods and only two species present in all samples. Statistical analysis of data distinguished the Mezokanal area (the boundary between the gulf and the open sea) from three other areas inside the gulf. Differences were also found among the areas inside the gulf at increasing degree of confinement. Mesozooplankton varied more sharply with confinement than with anthropogenic impact and yielded moredetailed space partitioning of the gulf than microzooplankton, which had been used in a previous study
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- 2018
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3. Marine alien species in Italy: A contribution to the implementation of descriptor D2 of the marine strategy framework directive
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Giulio Relini, Fabio Crocetta, Antonella Petrocelli, Francesco Mastrototaro, Marcello Catra, Franco Andaloro, Gianna Servello, Argyro Zenetos, Nicholas Jason Xentidis, Sabrina Lo Brutto, Michela D'Alessandro, Martin R. Langer, Ernesto Azzurro, Carlo Pipitone, Donatella Serio, Carlo Froglia, Cinzia Gravili, Francesco Denitto, Stefano Piraino, Antonia Chiarore, Luca Castriota, Servello, G., Andaloro, F., Azzurro, E., Castriota, L., Catra, M., Chiarore, A., Crocetta, F., D'Alessandro, M., Denitto, F., Froglia, C., Gravili, C., Langer, M. R., Lo Brutto, S., Mastrototaro, F., Petrocelli, A., Pipitone, C., Piraino, S., Relini, G., Serio, D., Xentidis, N. J., Zenetos, A., Servello G., Andaloro F., Azzurro E., Castriota L., Catra M., Chiarore A., Crocetta F., D'Alessandro M., Denitto F., Froglia C., Gravili C., Langer M.R., Lo Brutto S., Mastrototaro F., Petrocelli A., Pipitone C., Piraino S., Relini G., Serio D., Xentidis N.J., and Zenetos A.
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0106 biological sciences ,trends ,Environmental Engineering ,Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia ,Alien ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Marine Strategy Framework Directive ,Mediterranean sea ,Mediterranean Sea ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,14. Life underwater ,European union ,Μarine alien species ,MSFD ,Italy ,Alien species ,Mollusca ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common ,Descriptor D2 ,biology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,marine alien species ,biology.organism_classification ,Fishery ,trend ,Geography ,Taxon ,Marine alien specie ,Trends ,Μarine alien specie ,Global biodiversity - Abstract
A re-examination of marine alien species or Non Indigenous Species (NIS) reported in Italian Seas, until December 2018, is provided, focusing on establishment success, year of first record, origin, potential invasiveness, and likely pathways, in particular. Furthermore, their distribution is assessed according to the marine subregions outlined by the European Union (EU) Marine Strategy Framework Directive: Adriatic Sea (ADRIA), Ionian Sea and Central Mediterranean Sea (CMED), and Western Mediterranean Sea (WMED). In Italy, 265 NIS have been detected with the highest number of species being recorded in the CMED (154 species) and the WMED (151 species) subregions, followed by the ADRIA (143) subregion. Most of these species were recorded in more than one subregion. One hundred and eighty (180 or 68%) NIS have established stable populations in Italian Seas among which 26 have exhibited invasive traits. As regards the taxa involved, Macrophyta rank first with 65 taxa. Fifty-five of them are established in at least one subregion, mostly in the ADRIA and the CMED. Crustacea rank second with 48 taxa, followed by Polychaeta with 43 taxa, Mollusca with 29 taxa, and Fishes with 28 taxa, which were mainly reported from the CMED. In the period 2012-2017, 44 new alien species were recorded, resulting in approximately one new entry every two months. Approximately half of the NIS (~52%) recorded in Italy have most likely arrived through the transport-stowaway pathway related to shipping traffic (~28% as biofoulers, ~22% in ballast waters, and ~2% as hitchhikers). The second most common pathway is the unaided movement with currents (~19%), followed by the transport-contaminant on farmed shellfishes pathway (~18%). "Unaided" is the most common pathway for alien Fishes, especially in the CMED; escapes from confinement account for ~3% and release in nature for ~2%. The present NIS distribution hotspots for new introductions were defined at the first recipient area/location in Italy. In the ADRIA, the hotspot, Venice, accounts for the highest number of alien taxa introduced in Italy, with 50 newly recorded taxa. In the CMED subregion, the hotspots of introduction are the Taranto and Catania Gulfs, hosting 21 first records each. The Strait of Sicily represents a crossroad between alien taxa from the Atlantic Ocean and the Indo-Pacific area. In the WMED, bioinvasion hotspots include the Gulfs of Naples, Genoa and Livorno. This review can serve as an updated baseline for future coordination and harmonization of monitoring initiatives under international, EU and regional policies, for the compilation of new data from established monitoring programs, and for rapid assessment surveys.
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- 2019
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4. Nonindigenous species along the Apulian coast, Italy
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Antonella Petrocelli, Adriana Giangrande, Genuario Belmonte, Caterina Longo, Cinzia Gravili, Antonio Terlizzi, Francesco Mastrototaro, Stefano Piraino, Salvatore Moscatello, Ester Cecere, Paolo Guidetti, Ferdinando Boero, Francesco Denitto, Gravili, Cinzia, Belmonte, Genuario, Cecere, E., Denitto, Francesco, Giangrande, Adriana, Guidetti, Paolo, Longo, C., Mastrototaro, F., Moscatello, Salvatore, Petrocelli, A., Piraino, Stefano, Terlizzi, Antonio, and Boero, Ferdinando
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Mediterranean climate ,Ecology ,Adverse conditions ,business.industry ,Introduced species ,Apulian coast ,Marine species ,Geography ,Mediterranean sea ,transport vector ,Aquaculture ,Mediterranean Sea ,Suez canal ,transport vectors ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,%22">Fish ,business ,nonindigenous species (NIS) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Thirty-eight nonindigenous marine species (NIS) (macroalgae, sponges, hydrozoans, molluscs, polychaetes, crustaceans, ascidiaceans and fish), are reported from the Apulian coast of Italy. Shipping, aquaculture and migration through the Suez Canal are the main pathways of introduction of the NIS. In Apulian waters, 21% of NIS are occasional, 18% are invasive and 61% are well-established. It is highly probable that more NIS will arrive from warm-water regions, because Mediterranean waters are warming. Furthermore, some of the successful NIS must have the ability to become dormant in order to survive adverse conditions, either seasonal or during long journeys in ballast waters. The identification of NIS depends greatly on the available taxonomic expertise; hence the paucity of taxonomists hinders our knowledge of NIS in our seas. We propose the creation and maintenance of a network of observatories across the Mediterranean to monitor the changes that take place along its coasts.
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- 2010
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5. Occurrence of the Guinean species Herbstia nitida Manning & Holthuis, 1981 (Decapoda, Brachyura) in a Mediterranean submarine cave and a comparison with the congeneric H. condyliata (Fabricius, 1787)
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Genuario Belmonte, Francesco Denitto, and Michele Pastore
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Carcinology ,Mediterranean climate ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Cave ,Ecology ,Decapoda ,Submarine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Herbstia - Published
- 2010
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6. Occurrence and distribution pattern ofPalaemonspp. shrimps in a shallow submarine cave environment: a study case in South-eastern Italy
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Salvatore Moscatello, Genuario Belmonte, and Francesco Denitto
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Mediterranean climate ,geography ,education.field_of_study ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,Population ,Submarine ,social sciences ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,musculoskeletal system ,biology.organism_classification ,humanities ,Fishery ,Mediterranean sea ,Cave ,Genus ,Palaemon ,Juvenile ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The common shrimps of the genus Palaemon are often reported as living in Mediterranean submarine caves. The present study quantifies the distribution pattern of a Palaemon spp. populations throughout 1 year of observations in a shallow submarine cave in South-eastern Italy, Ionian Sea. The cave was subdivided into six sectors from the entrance towards the inner portion of the ‘blind cave’ and 16 dives (four per season, during both day and night) were performed with SCUBA equipment. The population was estimated in situ using visual census. Four different species of Palaemon were identified. This study has shown that Palaemon spp. assemblages live throughout the year in submarine caves. Moreover, the results suggest submarine caves play an important role in the biology of Palaemon spp. populations, by providing refuge, juvenile recruitment and food resources.
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- 2009
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7. Settlement and primary succession in a shallow submarine cave: spatial and temporal benthic assemblage distinctness
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Francesco Denitto, Antonio Terlizzi, and Genuario Belmonte
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,Ecological succession ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Substrate (marine biology) ,Colonisation ,Mediterranean sea ,Oceanography ,Cave ,Benthic zone ,Spatial ecology ,Primary succession ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Several studies have described patterns of distribution and species composition of sessile assemblages from marine caves but few have examined the processes of recruitment and larval settlement in the earlier stages of substrate colonisation. The present study evaluated (i) the distinctness of newly recruited assemblages on the local spatial scale, (ii) how this assemblage distinctness changes over time and (iii) how the recruitment patterns are affected by a different start-time in different positions in the cave. Two sets of 90 baked-clay panels (15 · 15 · 1 cm) were deployed in March (E1) and October 2002 (E2) at three positions in the shallow submarine cave ‘Grotta di Ciolo’ (South-East Italy, Central Mediterranean Sea): entrance (P1) and at 20 m (P2) and 80 m (P3) from the entrance, respectively. Each position was represented by two areas (1.5 · 1.5 m), and three panels from each area were randomly removed after 1, 3, 6, 12 and 24 months. The assemblages of the settled organisms comprised a total of 63 taxa. Different succession patterns were highlighted among assemblages across positions. A recruitment period of 2 years allowed a complete colonisation of panels at P1, where both encrusting algae dominated rocky walls and panels. In contrast, recruitment was very slow at P2 and P3, where the mature benthic community was not replicated on the 2-year panels. Finally, there was a partial convergence towards a common ecological succession in series started at different times.
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- 2007
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8. Life cycle of Bougainvillia nana (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa: Bougainvilliidae) from Italy, including a discussion of Bougainvillia muscus in the Mediterranean Sea
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Maria Pia Miglietta, Francesco Denitto, and Ferdinando Boero
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Cnidaria ,Bougainvilliidae ,Mediterranean sea ,biology ,Ecology ,Genus ,Hydroid (zoology) ,Zoology ,Bougainvillia ,Aquatic Science ,Subspecies ,biology.organism_classification ,Hydrozoa - Abstract
The life cycle of a species of the genus Bougainvillia (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa), found in the southern Mediterranean Sea, Italy, is here described. Hydroid colonies produced immature medusae with two tentacles and two ocelli per bulb and four unbranched oral tentacles. The number of tentacles and ocelli, which remained constant during the entire life cycle, are here considered diagnostic characters to identify the present as a new species. Female medusae lived up to 47 days (with an average of 30 days) when reared at 17°C, while males, reared at the same temperature, were short-lived, concluding their life cycle in no more than 15 days. The medusa of this species resembles B. ramosa var. nana described by Hartlaub in 1911 on the basis of few specimens and no polyp stage. After the complete life cycle has been observed, and given its peculiar medusa stage, Hartlaub's subspecies (variant) must be promoted to species rank as Bougainvillia nana.
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- 2007
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9. THE SALENTO AQUARIUM OF SANTA MARIA AL BAGNO – NARDÒ
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GENUARIO BELMONTE, FRANCESCO DENITTO, MARCELLO EMILIO POSI, Belmonte, Genuario, Denitto, Francesco, and Posi, Marcello Emilio
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aquarium ,naturalm history museum ,public interaction - Abstract
A public Aquarium was realized in the frame of the European Territorial Cooperation Programme, ETCP, Greece-Italy 2007-2013. Such a project (acronym APREH) started in 2011 with the University of Salento as Leader Partner, Province of Lecce and Municipality of Nardò as Italian partners, and University of Patra and Municipality of Kefallinia as Greek partners. The proposal of an Aquarium had the aim to promote the archaeological and natural submarine heritage along the coastline of the Salento Peninsula and of the Kefallinia island. The Italian partnership realized an Aquarium at Santa Maria al Bagno (Nardò, Lecce), restructuring an ancient building (Fig. 1) with services, a conference room, and 4 exhibition environments equipped with a total of 17 tanks of variable volume (25 – 2,500 litres), hosting a total of 100 species of marine organisms (Tab. 1, Fig. 2). Four tanks were equipped with reproductions of wrecks: a Junker 88 airplane, an Italian Cargo Ship, an English destroyer of the 2nd World War, and a Roman ship of the 2nd Century b.C. with its cargo of amphorae. The official opening was celebrated on 05 June 2015 (Fig. 3). The structure is the unique public Aquarium functioning in the Southern Italy apart from Naples; it has been open to visitors only during the 13 week ends of June-August, receiving more than 7,000 visitors mainly coming from Province of Lecce and the rest of Italy (Tab. 2). Also due to front end evaluation studies, a plan for the future functioning of the Aquarium is presented, taking into consideration its educative role, and its touristic attractiveness.
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- 2015
10. Fish Assemblages in Shallow Marine Caves of the Salento Peninsula (Southern Apulia, SE Italy)
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Paolo Guidetti, Simona Bussotti, Genuario Belmonte, Francesco Denitto, Bussotti, Simona, Denitto, Francesco, Guidetti, Paolo, and Belmonte, Genuario
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geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,biology ,Epinephelus marginatus ,social sciences ,Aquatic Science ,Plankton ,biology.organism_classification ,humanities ,Apogon imberbis ,Fishery ,Geography ,Benthos ,Cave ,Abundance (ecology) ,Diplodus vulgaris ,Species richness ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Fish assemblages of three shallow marine caves from the Salento Peninsula (Apulia, SE Italy) were investigated in July 2000. Data were collected in situ by using visual census. A total of nineteen fish species were recorded inside the caves. The species richness generally displayed a similar pattern in all three caves, decreasing from the entrance towards the innermost sections, whereas the patterns of total fish abundance differed among caves. Apogon imberbis (mainly represented by juveniles) was the most important species in terms of number of individuals (accounting for more than 85% of the censused fish) and showed a fairly even distribution inside the investigated caves. Without the numerical contribution of A. imberbis, fish abundance decreased from the entrance to the inner sections and this pattern was common to all three caves. Juvenile fishes of economic interest (e. g., Diplodus vulgaris and Epinephelus marginatus) were also recorded inside. The present study suggests that: (1) environmental constraints could affect distribution patterns in fish species richness and in the abundance of several fish along the axis of “blind caves” (with a single entrance), as already observed for sessile benthos and plankton assemblages; (2) shallow marine caves of the Salento Peninsula could exert the role of refuge and/or nursery for some littoral fish species during the adult and/or juvenile stages of their life histories.
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- 2002
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11. The rediscovery ofCodonorchis octaedrus(Hydroidomedusae, Anthomedusae, Pandeidae), with an update of the Mediterranean hydroidomedusan biodiversity
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Maria Pia Miglietta, Cinzia Gravili, Jean Bouillon, Francesco Denitto, and Ferdinando Boero
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,Anthomedusae ,Biodiversity ,biology.organism_classification ,Pandeidae ,Cave ,Genus ,Hydroid (zoology) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Mesenteries ,Hydrozoa - Abstract
Codonorchis octaedrus is recorded for the first time since its discovery by Haeckel in 1879. A hydroid colony collected in a cave of the Apulian Coast (between the Ionian and the Adriatic Seas) produced several medusae which have been reared to maturity. This is the first complete description of the species, which was previously considered as doubtful, as was the genus Codonorchis. The diagnostic features for the genus are: hydroid small, naked, sessile, with a single row of few tentacles, gono‐phores on hydrorhiza, medusa with apical projection with apical process from the manubrium, perradial, interradial and adradial ocellate bulbs, two perradial tentacles, horseshoe‐shaped interradial gonads, small mesenteries. The list of Mediterranean hydroidomedusae is updated with the new (or overlooked) records since the last published list (1993). The increase in species number is great (about 10%), showing that the knowledge of biodiversity of even a well‐studied sea as the Mediterranean is far from be...
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- 1997
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12. Recruitment of Serpuloidea (Annelida: Polychaeta) in a marine cave of the Ionian Sea (Italy, central Mediterranean)
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Francesco Denitto, Margherita Licciano, Denitto, Francesco, and Licciano, Margherita
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Mediterranean climate ,RECRUITMENT ,geography ,MARINE CAVES ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,Species distribution ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,BENTHOS ECOLOGY ,Taxon ,Serpulidae ,Cave ,Peninsula ,Spirorbidae ,SERPULOIDEA ,Relative species abundance - Abstract
This paper is the first attempt to study the recruitment of Serpuloideans in a Mediterranean marine cave through the use of artificial substrates placed in three different positions, from the entrance to the interior of the cave. This study provides qualitative and quantitative data concerning Serpuloidea recruitment on panels removed successively after one, three, six and 12 months of permanence in the cave. A homogeneous distribution of juveniles Spirorbidae throughout the cave axis had already been detected after one month of panel immersion. Spirorbids were recorded also on panels removed after three months as well as serpulids, which began to be detected during this sampling time, even though represented by just one species. A significantly different pattern of distribution throughout the cave axis was observed after only six months, while other serpulids were detected for the first time. The pattern of species distribution seemed to reflect the biotic and environmental conditions of the cave. The highest serpuloidean species abundance and diversity was found on panels placed in the intermediate position within the cave. After only one year of panel immersion, a total of 20 taxa (11 Serpulidae and 9 Spirorbidae) was recorded, including five species listed for the first time in the marine caves of the Salento Peninsula.
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- 2006
13. New Mediterranean Biodiversity Records (November 2020)
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Michail Ragkousis, Francesco Tiralongo, Ali Badreddine, Sercan Yapıcı, Francesco Denitto, Cemal Turan, Borut Mavrič, Argyro Zenetos, Radhouan El Zrelli, Ana Fortič, Andrea Spinelli, Panayotis Ovalis, Cataldo Licchelli, Michael Bariche, Vasilis Gerovasileiou, Anastasia Miliou, Cengiz Koçak, Ferhat Yalgin, Dyana Vitale, Miquel Pontes, Ghazi Bitar, Samir Grimes, Evgenios Loudaros, Ayşegül Ergenler, Nail Sevingel, Federica Montesanto, Fabio Crocetta, Francesco Mastrototaro, Lofti Rabaoui, Alexandros Tsatiris, Ernesto Azzurro, Sinan Mavruk, Nardjes Abdelali, Stelios Katsanevakis, and Markos Digenis
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0303 health sciences ,Environmental Engineering ,Callinectes ,biology ,ved/biology ,Cephalopholis taeniops ,ved/biology.organism_classification_rank.species ,Lagocephalus sceleratus ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,biology.organism_classification ,Diadema setosum ,Sea slug ,Fishery ,03 medical and health sciences ,Geography ,Mediterranean sea ,040102 fisheries ,Acanthurus monroviae ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,14. Life underwater ,Sea spider ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
This article includes 23 new records of alien and cryptogenic species in the Mediterranean Sea, belonging to 4 Phyla (Chordata, Echinodermata, Arthropoda and Mollusca), distributed from the Alboran to the Levantine Sea. Records are reported from eight countries listed from West to East as follows: Algeria : new records of the Atlantic blue crab Callinectes sapidus ; Spain : further spread and establishment of the sea slug Lamprohaminoea ovalis in continental shores; Tunisia : first record of the Atlantic Blue Crab Callinectes sapidus in the Gulf of Gabes; Italy : a new occurrence of the pufferfish Lagocephalus sceleratus in Northern Ionian waters; first record of Cephalopholis taeniops in the Ionian Sea; first record of the redlip blenny, Ophioblennius atlanticus in the Ionian Sea; Slovenia : first record of the isopod Paranthura japonica in Slovenia; Greece : first record of the molluscs E unaticina papilla, Plocamopherus ocellatus and the fish Cheilodipterus novemstriatus ; first record of the ascidian Ecteinascidia turbinata in Kriti; the long-spined sea urchin Diadema setosum in the Ionian Sea; Turkey : first record of the sea spider Ammothea hilgendorfi ; the stomatopod Cloridina cf. ichneumon ; the fishes Pempheris rhomboidea from the Sea of Marmara and Paranthias furcifer from the Aegean Sea; Lebanon : new records of the fishes Arothron hispidus, Rachycentron canadum, Heniochus intermedius and Acanthurus monroviae ; first record of Acanthostracion polygonius . The records of Cloridina cf. ichneumon from southern Turkey and the fish Acanthostracion polygonius from Lebanon, both being the first Mediterranean records, are noteworthy.
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14. Approaches to the ethology of hydroids and medusae (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa)
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Maria Pia Miglietta, Jean Bouillon, Francesco Denitto, Cinzia Gravili, Ferdinando Boero, Patrizia Pagliara, Luigi Della Tommasa, Miglietta, Mp, DELLA TOMMASA, L, Denitto, F, Gravili, C, Pagliara, Patrizia, Bouillon, J, and Boero, Ferdinando
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lcsh:SH1-691 ,Cnidaria ,biology ,Ecology ,Prey capture ,SH1-691 ,Zoology ,Anthomedusae ,Aquatic Science ,Ethology ,Oceanography ,biology.organism_classification ,Leptomedusae ,lcsh:Aquaculture. Fisheries. Angling ,[cnidarians] ,Hydrozoa ,ethology ,Aquaculture. Fisheries. Angling ,feeding - Abstract
The behavioural patterns of 26 species of Antho- and Leptomedusae (with or without medusa stage) were investigated by video recordings. The analysed activities were: answers to mechanical stimuli, prey capture and ingestion, digestion, egestion, and swimming. The quantity of behavioural patterns identified in the small number of hydrozoan diversity studied so far is sufficient to demonstrate that these supposedly simple animals have evolved a complex array of responses to both external and internal stimuli., No disponible
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