1. Risk assessment to identify high-risk voyage origin ports and a watch list for NIS introduction in the Mediterranean with vessels: the case of Saronikos Gulf, Greece.
- Author
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Kalyvioti, Grigoria, Galanidi, Marika, and Zenetos, Argyro
- Subjects
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SHIP hull fouling , *INTRODUCED aquatic species , *INTERNET traffic , *RISK assessment , *FOULING , *BALLAST water - Abstract
Commercial shipping activity plays a crucial role in the unintentional primary and secondary introduction of aquatic Non-Indigenous species (NIS), with ballast water (BW) and hull biofouling being the two major vectors of NIS transportation. The aim of this study is to identify potential high-risk donor port areas that may act as pools for NIS introduction in Saronikos Gulf, Greece. For the purpose of the study, we conducted a regional risk assessment and produced a NIS watch list based on the commercial vessel arrivals at the major ports of the Saronikos Gulf (Piraeus and Elefsis) for the period 2020–2022. In our risk analysis, we used the two most important factors for ship-mediated species introductions identified in the literature: salinity and biogeographic region of the voyage last origin ports. Then, combined with data on vessel arrivals, based on marine traffic data collected from the Marine Traffic online platform, we produced a NIS watch list for the study area. The most highrisk ports for primary introductions were found to be in the Temperate Northern Atlantic (e.g. Gemlik, Ambarli, Asyaport and Derince in Türkiye, Sines in Portugal), Western Indo-Pacific (e.g. Jeddah in Saudi Arabia, Aqaba in Jordan) and the Central Indo-Pacific (e.g. Singapore). For secondary introduction, the most high-risk voyage origin ports are located in the Levantine Sea (e.g. Limassol in Cyprus, Alexandria and Port Said in Egypt, Haifa and Ashdod in Israel, Iskenderun, Mersin and Nemrut in Türkiye), the Aegean Sea (e.g. Izmir in Türkiye) and the Ionian Sea (e.g. Marsaxlokk in Malta). Our watch list included 44 high risk and 13 medium risk NIS to be transferred to Saronikos Gulf. Of these, 38 high-risk species are already present in the Mediterranean, 6 high-risk species are absent from the Mediterranean and 18 species pose a high risk for both primary and secondary introduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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