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The new Checklist of the Italian Fauna: marine Mollusca

Authors :
Walter Renda
Bruno Amati
Cesare Bogi
Giuseppe Bonomolo
Domenico Capua
Bruno Dell'Angelo
Giulia Furfaro
Riccardo Giannuzzi Savelli
Rafael La Perna
Italo Nofroni
Francesco Pusateri
Luigi Romani
Paolo Russo
Carlo Smriglio
Lionello Paolo Tringali
Marco Oliverio
Renda, W.
Amati, B.
Bogi, C.
Bonomolo, G.
Capua, D.
Dell'Angelo, B.
Furfaro, G.
Giannuzzi-Savelli, R.
La Perna, R.
Nofroni, I.
Pusateri, F.
Romani, L.
Russo, P.
Smriglio, C.
Lionello P., Tringali
Oliverio, M.
Source :
Biogeographia – The Journal of Integrative Biogeography. 37
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
California Digital Library (CDL), 2022.

Abstract

The mollusc fauna of the Mediterranean Sea is still considered as the best-known marine mollusc fauna in the world. The previous modern checklists of marine Mollusca were produced by joint teams of amateurs and professionals. During the last years the Italian Society of Malacology (Società Italiana di Malacologia – S.I.M.) maintained an updated version of the Mediterranean checklist, that served as the backbone for the development of the new Italian checklist. According to the current version (updated on April 1st, 2021), 1,777 recognised species of marine molluscs are present in the Italian Economic Exclusive Zone, including also the Tyrrhenian coasts of Corsica and the continental shelf of the Maltese archipelago. The new checklist shows an increase of 17% of the species reported in the 1995 Checklist. This is largely (yet not solely) due to the new wave of studies based on Integrative Taxonomy approaches. A total of 135 species (7.6%) are strictly endemic to the Italian waters; 44 species (2.5%) are alien and correspond to the 28% of the Mediterranean alien marine molluscs. All eight extant molluscan classes are represented. The families represented in the Italian fauna are 307, an increase of 14.6% from the first checklist, partly due to new records and partly to new phylogenetic systematics. Compared with the whole Mediterranean malacofauna, the Italian component represents 71% in species and 61% in families, which makes it a very remarkable part of the Mediterranean fauna.

Details

ISSN :
24755257 and 15947629
Volume :
37
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biogeographia – The Journal of Integrative Biogeography
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d3e61947aa452caf8aac2a0bf34d9b90