This study provides new insights regarding the ecology and phenology of the likely nonindigenous canopy-forming species Sargassum furcatum on the central-eastern coast of Sicily (Italy, Central Mediterranean). This species was described for St. Thomas (Virgin Islands), and it was reported for the first time in the Mediterranean in 1995 in the Chafarinas islands (Spain, western Mediterranean). After the first report, this species was found in 2021 in several sites located along the eastern coast of Sicily (Italy), along the French Mediterranean coastline, in Corsica, and recently also in the Aeolian Islands (Italy). No phenological studies on this species have been ever carried out in the Mediterranean Sea. To conduct this study, a visual census activity was performed in three sites along the Ionian coast of Sicily throughout 2023, during which the length of the main axis of S. furcatum specimens was measured and the frequency of findings of the species during the year was noted. In this study, it was observed that S. furcatum shows a wide adaptability in terms of range of depth, temperature, light exposure, and type of substrate. Since the distribution of this species is mostly centralized in the western Atlantic Ocean, it is likely that S. furcatum entered the Mediterranean through the Gibraltar Strait. Consequently, the entrance of this species in this Basin could be further proof of the ongoing seawater warming and tropicalization of Mediterranean waters. From this point of view, it is important to keep monitoring the dynamics of S. furcatum in the Mediterranean Sea in order to understand its putative impacts on autochthonous communities.

Ecology and Phenology of the Subtidal Brown Alga Sargassum furcatum (Ochrophyta, Fucales), a Likely Non-Indigenous Species from the Mediterranean Sea

Giuliana Marletta
Primo
;
Andrea Lombardo
Secondo
;
Donatella Serio
Ultimo
2024-01-01

Abstract

This study provides new insights regarding the ecology and phenology of the likely nonindigenous canopy-forming species Sargassum furcatum on the central-eastern coast of Sicily (Italy, Central Mediterranean). This species was described for St. Thomas (Virgin Islands), and it was reported for the first time in the Mediterranean in 1995 in the Chafarinas islands (Spain, western Mediterranean). After the first report, this species was found in 2021 in several sites located along the eastern coast of Sicily (Italy), along the French Mediterranean coastline, in Corsica, and recently also in the Aeolian Islands (Italy). No phenological studies on this species have been ever carried out in the Mediterranean Sea. To conduct this study, a visual census activity was performed in three sites along the Ionian coast of Sicily throughout 2023, during which the length of the main axis of S. furcatum specimens was measured and the frequency of findings of the species during the year was noted. In this study, it was observed that S. furcatum shows a wide adaptability in terms of range of depth, temperature, light exposure, and type of substrate. Since the distribution of this species is mostly centralized in the western Atlantic Ocean, it is likely that S. furcatum entered the Mediterranean through the Gibraltar Strait. Consequently, the entrance of this species in this Basin could be further proof of the ongoing seawater warming and tropicalization of Mediterranean waters. From this point of view, it is important to keep monitoring the dynamics of S. furcatum in the Mediterranean Sea in order to understand its putative impacts on autochthonous communities.
2024
canopy-forming species
community shift
non-indigenous species
seawater warming
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11769/601849
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact