scholarly journals The arrival of a second ‘Lessepsian sprinter’? A first record of the red cornetfish Fistularia petimba in the Eastern Mediterranean

2017 ◽  
pp. 524 ◽  
Author(s):  
NIR STERN ◽  
GUY PAZ ◽  
YANA YUDKOVSKY ◽  
HADAS LUBINEVSKY ◽  
BARUCH RINKEVICH

Here we document the first occurrence of the red cornetfish Fistularia petimba in the Levantine Basin. This species identity has been confirmed using morphological and molecular tools, and is presented here with simplified illustrations for accurate future identification. This report voices a concern regarding another blitz invasion of a cornetfish into the Mediterranean, following its Lessepsian sprinter congeneric, F. commersonii, one of the most efficacious invaders of the Mediterranean Sea. The wide intra-specific genetic distances found between sympatric F. petimba specimens in the available literature resources may also demonstrate the presence of cryptic diversity within this taxon.

2011 ◽  
Vol 70 (2) ◽  
pp. 209-214 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernando Gómez

Diversity and Distribution of the DinoflagellatesBrachidinium, AsterodiniumandMicroceratium(Brachidiniales, Dinophyceae) in the open Mediterranean SeaBrachidiniacean dinoflagellates have been investigated in the open waters of the Mediterranean Sea, along a transect from the south of France to the south of Cyprus (20 June-18 July 2008).BrachidiniumandKarenia papilionaceaoften co-occurred,B. capitatumpredominating in the surface waters. The highest abundance ofBrachidiniumwere found in the upper 25min the western Mediterranean with amaximum (24 cells L-1) at a depth of 5 m in the Balearic Sea.Asterodinium(up to 4 cells L-1) was recorded below of deep chlorophyll maxima. The genusMicroceratium, only known from the tropical Indo-Pacific region, is reported for the first time in the Mediterranean Sea.Microceratiumwas found below 100min the eastern Mediterranean Sea, with the highest abundance of 8 cells L-1at 125 m depth, in the Levantine Basin. This study also illustrates for the first time specimens under the division ofBrachidiniumandMicroceratium. This first occurrence ofMicroceratiumin the Mediterranean Sea should be considered an indicator of climate warming. However, it should not be considered a non-indigenous taxon.Microceratiumis the ‘tropical morphotype’, the adaptation of a local species (a life stage ofKarenia - Brachidinium - Asterodinium) to the tropical environmental conditions that prevail in summer in the open Mediterranean Sea.


Author(s):  
RAZY HOFFMAN ◽  
HIROSHI KAJIHARA

The ribbon worm Evelineus mcintoshii is reported for the first time from the Mediterranean Sea. Observations that took place, during two algal surveys, on the intertidal abrasion platforms at the middle of the Levantine Sea of Israel indicated that this species is hiding inside a mixture of local and non-indigenous marine seaweeds. It is probably another alien species, one of many, that adopted the Levantine basin of the Eastern Mediterranean due to tropical environmental conditions that characterize this sea. We discuss the first record of this species and its possible origins as well as the first report of Notospermus geniculatus, the other marine nemertean species recently reported from Israel.


2008 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 173 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. SIMBOURA

A specimen of Glycinde bonhourei Gravier, 1904, an Indo-Pacific species, was found at a station near the metalliferous waste disposal in the Northern Evvoikos Gulf (Aegean Sea, eastern Mediterranean). This is the second report of this species in the Mediterranean Sea after its first finding in the Levantine basin (Israel and Egypt). This paper provides new information on its distributional range in the Mediterranean Sea.


ALGAE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 175-193
Author(s):  
Moufida Abdennadher ◽  
Amel Bellaaj Zouari ◽  
Walid Medhioub ◽  
Antonella Penna ◽  
Asma Hamza

This study provides the first report of the presence of Coolia malayensis in the Mediterranean Sea, co-occurring with C. monotis. Isolated strains from the Gulf of Gabès, Tunisia (South-eastern Mediterranean) were identified by morphological characterization and phylogenetic analysis. Examination by light and scanning electron microscopy revealed no significant morphological differences between the Tunisian isolates and other geographically distant strains of C. monotis and C. malayensis. Phylogenetic trees based on ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 and D1‒D3/28S rDNA sequences showed that C. monotis strains clustered with others from the Mediterranean and Atlantic whereas the C. malayensis isolate branched with isolates from the Pacific and the Atlantic, therefore revealing no geographical trend among C. monotis and C. malayensis populations. Ultrastructural analyses by transmission electron microscopy revealed the presence of numerous vesicles containing spirally coiled fibers in both C. malayensis and C. monotis cells, which we speculate to be involved in mucus production.


2018 ◽  
Vol 76 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-54
Author(s):  
Deniz Erguden ◽  
Yusuf Kenan Bayhan ◽  
Sibel Alagoz Erguden ◽  
Ayhan Altun

AbstractThree specimens (1 male and 2 females) of royal flagfinAulopus filamentosus(Bloch, 1792) were caught at a depth of 184 m off Erdemli, Mersin Bay (northeastern Mediterranean, Turkey) in June 2015. The present paper reports the first occurrence and is the confirmation of royal flagfinA. filamentosusfrom the northeastern Mediterranean Sea, Turkey. Since it has been recorded only once in the last sixty years, this species could be considered as exceptionally rare in the easternmost area of the Mediterranean Sea, Turkey.


2015 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.J. van Aartsen ◽  
B. Galil ◽  
C. Bogi

We report the first record in the Mediterranean Sea of the minute Indo-Pacific venerid bivalveCostellipitar chordatum. The species has recently established a small population off the central coast of Israel. Numerous live specimens ofGouldiopa consternans, at several locations off the Israeli coast, confirm the presence of a fast growing population. This is the first record of the species from Israel, following a recent report from Turkey.


2014 ◽  
Vol 57 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Razy Hoffman ◽  
Marcelo Sternberg ◽  
Donatella Serio

AbstractThe Mediterranean coast of Israel is well known as a hotspot of invasive marine species, mostly from the Indian and Pacific oceans. Here, we report the first occurrence of the red seaweed


2009 ◽  
Vol 54 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Esmail Shakman ◽  
Ragnar Kinzelbach ◽  
Jean Trilles ◽  
Michel Bariche

AbstractThis paper presents the first record of two native Mediterranean cymothoid species caught attached to introduced Lessepsian rabbitfishes. This is also the first record of cymothoids from the coastal waters of Libya. Anilocra physodes was collected from Siganus luridus while Nerocila bivittata was found on both Siganus rivulatus and S. luridus. Rabbitfishes in the southern central Mediterranean have acquired native Mediterranean cymothoids but do not seem to be infested along the Levantine coast.


2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 613-653 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. Oviedo ◽  
P. Ziveri ◽  
M. Álvarez ◽  
T. Tanhua

Abstract. The Mediterranean Sea is considered a "hot-spot" for climate change, being characterized by oligotrophic to ultra-oligotrophic waters and rapidly changing carbonate chemistry. Coccolithophores are considered a dominant phytoplankton group in these waters. As a marine calcifying organism they are expected to respond to the ongoing changes in seawater CO2 systems parameters. However, very few studies have covered the entire Mediterranean physiochemical gradients from the Strait of Gibraltar to the Eastern Mediterranean Levantine Basin. We provide here an updated state of knowledge of the coccolithophore distribution in the Mediterranean Sea and relate this to a broad set of in situ measured environmental variables. Samples were taken during the Meteor (M84/3) oceanographic cruise in April 2011, between 0–100 m water depth from 28 stations. Total diatom, dinoflagellate and silicoflagellate cell concentrations are also presented. Our results highlight the importance of seawater carbonate chemistry, especially CO32−, in unraveling the distribution of heterococcolithophores, the most abundant coccolithophore life phase. Holo- and hetero-coccolithophores respond differently to environmental factors. For instance, changes in heterococcolithophore assemblages were best linked to the combination of [CO32−], pH, and salinity (ρ = 0.57) although salinity might be not functionally related to coccolithophore assemblage distribution. Holococcolithophores, on the other hand, were preferentially distributed and showed higher species diversity in oligotrophic areas (Best fit, ρ = 0.32 for nutrients), thriving in nutrient depleted waters. Clustering of heterococcolithophores revealed three groups of species sharing more than 65% similarities. These clusters could be assigned to the eastern and western basins, and deeper layers (below 50 m), respectively. In addition, the species Gephyrocapsa oceanica, G. muellerae and Emiliania huxleyi morphotype B/C are spatially distributed together and trace the influx of Atlantic waters into the Mediterranean Sea. The results of the present work emphasize the importance of considering holo- and hetero-coccolithophores separately when analyzing changes in species assemblages and diversity. Our findings clearly show that coccolithophores are a dominant phytoplankton group in the entire Mediterranean Sea; they have life stages that are expected to respond differently to the variability in seawater carbonate chemistry and nutrient concentrations.


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