Search results for " Invasive species"

showing 10 items of 40 documents

First record of Heptapleurum arboricola Hayata (Araliaceae) as a casual non-native woody plant in the Mediterranean area

2021

I report here the first record of Heptapleurum arboricola Hayata (syn. Schefflera arboricola (Hayata) Merr.) (Araliaceae) as a casual non-native plant throughout the Mediterranean area. I observed the natural regeneration in urban areas at Castellammare del Golfo, a small coastal town in north-west Sicily (Mediterranean Italy). Due to the lack of self-sustaining populations and the short-term observational period, Heptapleurum arboricola should be considered as a casual species according to the classification of non-native plants. The detection of early signs of naturalization of non-native plants is of crucial importance for the management and control of invasive species. The main abiotic …

GeographySettore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E SelvicolturaEcologyCasualbiologyBotanyMediterranean areaAraliaceaebiology.organism_classificationcoastal areas dwarf umbrella tree early detection naturalization Schefflera urban ecosystems woody invasive speciesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsWoody plantBioInvasions Records
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What does happen when an insect pest follows its host plant and viceversa?

2015

Invasive species are usually well known but only make up a small percentage of the European’s alien plants and insects. The ways these exotic species interact with our natural and cultural heritage are very complex and even some species considered invasive had and could have positive aspects on some European landscape and culture. A close look at the complicated relationship between non-native and native plants and insects in the Mediterranean areas reveals some unexpected twists in the story. Here are some cases of when aliens can threaten our cultural heritage or being part of it

Insect pestSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataEcologyBotanySettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataPlant ScienceBiologyalien invasive species cultural heritage landscape natural heritage silkworms rice
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The spreading of the invasive italian wall lizard on Vulcano, the last island inhabited by the critically endangered aeolian wall lizard

2018

[EN] The Aeolian Wall Lizard (Podarcis raffoneae) is an endemic species of the Aeolian Archipelago of Italy (Mediterranean Sea). Its distribution is limited to three islets and two relict populations on a relatively large island: Vulcano (a population on the summit of Gran Cratere volcano and another on Capo Grosso promontory). The critically endangered Aeolian Wall Lizard is threatened by the introduction of the Italian Wall Lizard (Podarcis siculus), which successfully competes and hybridizes with the endemic lizard. The invasive lizard is widespread on Vulcano, although the literature does not provide the exact distribution. Our first aim was updating the distribution of the Italian Wall…

Invasive speciesNarrow-endemic specieInvasive specieIntroduction gatewayPodarcis raffoneaePodarcis siculusPodarcis siculuEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicNarrow-endemic speciesSmall-range specieInvasion pathwayAnimal Science and ZoologyBiological invasionsBiological invasions; Introduction gateway; Invasion pathway; Invasive species; Narrow-endemic species; Podarcis raffoneae; Podarcis siculus; Small-range species; Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics; Animal Science and ZoologyBiological invasionSmall-range species
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Identification, cloning and environmental factors modulation of a αβ defensin from the lessepsian invasive mussel Brachidontes pharaonis (Bivalvia: M…

2015

International audience; Immunological effectors of invasive species playing a role in addressing new colonization are still poorly studied. In the present study the cDNA sequence of the defensin from a Lessepsian invasive species, the Red Sea mussel Brachidontes pharaonis, was cloned using RACE method. Defensins are a class of widely known antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), oligopeptides with a broad spectrum of targeted organisms ranging from viruses to parasites. Analysis of BpDef sequence (262 bp) revealed the presence of an ORF coding for 81 amino acids. The full-length amino acid sequence showed the highest similarity to antimicrobial peptides MGD1 and MGD2 sequence from Mytilus galloprovi…

Lessepsian mussellcsh:Biology (General)Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs)antimicrobial peptide defensine invasive speciesenvironmental stress effectBrachidontes pharaonis[SDU.STU.HY]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Hydrologylcsh:QH301-705.5Brachidontes pharaonis; Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs); defensin; Lessepsian mussel; environmental stress effectdefensin
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Assessing anthropogenic pressures on coastal marine ecosystems using stable CNS isotopes: State of the art, knowledge gaps, and community-scale persp…

2015

Abstract In recent decades, the analysis of carbon, nitrogen and sulfur stable isotopes (SIA) has emerged as a powerful, viable methodology for examining food web structure and dynamics, as well as addressing a number of applied issues. Here, we provide a state-of-the-art review of the use of SIA for assessing anthropogenic pressures on natural ecosystems, in order to establish current knowledge gaps and identify promising applications for evaluating the ecological status of marine coastal waters. Specifically, the potential of SIA to provide food web-scale indicators for estimating cumulative anthropogenic pressures is addressed. The review indicates that the methodology has been used for …

PollutionSettore BIO/07 - Ecologiabusiness.industryEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectEnvironmental resource managementMarine food webInvasive speciecarbon nitrogen and sulfur stable isotopes marine food webs multiple anthropogenic pressures eutrophication pollution invasive speciesAquatic ScienceEutrophicationOceanographyPollutionFood webHabitatIndicator speciesCarbon nitrogen and sulfur stable isotopeEnvironmental scienceMultiple anthropogenic pressureMarine ecosystembusinessEutrophicationIsotope analysisTrophic levelmedia_common
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An individual-based dataset of carbon and nitrogen isotopic data of Callinectes sapidus in invaded Mediterranean waters

2022

The characterisation of functional traits of non-indigenous and invasive species is crucial to assess their impact within invaded habitats. Successful biological invasions are often facilitated by the generalist diet of the invaders which can modify their trophic position and adapt to new ecosystems determining changes in their structure and functioning. Invasive crustaceans are an illustrative example of such mechanisms since their trophic habits can determine important ecological impacts on aquatic food webs. The Atlantic blue crab Callinectes sapidus is currently established and considered invasive in the Mediterranean Sea where it has been recorded for the first time between 1947 and 19…

PortunoideaArthropodaBrachyuraQH301-705.5Eubrachyuratrophic positioninvasive speciesPleocyemataDecapodainvasive specieHeterotremataPortuninaestable isotopeAnimaliaPortunidaeBiology (General)MalacostracaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTECNOLOGIA DEL MEDIO AMBIENTEtransitionalEcologyInvasive speciesInvaded Stable methodologyfungifood and beveragesisotopic nicheBiotaAtlantic blue crabtransitional waterCallinectesAtlantic blue crab Invasive species isotopic niche stable isotope transitional water trophic positionCallinectes sapidusBiodiversity Data Journal
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Leratiomyces ceres (Strophariaceae, Basidiomycota), new to Poland

2019

<em>Leratiomyces ceres</em>, an extra-European species hitherto unknown in Poland, was identified in a public park in Rybnik City (SW Poland). The first Polish collections of the fungus were studied using macroscopic and microscopic features. A brief description and illustration of the species, based on Polish specimens, are presented. The ecology and characteristics distinguishing <em>L. ceres</em> from related <em>Leratiomyces</em> species are also discussed.

Public parkstropharia aurantiacabiologyEcologyEcology (disciplines)BasidiomycotaPlant Sciencewoodchip fungibiology.organism_classificationupper silesiastropholoma aurantiacumGeographylcsh:Biology (General)Stropholoma aurantiacum; Stropharia aurantiaca; Psilocybe aurantiaca; alien invasive species; woodchip fungi; Upper Silesia; EuropeStrophariaceaeStropharia aurantiacaeuropeLeratiomyces cerespsilocybe aurantiacalcsh:QH301-705.5Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsalien invasive speciesLeratiomycesActa Mycologica
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Are Sicilian forests at less risk of invasion by alien plants?

Climate change could facilitate the spread of invasive alien plants by making plant communities and individuals weaker and less competitive. Indeed, alien plants are generally more adapted to the rapidly changing environmental conditions that are being determined in the coming decades. Moreover, while alien plants have, until recent years, mainly affected synanthropic communities and man-made habitats, they are increasingly able to affect also more complex natural communities such as forests. The talk will show some Sicilian cases.

Settore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E SelvicolturaNon-native trees climate change Mediterranean woodlands invasive species
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First record in Algeria of two eulophid wasps: Closterocerus chamaeleon (Girault) and its host, the eucalyptus gall wasp Ophelimus maskelli (Asmead) …

2010

The endophagous parasitoid Closterocerus chamaeleon, released in Israel, Italy and Corsica, for classical biological control programs, and its host, the gall-maker Ophelimus maskelli, were recorded for the first time in Algeria, in a straight line 450 km far from the Sardinian release site and 700 km far from the closest Sicilian release site. Their presence is confirmed in Andalucia (Spain), about 2000 km far from release sites of Sicily and Campania. In about two years the parasitoid spread and was established in many Mediterranean countries.

Settore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataEndophagous parasitoid exotic insect invasive species dispersal
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An updated overview of invasive Caulerpa taxa in Sicily and circum- Sicilian Islands, strategic zones within the NW Mediterranean Sea

2017

The spread dynamics of invasive Caulerpa taxa (i.e. Caulerpa cylindracea, C. taxifolia var. taxi- folia and C. taxifolia var. distichophylla) in Sicily and circum-Sicilian Islands, based on relevant publications, grey literature, unpublished data and in situ observations during the last 23 years, is presented here and discussed. Their known distribution is mapped. New records are also reported. Transport-stowaway is considered the most plausible vector of introduction of invasive Caulerpa in the area. The three invasive taxa showed different spread dynamics. Caulerpa cylindracea and C. taxifolia var. distichophylla, behaved as highly successful and fast-spreading taxa, i.e. as true invasive…

Settore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataCaulerpa cylindracea C. taxifolia invasive species Mediterranean basin.
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