Search results for "SEAGRASS MEADOW"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Altered epiphyte community and sea urchin diet in Posidonia oceanica meadows in the vicinity of volcanic CO2 vents

2017

Ocean acidification (OA) predicted for 2100 is expected to shift seagrass epiphyte communities towards the dominance of more tolerant non-calcifying taxa. However, little is known about the indirect effects of such changes on food provision to key seagrass consumers. We found that epiphyte communities of the seagrass Posidonia oceanica in two naturally acidified sites (i.e. north and south sides of a volcanic CO2 vent) and in a control site away from the vent at the Ischia Island (NW Mediterranean Sea) significantly differed in composition and abundance. Such differences involved a higher abundance of non-calcareous crustose brown algae and a decline of calcifying polychaetes in both acidif…

Settore BIO/07 - Ecologia0106 biological sciencesAssemblagesPH reductionAlgalGrowthAquatic ScienceOceanography010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesParacentrotus lividusAcidificationAlgaeParacentrotus-lividus lam.Seawater14. Life underwaterHerbivoryClimate-changebiologyEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyCoralline algaeGeneral MedicineEcosystem shiftsbiology.organism_classificationPollutionSeagrass13. Climate actionPosidonia oceanicaEpiphyteCrustoseSeagrass meadowsCoastal waters Coralline algae Calcifying organisms Community composition Epiphytes Global change Gut content Marine ecology Ocean acidification Paracentrotus lividus Seagrass
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Colonisation process of vegetative fragments of Posidonia oceanica (L.) Delile on rubble mounds

2005

Seagrass colonise new areas via the dispersion of seeds or vegetative fragments. Independent of the manner of colonization, habitat requirements need to be met for the successful establishment of seagrasses. Here we report on the colonization process of Posidonia oceanica in a highly disturbed area: a gas pipeline trench at Capo Feto (SW Sicily, Italy). A trench dredged through a P. oceanica bed was back-filled with rubble added from dump barges leading to the formation of a series of rubble mounds on the seabed. Over time, these mounds became colonised with P. oceanica. In order to understand the pattern of P. oceanica colonization, shoot density was quantified over 3 years (2001-2003) on …

DYNAMICSPotamogetonaceaeSEDIMENT RETENTIONAquatic Scienceengineering.materialWATER MOTIONDISTRIBUTIONSEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSeabedCYMODOCEA-NODOSAEcologybiologyEcologyfungiSEAGRASS MEADOWRubbleRECOVERYbiology.organism_classificationColonisationREPRODUCTIONOceanographySeagrassHabitatPosidonia oceanicaTrenchSURVIVALengineeringGROWTH
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Blue carbon sink capacity of degraded ecosystems: the potential role of disturbed seagrass meadows in climate change mitigation

2020

Settore BIO/07 - Ecologiablue carbon sink climate change seagrass meadows
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