Search results for "Scuba diving"

showing 6 items of 16 documents

Can recreational scuba divers alter natural gross sedimentation rate? A case study from a Mediterranean deep cave

2010

Abstract Di Franco, A., Ferruzza, G., Baiata, P., Chemello, R., and Milazzo, M. 2010. Can recreational scuba divers alter natural gross sedimentation rate? A case study from a Mediterranean deep cave. – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 67: 871–874. Submarine caves are environments with features distinguishing them from other littoral habitats but, despite their ecological importance, their response to anthropogenic disturbance has been seldom verified. One potential threat affecting natural communities within caves is represented by recreational scuba diving. Divers' disturbance within marine caves is mainly related to physical contacts and increased sediment resuspension potentially affecti…

Mediterranean climategeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyscuba divingAquatic ScienceSedimentationOceanographyNatural (archaeology)Scuba divingOceanographyGeographyresuspensionCavesedimentsubmarine cavessediment trapRecreationasymmetrical experimental designEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Effects of recreational scuba diving on Mediterranean fishes: evidence of involuntary feeding?

2013

Despite a large body of literature assessing the impacts of recreational scuba diving on marine habitats, little attention has been paid to the potentially harmful effects this has on fishes. The aim of this study was the assessment of the immediate response of different fish species to divers’ activities. A decrease of fishes’ natural diffidence towards divers is shown, probably due to an enhanced availability of their prey as a result of divers’ contacts with the substrate.

Mediterranean climatelcsh:SH1-691Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaEnvironmental EngineeringEcologyMarine habitatsFish speciesfish behaviourshort-term effectScuba divingAquatic ScienceOceanographylcsh:Aquaculture. Fisheries. AnglingScuba diving fish behaviour short-term effect Mediterranean SeaPredationScuba divingFisheryGeographyScuba diving fish behaviour short-term effect Mediterranean Sea.Mediterranean Sea.Recreationhuman activitiesEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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The effects of recreational Paracentrotus lividus fishing on distribution patterns of sea urchins at Ustica Island MPA (Western Mediterranean, Italy)

2006

This study evaluated the effects of recreational Paracentrotus lividus fishing on average density and size of this edible sea urchin, and its indirect effects on Arbacia lixula on barren substrates of Ustica Island MPA (SW Italy, Mediterranean Sea). Size, single and pooled species densities, density of large individuals (>40 mm long) and small individuals (<20 mm long) of the two species were estimated by scuba diving in autumn 2003, spring and summer 2004 at two sites impacted by P. lividus fishing (Punta Cavazzi and Pagliaro, take zone C) and one control (Cala Sidoti, no take zone). Two samplings were performed in each season. We found that reduced densities of P. lividus and A. lixula oc…

Sea urchinbiologyEcologyFishingMarine Protected AreasInterspecific competitionAquatic ScienceArbacia lixulabiology.organism_classificationParacentrotus lividusScuba divingFisheryMPAMediterranean seaFisheryHabitatParacentrotus lividusbiology.animalSea urchins; Fishery; Marine Protected Areas; Paracentrotus lividus; Arbacia lixulaMediterranean SeaSea urchinsSea urchinArbacia lixulaFisheries Research
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Scuba diver behaviour and its effects on the biota of a Mediterranean marine protected area

2009

The effects of diving activity in different Mediterranean subtidal habitats are scarcely known. This study evaluates diver behaviour (for example time spent in each habitat), use (contacts made with the substrate) and immediate effects of diver contact on benthic species in a marine protected area (MPA) in Sicily. Over a two-year period, intentions of 105 divers were observed within seven subtidal habitats: algae on horizontal substrate, algae on vertical substrate, Posidonia oceanica, encrusted walls, caves, sand and pebbles. Divers selected a habitat in proportion to its availability along the scuba trail. On average, each diver made 2.52 contacts every seven minutes, and no differences w…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaAstroides calycularisfood.ingredientbiologyved/biologyEcologyHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesisved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesManagement Monitoring Policy and Lawbiology.organism_classificationPollutionScuba divingfoodBenthosHabitatEunicella singularisBenthic zonePosidonia oceanicahabitat selection impact marine protected area Mediterranean Sea scuba divingEnvironmental scienceMarine protected areaNature and Landscape ConservationWater Science and TechnologyEnvironmental Conservation
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Developing a scuba trail vulnerability index (STVI): a case study from a Mediterranean MPA

2008

Scuba diving is now one of the major form of commercial use of marine protected areas (MPAs) around the world and the control of its potential impacts on the marine environment represents a fundamental key to manage this recreational activity in highly dived areas. A potential tool to tackle such issues has been thought to be the definition of a value of recreational carrying capacity of an area, but this approach has been rarely considered management-effective. Therefore, the first step for effectively managing scuba-diving should be ‘bottom-up’: characterizing the benthic communities potentially affected by diving and evaluating their vulnerability. Aim of this paper is to propose a tool …

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaEcologyVulnerability indexbusiness.industryComputer scienceDivingEnvironmental resource managementMarine protected areaVulnerabilityVulnerabilityScuba divingIndexFuzzy logicSustainabilityMarine protected areaEnvironmental impact assessmentbusinessRecreationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEnvironmental qualityNature and Landscape Conservation
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The operational sex ratio of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus populations: the case of the Mediterranean marine protected area of Ustica Island (…

2009

We investigated, with a series of field and laboratory observations, the possible effect of the starfish Marthasteria glacialis predation on the operational sex ratio (OSR), i.e. the number of sexually mature males divided by the total number of sexually mature adults of both sexes at any one time, of the edible sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus. The OSR was estimated three times during the sea urchin summer spawning period (July 2004, June 2005 and July 2006) on barren substrates of Ustica Island Marine Protected Area (Southern Tyrrhenian Sea, Italy). Four sites were selected: two characterized by high M. glacialis density (take zone C) and two controls with low starfish density (no-take zo…

echinoidEcologybiologyStarfishAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationParacentrotus lividusPredationScuba divingFisherystarfishTyrrhenian Sea.biology.animalAdult sex ratioMarine protected areaOperational sex ratioSea urchinnatural predationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSex ratioMarine Protected Area
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