Search results for "Serpulidae"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

The role of two non-indigenous serpulid tube worms in shaping artificial hard substrata communities: case study of a fish farm in the central Mediter…

2019

Understanding the spread and establishment of non-indigenous species (NIS) is one of the primary areas of focus in bioinvasion science and is essential for generating appropriate management strategies in aquaculture. Here we investigated the role of 2 non-indigenous serpulid tube worms (Hydroides elegans and H. dirampha) in shaping the hard substrata communities around a fish farm in the Strait of Sicily over 1 yr (June 2014-June 2015), at 3 mo intervals (September and December 2014, March and June 2015). The mean density values of serpulids were significantly different at each sampling time. The density of serpulids on submerged panels showed a peak in spring (March 2015, after 9 mo) and d…

lcsh:SH1-691biologyFish farmingManagement Monitoring Policy and LawAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationlcsh:Aquaculture. Fisheries. AnglingIndigenousFisheryMediterranean seaSerpulidaeGeographylcsh:QH540-549.5lcsh:EcologyTube (container)Water Science and TechnologyAquaculture Environment Interactions
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Fosildiagénesis del anélido Rotularia spirulaea (Lamarck, 1818) (Polychaeta, Serpulidae) en el Eoceno del dominio pirenaico occidental

2018

UNESCO::CIENCIES DE LA VIDA:CIENCIES DE LA VIDA [UNESCO]Fosildiagénesis del anélido Rotularia spirulaea (Lamarck 1818) (Polychaeta Serpulidae) en el Eoceno del dominio pirenaico occidental Artículo
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Following the Phoenician example: western Mediterranean colonization by <em>Spirobranchus</em> cf. <em>tetraceros</em> (Annel…

2020

A newly established population of the fouling polychaete Spirobranchus cf. tetraceros is reported from the western Mediterranean (Valencia Port). Despite previous intensive surveys, this is the first record for the taxon in the Iberian Peninsula. Molecular analyses revealed that S. cf. tetraceros from Valencia are genetically identical to specimens from Heraklion, Crete, but different from those collected in the Red Sea and S. tetraceros sensu stricto from the type locality in Australia. Mediterranean and Red Sea S. cf. tetraceros form a well-supported monophyletic clade but are clearly distinct from New South Wales specimens of S. tetraceros. Our new molecular evidence supports the hypothe…

Spirobranchuseducation.field_of_studySpecies complexbiologyEcologyPopulationAquatic ScienceOceanographybiology.organism_classificationMonophylyTaxonMediterranean seaSerpulidaeGeographyType localityeducationScientia Marina
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