Search results for "Ulvophyceae"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Standardization proposal for the mapping of Caulerpa taxifolia expansion in the Mediterranean sea

1999

Fourteen years after the first observation of Caulerpa taxifolia (Valh) C. Agardh in the northwestern Mediterranean Sea, this green alga of tropical origin is now present in five countries (Spain, France, Monaco, Italy and Croatia). By the end of 1997, more than 46 km(2), at depths of between 0 and 50 m, were found to be affected by this expansion. A standardization of the cartographic procedure is proposed here. Such a standardization is necessary to compare maps produced by various organizations from different countries. For a given independent station, it is based on the definition of three levels of colonization:Level I refers to a station where one or several colonies less than 100 m a…

0106 biological sciencesCartographyCaulerpa taxifoliaMediterranean SeacartographieAquatic ScienceOceanography010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesInvasive speciesSurface areaMediterranean seacartography; Caulerpa taxifolia; invasive species; Mediterranean seaMediterranean SeaColonization14. Life underwaterbiologyInvasive speciesEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyUlvophyceaebiology.organism_classificationStandardizationGeographyMer MéditerranéePhysical geographyLevel iiLevel iiiStandardisationCaulerpa taxifoliaEspèces envahissantes
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Heavy Metal Contents in Soft-Bottom Marine Macrophytes and Sediments Along the Mediterranean Coast of Spain

2000

. Hg, Cd, Pb and Zn concentrations were determined in sediment and in tissues of five species of soft-bottom marine macrophytes (Posidonia oceanica, Cymodocea nodosa, Zostera noltii, Ruppia cirrhosa and Caulerpa prolifera) along the Spanish Mediterranean coast. Levels of metals were low in most of the sampling stations and similar to those found by other authors in uncontaminated zones. Certain locations, however, showed some degree of contamination (Cambrils, Almassora, Alacant, Mar Menor and El Portus). In Santa Pola we found high contents of metals in one sample of sediment due to the high proportion of the fine fraction (particules < 63µm) and organic matter, but not in the seagrass spe…

EcologybiologyCymodocea nodosaUlvophyceaeSedimentAquatic ScienceCaulerpa proliferabiology.organism_classificationSeagrassRuppia cirrhosaPosidonia oceanicaBotanyZosteraEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMarine Ecology
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Effects of fish-farm biodeposition on periphyton assemblages on artificial substrates in the southern Tyrrhenian Sea (Gulf of Castellammare, Sicily)

2007

An algal assemblage growing on artificial substrata of fish-farm cages was investigated. Specifically, algal response to the effects of fish-farm facilities was studied, in order to identify a possible future descriptor of biodeposition impact. Some sites were positioned upstream of the farms (at least 750 m; ‘controls’) and other sites were positioned downstream of the farms (‘impacts’). All sites were situated in the Tyrrhenian Sea. Control and impact sites differed significantly with regard to the dissolved nutrient profile. The fouling community (samples were scraped from buoys) displayed a reduction gradient in diversity which increased with the effect of fish farms. A total of 51 taxa…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaFouling communitybiologyEcologyUlvophyceaeFish farmingChlorophyceaeFish-farm wasteAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationAquaculture impactAlgal assemblageFisheryNutrientDissolved nutrientsDominance (ecology)EcosystemPeriphytonEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Feeding strategy of the sacoglossan opisthobranch Oxynoe olivacea on the tropical green alga Caulerpa taxifolia.

2007

The feeding behaviour of the shelled sacoglossan Oxynoe olivacea was investigated to better understand the role and importance of this species in influencing encroachments of the alien alga Caulerpa taxifolia in the Mediterranean sea. We tested whether this slug preferred, as preliminary field observations suggested, an aggregative feeding behaviour and which part of the algal thallus, phylloid vs rhizoid, it preferred. Results showed that O. olivacea fed in groups and actively selected phylloid. This outcome poses important questions regarding the possibility that this species, fragmenting the alga thallus, could enhance dispersion and regeneration of C. taxifolia.

biologyAlgaeCaulerpa taxifoliaOxynoe olivaceaUlvophyceaeBotanyGastropodaIntroduced speciesCaulerpa spp.Feeding strategy Introduced species Oxynoe olivaceaAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationMolluscaThallus
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