Search results for "marine conservation"

showing 10 items of 34 documents

Aquaculture and its by-products as a source of nutrients and bioactive compounds

2020

Underutilized marine resources (e.g., algae, fish, and shellfish processing by-products), as sustainable alternatives to livestock protein and interesting sources of bioactive compounds, have attracted the attention of the researchers. Aquatic products processing industries are growing globally and producing huge amounts of by-products that often discarded as waste. However, recent studies pointed out that marine waste contains several valuable components including high-quality proteins, lipids, minerals, vitamins, enzymes, and bioactive compounds that can be used against cancer and some cardiovascular disorders. Besides, previously conducted studies on algae have shown the presence of some…

Marine conservation0303 health sciences030309 nutrition & dieteticsbusiness.industrySeafood processingBiologybiology.organism_classificationBiotechnology03 medical and health sciencesNutrientAlgaeAquacultureFish <Actinopterygii>businessFish processingShellfish
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A False Sense of Protection: Recreational Uses and Illegal Behavior in a Mediterranean Marine Protected Area and Implications for Management.

2019

Over the last 35 years, at both the European and the Italian level, great efforts have been made to increase the number of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs): they are considered an effective tool for protecting oceans and biodiversity. In recent years, MPAs have become more than simply tools to improve marine conservation. In fact, their management agencies are actively involved in the sustainable development of nearby communities through the promotion of recreational activities (boating, snorkeling, diving). Even if the recreational uses of the marine environment are generally considered benign, they can potentially be highly detrimental for species and their habitats. As a result, these activ…

Marine conservationConservation of Natural Resources010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesGeography Planning and DevelopmentBiodiversity010501 environmental sciencesSnorkeling01 natural sciencesMediterranean SeaRecreationEnvironmental planningShips0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental ScienceSustainable developmentbusiness.industryGeneral MedicineGeographyHabitatItalyCriminal BehaviorRecreationMarine protected areaSeasonsbusinessZoningIntegrated environmental assessment and management
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Conservation, Spillover and Gene Flow within a Network of Northern European Marine Protected Areas

2013

Published version of an article in the journal: PLoS ONE. Also available from the publisher at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0073388 Open access To ensure that marine protected areas (MPAs) benefit conservation and fisheries, the effectiveness of MPA designs has to be evaluated in field studies. Using an interdisciplinary approach, we empirically assessed the design of a network of northern MPAs where fishing for European lobster (Homarus gammarus) is prohibited. First, we demonstrate a high level of residency and survival (50%) for almost a year (363 days) within MPAs, despite small MPA sizes (0.5-1 km2). Second, we demonstrate limited export (4.7%) of lobsters tagged within MPAs…

Marine conservationGene FlowConservation of Natural ResourcesMovementFishingPopulation Dynamicslcsh:MedicineBiologyGene flowSpillover effectAnimalsVDP::Mathematics and natural science: 400::Zoology and botany: 480::Marine biology: 497Ecosystemlcsh:ScienceEcosystemVDP::Agriculture and fishery disciplines: 900::Fisheries science: 920MultidisciplinaryEcologylcsh:RfungiPelagic zoneLife stageNephropidaeEuropeMarine protected arealcsh:QResearch Article
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Climate driven life histories: the case of the Mediterranean Storm petrel

2014

Seabirds are affected by changes in the marine ecosystem. The influence of climatic factors on marine food webs can be reflected in long-term seabird population changes. We modelled the survival and recruitment of the Mediterranean storm petrel (Hydrobates pelagicus melitensis) using a 21-year mark-recapture dataset involving almost 5000 birds. We demonstrated a strong influence of prebreeding climatic conditions on recruitment age and of rainfall and breeding period conditions on juvenile survival. The results suggest that the juvenile survival rate of the Mediterranean subspecies may not be negatively affected by the predicted features of climate change, i.e., warmer summers and lower rai…

Mediterranean climateCharadriiformesAtmospheric ScienceTime FactorsClimatePopulationClimate changelcsh:MedicinePopulation ModelingMarine BiologyBreedingModels BiologicalHydrobates pelagicusMarine ConservationCharadriiformesbiology.animalAnimalsMarine ecosystemeducationlcsh:ScienceAvian BiologyConservation ScienceClimatologyeducation.field_of_studyPrincipal Component AnalysisMultidisciplinarybiologyPopulation BiologyClimate change Mediterranean Storm Petrel WinteringEcologyMediterranean Regionlcsh:REcology and Environmental SciencesBiology and Life SciencesComputational BiologyStormbiology.organism_classificationSurvival AnalysisGeographySettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataEarth Scienceslcsh:QSeasonsSeabirdZoologyResearch ArticleClimate Modeling
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Effects of Nautical Traffic and Noise on Foraging Patterns of Mediterranean Damselfish (Chromis chromes)

2012

Chromis chromis is a key species in the Mediterranean marine coastal ecosystems where, in summer, recreational boating and its associated noise overlap. Anthropogenic noise could induce behavioural modifications in marine organisms, thereby affecting population dynamics. In the case of an important species for the ecosystem like C. chromis, this could rebound on the community structure. Here, we measured nautical traffic during the summer of 2007 in a Southern Mediterranean Marine Protected Area (MPA) and simultaneously the feeding behaviour of C. chromis was video-recorded, within both the no-take A-zone and the B-zone where recreational use is allowed. Feeding frequencies, escape reaction…

Mediterranean climateConservation of Natural ResourcesScienceForagingPopulationMarine and Aquatic SciencesMarine BiologyMarine ConservationBehavioral EcologyMediterranean SeaAnimalsEcosystemChromisDamselfisheducationBiologyEcosystemShipseducation.field_of_studyAnalysis of VarianceMultidisciplinarybiologyEcologyBehavior AnimalEcologyQRMarine Ecologybiology.organism_classificationChromis chromisMarine Environmentsnautical traffic foraging noise impact Chromis chromisPerciformesFisheryEarth SciencesMedicineRecreationMarine protected areaNoiseCoastal EcologyEnvironmental ProtectionResearch ArticleEcological Environments
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Sometimes Sperm Whales (Physeter macrocephalus) Cannot Find Their Way Back to the High Seas: A Multidisciplinary Study on a Mass Stranding

2011

BackgroundMass strandings of sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) remain peculiar and rather unexplained events, which rarely occur in the Mediterranean Sea. Solar cycles and related changes in the geomagnetic field, variations in water temperature and weather conditions, coast geographical features and human activities have been proposed as possible causes. In December 2009, a pod of seven male sperm whales stranded along the Adriatic coast of Southern Italy. This is the sixth instance from 1555 in this basin.Methodology/principal findingsComplete necropsies were performed on three whales whose bodies were in good condition, carrying out on sampled tissues histopathology, virology, bacter…

Mediterranean climateMaleMeteorological ConceptsVeterinary ToxicologyMARINE MAMMALS; GENETIC DIVERSITY; TOXOPLASMA-GONDII; HARBOR PORPOISES; PORPOISES PHOCOENA-PHOCOENAMarine ConservationMARINE MAMMALSMediterranean seaeducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinaryBehavior AnimalGeographyEcologyPORPOISES PHOCOENA-PHOCOENAQRMarine EcologyMammalogyVeterinary DiseasesAdipose TissueItalyBlood circulationGENETIC DIVERSITYMedicineEnvironmental PollutantsHARBOR PORPOISEScetacean necropsies histopathology virology bacteriology parasitology contamination stable isotope MediterraneanVeterinary PathologyResearch ArticleSettore BIO/07 - EcologiaSciencePopulationMultidisciplinary studyZoologyMarine BiologyBiologySperm whale; Cetacean mass strandings; Multidisciplinary studyCetacean mass strandingsmass strandingSperm whaleMetals HeavyOrientationMediterranean SeaAnimalsHumanseducationBiologySperm Whalesperm whale; mass strandingbiology.organism_classificationVeterinary ParasitologySpermTOXOPLASMA-GONDIIWater temperatureMultidisciplinary studyVeterinary ScienceZoologyPLoS ONE
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Isotope evidence for the use of marine resources in the Eastern Iberian Mesolithic

2014

There are relatively few coastal Mesolithic sites in the Iberian Mediterranean region, probably due to a number of factors including sea level changes and the disappearance of sites due to agriculture and urbanisation. However, recent excavations have uncovered inland sites that have marine faunal remains (i.e. molluscs and fish) and lithics from the coastal area, which both indicate interactions between the coast and the upland valleys. These inland sites are located at a distance of 30-50km from today's coastline and are at altitudes higher than 1000m. We report on additional information on the links between the coast and these inland sites through the use of dietary isotope analysis (car…

Mediterranean climateMarine conservationArcheologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyStable isotope ratioMediterranean IberiaArqueologiaPalaeodietUrbanizationparasitic diseasesCoveSea levelGeologyMesolithicMesolithicIsotope analysisStable isotopes
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Late Mesolithic burials at Casa Corona (Villena, Spain): direct radiocarbon and palaeodietary evidence of the last forager populations in Eastern Ibe…

2013

Abstract Current knowledge about the Mesolithic–Neolithic transition in the Central and Western Mediterranean European regions is deeply limited by the paucity of Late Mesolithic human osteological data and the presence of chronological gaps covering several centuries between the last foragers and the first archaeological evidence of farming peoples. In this work, we present new data to fill these gaps. We provide direct AMS radiocarbon dating and carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) stable isotope analysis were carried out on bone collagen samples of two single burials from the recently discovered open-air Late Mesolithic site of Casa Corona (Villena, Spain). The results shed new light on the…

Mediterranean climateMarine conservationArcheologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEpipaleolithicArqueologiaArchaeologylaw.inventionPeninsulalawRadiocarbon datingMesolithicChronologyIsotope analysis
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Economic transitions in finis terra

2009

A gradualist approach has been taken in describing the evolution of the last foragers in the Iberian Mediterranean Region (IMR) up to their rapid collapse, brought about by the appearance of the first prehistoric farmers. This point of view assumes that the post-Last Glaical Maximum (LGM) climatic change brought about a certain restructuring of the mammal fauna and exerted a direct influence by flooding the changing coastal plain and submerging coastal sites related to marine resource use. This paper proposes that small prey was a constant and structural resource in the IMR that did not signal intensification, since human consumption of rabbits goes back to the Middle Palaeolithic. At the s…

Mediterranean climateMarine conservationArcheologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryResource (biology)Coastal plainRestructuringEcologyFlooding (psychology)Climate changePrehistoryAnthropologyPhysical geographyGeologyBefore Farming
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Signals of loss: Local collapse of neglected vermetid reefs in the western Mediterranean Sea

2022

During the summer of 2022, an extensive die-off of Dendropoma cristatum and other marine organisms associated with vermetid reefs was observed in the western Mediterranean Sea (northern coast of Sicily). Quantitative data from more than 300 km of coastal stripe indicated that the percentage of dead D. cristatum specimens, showing empty and/or transversely fractured shells, ranged from 64 to 84 % in populations having a density of 2900-4730 ind./m2, suggesting that millions of organisms had recently died along the Sicilian coast. This high mortality range coincided with prolonged desiccation events during which biogenic vermetid reefs were exposed to extreme warm-air conditions for several c…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaMarine benthosMarine conservationSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaBiodiversityAquatic ScienceOceanographyPollutionMass mortalityMediterranean SeaClimate changeSeasonsHabitat-forming speciesSicily
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