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Climatic fluctuations, current variability and marine species distribution: a case study in the Ligurian Sea
Title | Climatic fluctuations, current variability and marine species distribution: a case study in the Ligurian Sea |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 1995 |
Authors | Astraldi, Bianchi, Gasparini, Morri |
Journal | Oceanologica Acta |
Volume | 18 |
Keywords | biodiversité, biodiversity, biology, climate change, distribution, distribution d'espèces, écosystème, espèce d'eau chaude, Italie, Italy, Ligurian Sea, Mediterranean sea, Méditerranée nord-occidentale, Méditerrannée occidentale, Mer Ligure, Mer Méditerranée, monitoring, north-western Mediterranean, species distribution, temperature, warm-water species, warming, western Mediterranean |
Abstract | The Ligurian Sea, situated in the north-east corner of the western Mediterranean, is colder than the Tyrrhenian Sea, situated just to the south. As a consequence, there are differences in the composition and physionomy of their respective marine biota. Episodical records of epibenthic warm-water species, of Tyrrhenian origin, in the colder Ligurian Sea were paradoxically linked to the occurence of low mean air temperatures. This is explained by the peculiar pattern of water and heat exchanges between the Tyrrhenian and Ligurian basins mediated through the northward-flowing Tyrrhenian Current. In response to the greater cooling of the Ligurian Sea, induced by the more intense water and temperature losses, a seasonnal flux of warmer water is drawn from the Tyrrhenian Sea in order to restore the altered budget: the more intense the Ligurian Sea winter cooling, the larger the volume of the warmer flow carried northward by the Tyrrhenian Current, increasing the probability of warm-water species transoprt into the Ligurian Sea. Survival of warm-water species in cold years is unlikely, and this explains the rarity of findings in the last one and a half centuries. In a few cases, warm-water species have succeeded in establishing adult pseudopopulations. However, this scenario is probably changing: the detection of warm-water species in the Ligurian Sea has become more frequent and nearly constant in recent years, even in the presence of high winter temperatures. It is hypothesized that present sea water warming is allowing former sterile pseudopulations to reproduce in the Ligurian Sea, thus assuring independence from the larval supply by the Tyrrhebian Current. Future investigations should concentrate on monitoring the population biology of warm-water species established in the Ligurian Sea. |
Issue | 2 |
Start Page | 139 |
End Page | 149 |
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