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A benthic mucilage event in North-Western Mediterranean Sea and its possible relationships with the summer 2003 European heatwave: short term effects on littoral rocky assemblages

TitleA benthic mucilage event in North-Western Mediterranean Sea and its possible relationships with the summer 2003 European heatwave: short term effects on littoral rocky assemblages
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2007
AuthorsSchiaparelli S, Castellano M, Povero P, Sartoni G, Cattaneo-Vietti R
JournalMarine Ecology
Volume28
KeywordsAcinetospora crinita, anomalie thermique, biomass, bleaching, Cladocora caespitosa, climate change, dynamic, Ligurian Sea, littoral, Mediterranean sea, mucilage, north-western Mediterranean, Portofino, recovery, scleractinian, sea water temperature, temperature, Tyrrhenian Sea, warming
Abstract

In this contribution we document an anomalous mucilage growth which occurred in June 2003 along the rocky cliffs of the Portofino Promontory (Ligurian Sea, NW Mediterranean Sea), and we describe its dynamics and its negative effects on many benthic taxa. The zooxanthellate scleractinian Cladocora caespitosa underwent 'bleaching' and about 40% of biomass of the erect algae was detached by mucilage 'lianas' created and strengthened by bottom currents. The 2003 event differed from any other previously occurred in the northern Tyrrhenian Sea, in that the mucilage aggregates were formed by the free-living form of the Phaeophyceae Acinetospora crinita (Harvey) Kornmann, a not usually dominant species in mucilage aggregates from the north Tyrrhenian Sea. The damage suffered by the benthic organisms living in this area was curtailed by a severe storm, occurred in July, which removed the mucilage to deeper depths, preventing irreversible damages. Only slow growing, perennant organisms, such as corallinales or scleractinians, were seriously affected, but a survey carried out 1 year later, in June 2004, allowed to appreciate a complete recovery of those organisms. This anomalous mucilage event occurred in coincidence of the 2003 European heatwave, and the anomalous temperature increase of seawater has to be regarded as the major contributing event that led to the mucilage outbreak.

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