AlgaeTraits source details

Zenetos, A., M.E. Cinar, M.A. Pancucci-Papadopoulou, J.G. Harmelin, G. Furnari, F. Andaloro, N. Bellou, N. Streftaris & H. Zibrowius. (2005). Annotated list of marine alien species in the Mediterranean with records of the worst invasive species. Mediterranean Marine Science. 6 (2): 63-118.
124391
Zenetos, A., M.E. Cinar, M.A. Pancucci-Papadopoulou, J.G. Harmelin, G. Furnari, F. Andaloro, N. Bellou, N. Streftaris & H. Zibrowius
2005
Annotated list of marine alien species in the Mediterranean with records of the worst invasive species.
Mediterranean Marine Science
6 (2): 63-118.
Publication
Available for editors  PDF available
This collaborative effort by many specialists across the Mediterranean presents an updated an-notated list of alien marine species in the Mediterranean Sea. Alien species have been grouped into six broad categories namely established, casual, questionable, cryptogenic, excluded and invasive, and presented in lists of major ecofunctional/taxonomic groups. The establishment success within each group is provided while the questionable and excluded records are commented in brief. A total of 963 alien species have been reported from the Mediterranean until December 2005, 218 of which have been classified as excluded (23%) leaving 745 of the recorded species as valid aliens. Of these 385 (52%) are already well established, 262 (35%) are casual records, while 98 species (13%) remain “questionable” records. The species cited in this work belong mostly to zoobenthos and in par-ticular to Mollusca and Crustacea, while Fish and Phytobenthos are the next two groups which prevail among alien biota in the Mediterranean. The available information depends greatly on the taxonomic group examined. Thus, besides the three groups explicitly addressed in the CIESM atlas series (Fish, Decapoda/Crustacea and Mollusca), which are however updated in the present work, Polychaeta, Phytobenthos, Phytoplankton and Zoo-plankton are also addressed in this study. Among other zoobenthic taxa sufficiently covered in this study are Echinodermata, Sipuncula, Bryozoa and Ascidiacea. On the contrary, taxa such as Foraminifera, Amphipoda and Isopoda, that are not well studied in the Mediterranean, are insufficiently covered. A gap of knowledge is also noticed in Parasites, which, although ubiquitous and pervasive in marine systems, have been relatively unexplored as to their role in marine invasions. Conclusively the lack of funding purely systematic studies in the region has led to underestimation of the number of aliens in the Mediterranean. Emphasis is put on those species that are current or potential threats to the marine ecosystems, namely the Worst Invasive Alien Species providing their record across major groups.
Mediterranean
Invasions, introduction of alien species
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Acanthophora muscoides (Linnaeus) Bory de Saint-Vincent, 1828 (additional source)
Acetabularia caliculus J.V.Lamouroux, 1824 (additional source)
Acrothamnion preissii (Sonder) E.M.Wollaston, 1968 (additional source)
Acrothrix gracilis Kylin, 1907 (additional source)
Agardhiella subulata (C.Agardh) Kraft & M.J.Wynne, 1979 (additional source)
Aglaothamnion feldmanniae Halos, 1965 (additional source)
Antithamnion amphigeneum A.Millar, 1990 (additional source)
Antithamnion pectinatum (Montagne) Brauner, 1994 (additional source)
Antithamnionella ternifolia (Hooker f. & Harvey) Lyle, 1922 (additional source)
Apoglossum gregarium (E.Y.Dawson) M.J.Wynne, 1985 accepted as Phrix spatulata (E.Y.Dawson) M.J.Wynne, M.Kamiya & J.A.West, 2018 (additional source)
Asparagopsis armata Harvey, 1855 (additional source)
Bonnemaisonia hamifera Hariot, 1891 (additional source)
Botryocladia madagascariensis G.Feldmann, 1945 (additional source)
Caulerpa mexicana Sonder ex Kützing, 1849 (additional source)
Caulerpa racemosa (Forsskål) J.Agardh, 1873 (additional source)
Caulerpa scalpelliformis (R.Brown ex Turner) C.Agardh, 1817 (additional source)
Caulerpa taxifolia (M.Vahl) C.Agardh, 1817 (additional source)
Ceramium strobiliforme G.W.Lawson & D.M.John, 1982 (additional source)
Chondria collinsiana M.A.Howe, 1920 (additional source)
Chondria polyrhiza F.S.Collins & Hervey, 1917 (additional source)
Chondria pygmaea Garbary & Vandermeulen, 1990 (additional source)
Chrysymenia wrightii (Harvey) Yamada, 1932 accepted as Botryocladia wrightii (Harvey) W.E.Schmidt, D.L.Ballantine & Fredericq, 2017 (additional source)
Codium taylorii P.C.Silva, 1960 (additional source)
Dasya sessilis Yamada, 1928 (additional source)
Derbesia boergesenii (M.O.P.Iyengar & Ramanathan) Mayhoub, 1976 (additional source)
Fucus spiralis Linnaeus, 1753 (additional source)
Galaxaura rugosa (J.Ellis & Solander) J.V.Lamouroux, 1816 (additional source)
Goniotrichopsis sublittoralis G.M.Smith, 1943 (additional source)
Grateloupia lanceolata (Okamura) Kawaguchi, 1997 accepted as Pachymeniopsis lanceolata (Okamura) Yamada ex Kawabata, 1954 (additional source)
Grateloupia subpectinata Holmes, 1912 (additional source)
Grateloupia turuturu Yamada, 1941 (additional source)
Griffithsia corallinoides (Linnaeus) Trevisan, 1845 (additional source)
Halothrix lumbricalis (Kützing) Reinke, 1888 (additional source)
Heterosiphonia japonica Yendo, 1920 accepted as Dasysiphonia japonica (Yendo) H.-S.Kim, 2012 (additional source)
Hypnea cornuta (Kützing) J.Agardh, 1851 (additional source)
Hypnea spinella (C.Agardh) Kützing, 1847 (additional source)
Hypnea valentiae (Turner) Montagne, 1841 (additional source)
Laurencia chondrioides Børgesen, 1918 (additional source)
Laurencia majuscula (Harvey) A.H.S.Lucas, 1935 accepted as Laurencia dendroidea J.Agardh, 1852 (additional source)
Leathesia difformis Areschoug, 1847 accepted as Leathesia marina (Lyngbye) Decaisne, 1842 (additional source)
Lomentaria hakodatensis Yendo, 1920 (additional source)
Lophocladia lallemandii (Montagne) F.Schmitz, 1893 accepted as Lophocladia trichoclados (C.Agardh) F.Schmitz, 1893 (additional source)
Neosiphonia harveyi (Bailey) M.-S.Kim, H.-G.Choi, Guiry & G.W.Saunders, 2001 accepted as Melanothamnus harveyi (Bailey) Díaz-Tapia & Maggs, 2017 (additional source)
Neosiphonia sphaerocarpa (Børgesen) M.-S.Kim & I.K.Lee, 1999 accepted as Melanothamnus sphaerocarpus (Børgesen) Díaz-Tapia & Maggs, 2017 (additional source)
Padina boergesenii Allender & Kraft, 1983 (additional source)
Padina boryana Thivy, 1966 (additional source)
Parvocaulis parvulus (Solms-Laubach) S.Berger, Fettweiss, Gleissberg, Liddle, U.Richter, Sawitzky & Zuccarello, 2003 (additional source)
Polysiphonia atlantica Kapraun & J.N.Norris, 1982 (additional source)
Polysiphonia kampsaxii Børgesen, 1939 (additional source)
Polysiphonia morrowii Harvey, 1857 (additional source)
Polysiphonia paniculata Montagne, 1842 accepted as Eutrichosiphonia paniculata (Montagne) D.E.Bustamante & T.O.Cho, 2021 (additional source)
Rhodophysema georgei Batters, 1900 (additional source)
Sarconema filiforme (Sonder) Kylin, 1932 (additional source)
Sarconema scinaioides Børgesen, 1934 (additional source)
Sargassum muticum (Yendo) Fensholt, 1955 (additional source)
Scytosiphon dotyi M.J.Wynne, 1969 (additional source)
Solieria dura (Zanardini) F.Schmitz, 1895 (additional source)
Solieria filiformis (Kützing) P.W.Gabrielson, 1985 (additional source)
Stypopodium schimperi (Kützing) Verlaque & Boudouresque, 1991 (additional source)
Symphyocladia marchantioides (Harvey) Falkenberg, 1897 (additional source)
Undaria pinnatifida (Harvey) Suringar, 1873 (additional source)
Womersleyella setacea (Hollenberg) R.E.Norris, 1992 (additional source)

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