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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The westernmost occurrence of Caulerpa prolifera on the Atlantic European coast has been accepted in recent decades, to be Huelva province, southern Spain. In April 2011, this species was found in Ria Formosa, southern Portugal, extending its westernmost limit along the Iberian Peninsula coastline. In the course of research into this species it was discovered that this alga had been found in Ria Formosa in the 19th century by the naturalist Welwitsch and subsequently
in the 1930s by others but it was never found in the many field studies conducted in Ria Formosa during the past few decades. The species had therefore either become extinct in the area or persisted as a cryptic undetected stage. In order to investigate the source of colonization and to verify the genetic identity, a partial cpDNA region (tufA gene) was sequenced. Comparisons of nucleotide similarity in sequences from the Ria Formosa and from populations of the Atlantic and Mediterranean confirmed the Caulerpa prolifera identification and gave clues about a possible origin of this population as deriving from expansion of a Mediterranean source rather than one from the western Atlantic.
Description
Keywords
Coastal conservation Seaweed Ria Formosa Genetic identification Competitive advantage
Citation
Cunha, A.H.; Varela-¿?lvarez, E.; Paulo, D.S.; Sousa, I.; Serrão, E. The rediscovery of Caulerpa prolifera in Ria Formosa, Portugal, 60 years after the previous record, Cahiers de Biologie Marine, 54, 3, 359-364, 2013.