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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The epifauna associated to farmed mussels in southern Portugal coast was analysed, aiming at identifying the
species with spreading potential through commercial transport. The presence of a relevant number of the species
here found is not reported to at least one of the common mussel export/transposition countries. Indeed,
important species biogeographic dissimilarities between the mussel farm area and the Greater North Sea and
Western Mediterranean Sea sub-regions were detected, suggesting the potential transport of non-indigenous
species (NIS) into other countries. Among them, fouling species such as the anemones Paractinia striata and
Urticina felina, the acorn barnacles Balanus glandula and Balanus trigonus or the bryozoans Bugulina stolonifera and
Schizoporella errata exhibit functional attributes that allow them to colonise and spread in new areas. This
combined biogeographic and functional approach may contribute to clarify the role of aquaculture on the
transport of NIS and to predict and prevent their spreading worldwide.
Description
Keywords
Invasive species Biogeographic distribution Functional traits Fouling organisms Offshore aquaculture Mytilus galloprovincialis
Citation
Publisher
Elsevier