Setting-up a billboard of marine invasive species in the ESENIAS area: current situation and future expectancies

Authors

  • Paraskevi K. KARACHLE
  • Maria CORSINI FOKA
  • Fabio CROCETTA
  • Jakov DULČIĆ
  • Nina DZHEMBEKOVA
  • Marika GALANIDI
  • Petya IVANOVA
  • Noa SHENKAR
  • Marius SKOLKA
  • Elitsa STEFANOVA
  • Kremena STEFANOVA
  • Victor SURUGIU
  • Irfan UYSAL
  • Marc VERLAQUE
  • Argyro ZENETOS

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32582/aa.58.3.4

Keywords:

invasive species, ESENIAS, Mediterranean Sea, Black Sea

Abstract

        In this study we present a list of invasive/potential invasive alien species in the East and South European Network for Invasive Alien Species (ESENIAS) countries with marine borders. The species were classified according to the existing literature and experts’ judgment, as established, casual, invasive and expected. Finally, factsheets were compiled for ten species of high importance based on their expanding/invading character. Of the 160 species comprising the list, 149 were already present in the ESENIAS countries, while eleven were invasive species either present in the Mediterranean or in other European Seas, likely to be recorded in the ESENIAS countries. The majority of the species were of Red Sea/IndoPacific origin (97 species; 60.6%). Italy, Turkey and Greece were the countries with the highest representation of species (159, 152 and 139 species respectively), due to their extended coastline and the number of scholars working on marine invasive species. The highest number of established species was recorded in Turkey (116 species), whereas in Italy and Greece the most numerous species were the “expected” ones (85 and 48 species, respectively). The eastern Adriatic Sea countries (i.e. Albania, Croatia, Montenegro and Slovenia) had generally low numbers of species in this list, many of which are still “expected” to arrive from the neighbouring countries of Greece and Italy. Finally, the most frequently potential pathway was transfer stowaways (ship ballast water: 41 cases; ship hull fouling: 55), whereas unaided spread of Lessepsian immigrants followed (95 cases).
        This list is intended to serve as an early warning system that through horizon scanning process would assist ESENIAS countries to prioritise invasive alien species, their pathways and the areas of higher likelihood to appear, in order to take management measures.

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Published

20.12.2017

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Original article