“…Since 2008 O. davisae periodically contributed up to 99% of total copepod abundance in Sevastopol Bay (Altukhov, Gubanova & Mukhanov, 2014;Svetlichny et al, 2016), similar to domination of O. davisae observed in Tokyo Bay where it contributed about 99% of the total number of copepods during the warm periods in 1980-s (Tsuda & Nemoto, 1988). It was registered later near Romanian (Timofte & Tabarcea, 2012), Bulgarian (Mihneva & Stefanova, 2013) and recently Turkish coasts (Üstün & Terbıyık Kurt, 2016;Yıldız, Feyzioğlu & Besiktepe, 2016) in Büyükçekmece Bay and in the Golden Horn Estuary located in the North-eastern (Doğan & Isinibilir, 2016;Isinibilir, Svetlichny & Hubareva, 2016). Wide dissemination of O. davisae in variable climatic zones and its survival in wide range of temperature from + 6 °C , and even from inconceivable -1.8 °C in the North Sea (Cornils & Wend-Heckmann, 2015) up to+ 28 °C in Pacific (Uye & Sano, 1998) and + 29 °C in the Black Sea , was supposed due to the unique adaptive strategy of this species: flexible metabolism, high survival rate of overwintering fertilized females during long unfavorable cold winter, and emergence of the offsprings originated from these overwintering females in favorable conditions in late spring .…”