“…In fact, the striped piggy P. stridens is native to the Indo-Pacific and entered the Mediterranean Sea through the Suez Canal around 1888, when it was first observed in Port-Saïd (see Carus 1983, Bodilis et al 2013, subsequently colonising the eastern Mediterranean basin up to Greece and being also known from Italy on the basis of a single record (Golani et al 2002, Bilecenoglu et al 2009, Kousteni et al 2019, Servello et al 2019, Bariche and Fricke 2020. Conversely, the bastard grunt P. incisus was originally described from Gambia and is widely distributed along the entire Eastern Atlantic coastline, from South Africa to Galicia (Palacky 1895, Gilchrist and Thompson 1908, Osorio 1909, Bauchot 1963, Bodilis et al 2013, Bañón et al 2014, including the Canary Islands (Vinciguerra 1883, Murray et al 1912, Bianchi 1984, Madeira (Günther 1859, Andrade andAlbuquerque 1935, Ribeiro et al 2005) and Cape Verde Islands (Osorio 1909), but it has also been recorded in the Mediterranean Sea since the middle of the XIX century. In fact, despite its first record in the Mediterranean Sea dating back to 1840 (Guichenot 1850), the species could have been already present in the basin, but simply overlooked until the mid XIX century.…”