Introduction -marine chemical ecologySince the beginning of life on the earth, chemical relationships have ruled all aspects of nature (Cole, 2016) and ecological interactions are linked to chemical and biochemical processes (Overbeck and Chrost, 2012). Infochemical interactions are among the oldest and most widespread forms of communication both in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems (Wyatt, 2014;Roggatz et al., 2022). Aquatic organisms respond to small concentrations of chemicals released in the environment and such molecules, called infochemicals, are involved in recognition of prey and predators, chemotaxis, allelochemical defenses, mate recognition, reproductive and settlement cues, larvae metamorphosis, sex pheromones, and more in general organism's interactions (