“…The loss of large individuals produces cascading effects on the biology of limpets in exploited populations, including changes in lifehistory parameters, demographics, reproductive success, genetics, as well as changes in ecological interactions and limpet behaviour (Fenberg and Roy, 2008;Espinosa et al, 2009;López et al, 2012;Henriques et al, 2017). In the most extreme cases, harvesting pressure is recognized to have led to the high fragmentation of limpet assemblages as occurred for P. candei crenata and P. aspera in the Canaries (Riera et al, 2016) and even to the disappearance of populations of P. ferruginea, an endemic and endangered species from the Mediterranean Sea (Espinosa, 2009), and of the endemic species Cellana sandwicensis (Pease, 1861), Cellana exarata (Reeve, 1854) and Cellana talcosa (Gould, 1846) in Hawaii (Valledor, 2000).…”