2024
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.17272
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Ecological baselines in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea shifted long before the availability of observational time series

Jan Steger,
Cesare Bogi,
Hadas Lubinevsky
et al.

Abstract: Native biodiversity loss and invasions by nonindigenous species (NIS) have massively altered ecosystems worldwide, but trajectories of taxonomic and functional reorganization remain poorly understood due to the scarcity of long‐term data. Where ecological time series are available, their temporal coverage is often shorter than the history of anthropogenic changes, posing the risk of drawing misleading conclusions on systems' current states and future development. Focusing on the Eastern Mediterranean Sea, a re… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The Mediterranean Sea, particularly its southeastern regions, has been signi cantly impacted by climate change, leading to notable local extinctions of native species despite past conservation efforts (Rilov 2016;Rilov et al 2018;Albano et al 2020; Nikolaou and Katsanevakis 2023; Steger et al 2024). This area is also a hotspot for bioinvasions, with approximately 500 alien species of thermophilic a nity introduced through the Suez Canal, a man-made corridor that connects Mediterranean waters to the Red Sea (Galanidi et al 2023).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Mediterranean Sea, particularly its southeastern regions, has been signi cantly impacted by climate change, leading to notable local extinctions of native species despite past conservation efforts (Rilov 2016;Rilov et al 2018;Albano et al 2020; Nikolaou and Katsanevakis 2023; Steger et al 2024). This area is also a hotspot for bioinvasions, with approximately 500 alien species of thermophilic a nity introduced through the Suez Canal, a man-made corridor that connects Mediterranean waters to the Red Sea (Galanidi et al 2023).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%