2002
DOI: 10.3354/meps238061
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How different is Mediterranean Caulerpa taxifolia (Caulerpales: Chlorophyta) to other populations of the species?

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Cited by 37 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…Wiedenmann et al, 2001;Famaè t al., 2002). The 'aquarium-Mediterranean' strain also resembles the Moreton Bay population morphologically, both of these having more robust thalli than C. taxifolia found elsewhere (Meinesz et al, 1995;Komatsu et al, 1997;Phillips & Price, 2002). Moreton Bay experiences minimum winter temperatures similar to the Mediterranean Sea and the two populations of C. taxifolia thus exhibit similar cold tolerance thresholds (Komatsu et al, 1997;Chisholm et al, 2000;Phillips & Price, 2002;Burfeind & Udy, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 83%
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“…Wiedenmann et al, 2001;Famaè t al., 2002). The 'aquarium-Mediterranean' strain also resembles the Moreton Bay population morphologically, both of these having more robust thalli than C. taxifolia found elsewhere (Meinesz et al, 1995;Komatsu et al, 1997;Phillips & Price, 2002). Moreton Bay experiences minimum winter temperatures similar to the Mediterranean Sea and the two populations of C. taxifolia thus exhibit similar cold tolerance thresholds (Komatsu et al, 1997;Chisholm et al, 2000;Phillips & Price, 2002;Burfeind & Udy, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…This alga is out-competing native seaweeds and seagrasses in the Mediterranean by forming dense carpets, leading to a loss of biodiversity. Although C. taxifolia is considered one of the most invasive species in the Mediterranean, it is also indigenous to tropical and subtropical seas worldwide, including Australia (Phillips & Price, 2002) and it has been used widely as a decorative plant in the marine aquarium trade. It was accidentally released from the Monaco Aquarium in 1984 (Meinesz & Hesse, 1991) and rapidly spread across the western Mediterranean basin .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the Mediterranean and in Australia, C. taxifolia invades seagrass meadows and bare sediments, which may or may not have previously been colonized by seagrasses (Chisholm et al 1997;Ceccherelli and Cinelli 1998;Glasby and Creese 2007). Although C. taxifolia is native to subtropical Moreton Bay (eastern Australia) (Phillips and Price 2002), its range is expanding into large areas that were previously colonized by seagrass (Burfeind and Udy 2009). However, rather than directly displacing seagrass, there appears to be a successional trend of seagrass loss (controlled by other factors) followed by C. taxifolia colonization of the bare sediment (Burfeind and Udy 2009).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The alga's acclaimed ability to expand exponentially on any type of substratum and thereby displace keystone species such as the seagrass Posidonia oceanica L. Delile has been ascribed to exceptional, morphological and physiological traits (gigantic size, amplified growth rate, exceptional cold resistance, enhanced chemical toxicity, reproduction from small fragments), which it supposedly acquired through prolonged aquarium culture (2,7,9,10). Contradictory data indicate that the alga does not possess abnormal traits (11)(12)(13), nor covers 30,000 acres of the Mediterranean seabed (14,15), nor develops on any type of substratum but preferentially exploits nutrient resources in polluted or organically enriched substrata (16)(17)(18). The latter argument is supported by a correlation between the extent of Caulerpa taxifolia development in the coastal waters of the Riviera, where more than 90% of the alga's biomass in the Mediterranean is found (19), and the quantity and treatment level of wastewater discharged from adjacent human settlements (14-16; Figs S1 and S2).…”
Section: Effort To Have All Varieties Of the Marine Algamentioning
confidence: 99%