2024
DOI: 10.12681/mms.37214
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New records of rarely reported species in the Mediterranean Sea (March 2024)

MARKOS DIGENIS,
OKAN AKYOL,
LAURE BENOIT
et al.

Abstract: This Collective Article presents information about 30 species with records in eight countries (Greece, Israel, Italy, Montenegro, Slovenia, Spain, Syria and Türkiye) and six ecoregions extending from the Alboran to the Levantine Seas. The recorded species belong to eight Phyla (4 Chlorophyta, 1 Rhodophyta, 1 Porifera, 3 Cnidaria, 2 Platyhelminthes, 2 Arthropoda, 2 Mollusca and 15 Chordata) as follows: Chlorophyta: Didymosporangium repens, Ochlochaete hystrix and Phaeophila hirsuta are reported for the first ti… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Grammonus ater, therefore, can be considered as a permanent and exclusive mesolithial resident, which does not inhabit other habitats and has never been recorded outside cryptic environments. In the Mediterranean Sea this species has been found in numerous marine caves from the Levantine Basin [115] to the Alboran Sea [116] (Table 2). Other Grammonus species were also reported in littoral marine caves in other seas, such as West Pacific Grammonus thielei Nielsen & Cohen, 2004 and Grammonus yunokawai Nielsen, 2006 [83,84] and Hawaiian Grammonus nagaredai Randall & Hughes, 2008 [88].…”
Section: Permanent Mesolithial Residents In Marine Cavesmentioning
confidence: 99%

Fishes in Marine Caves

Kovačić,
Gerovasileiou,
Patzner
2024
Fishes
Self Cite
“…Grammonus ater, therefore, can be considered as a permanent and exclusive mesolithial resident, which does not inhabit other habitats and has never been recorded outside cryptic environments. In the Mediterranean Sea this species has been found in numerous marine caves from the Levantine Basin [115] to the Alboran Sea [116] (Table 2). Other Grammonus species were also reported in littoral marine caves in other seas, such as West Pacific Grammonus thielei Nielsen & Cohen, 2004 and Grammonus yunokawai Nielsen, 2006 [83,84] and Hawaiian Grammonus nagaredai Randall & Hughes, 2008 [88].…”
Section: Permanent Mesolithial Residents In Marine Cavesmentioning
confidence: 99%

Fishes in Marine Caves

Kovačić,
Gerovasileiou,
Patzner
2024
Fishes
Self Cite