2021
DOI: 10.1002/aqc.3739
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Strongly structured populations and reproductive habitat fragmentation increase the vulnerability of the Mediterranean starry rayRaja asterias(Elasmobranchii, Rajidae)

Abstract: 1. The Mediterranean starry ray (Raja asterias) populations within the Mediterranean Sea are susceptible to high rates of bycatch in the multispecies trawl fisheries.Understanding its population structure and identifying critical habitats are crucial for assessing species vulnerability and setting the groundwork for specific management measures to prevent population decline. 2. To assess the population structure of R. asterias in the Mediterranean, the genetic variation in nine population samples at one mitoch… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…In particular, the role of oceanographic discontinuities has been invoked in several elasmobranch studies as the main factor responsible for geographically isolating and hence genetically differentiating the populations. This pattern has been reported for the differentiation of the easternmost Mediterranean locations of the Levantine Sea, with the Strait of Sicily potentially representing a barrier limiting the genetic exchanges between the Eastern and the Western Mediterranean basins [1,7,[84][85][86][87].…”
Section: The Three Electric Rays At a Large Spatial Scale (Mediterran...supporting
confidence: 71%
“…In particular, the role of oceanographic discontinuities has been invoked in several elasmobranch studies as the main factor responsible for geographically isolating and hence genetically differentiating the populations. This pattern has been reported for the differentiation of the easternmost Mediterranean locations of the Levantine Sea, with the Strait of Sicily potentially representing a barrier limiting the genetic exchanges between the Eastern and the Western Mediterranean basins [1,7,[84][85][86][87].…”
Section: The Three Electric Rays At a Large Spatial Scale (Mediterran...supporting
confidence: 71%
“…The combination of these features could have limited gene flow between western and eastern populations and driven the differentiation of the Eastern Mediterranean samples (ADR, ISR and LEV; Figure 1 ). The specific habitat and depth preferences, the less pronounced migratory behaviour and the limited dispersal capability of taxa belonging to the R. miraletus species complex are rather common characteristics among skates [ 62 , 73 , 113 , 114 ], although other congeneric species did not show such evidence of deep differentiation at both nuDNA and mtDNA markers [ 10 , 56 , 72 , 110 ]. In detail, the Mediterranean starry ray R. asterias showed a strongly structured population with three geographical clades corresponding to the western, central–western and central–eastern Mediterranean areas [ 62 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The specific habitat and depth preferences, the less pronounced migratory behaviour and the limited dispersal capability of taxa belonging to the R. miraletus species complex are rather common characteristics among skates [ 62 , 73 , 113 , 114 ], although other congeneric species did not show such evidence of deep differentiation at both nuDNA and mtDNA markers [ 10 , 56 , 72 , 110 ]. In detail, the Mediterranean starry ray R. asterias showed a strongly structured population with three geographical clades corresponding to the western, central–western and central–eastern Mediterranean areas [ 62 ]. R. clavata showed a weak but detectable phylogeographic structure in the Levantine Sea [ 73 ] and a finer structuring located off the Algerian coasts and Tyrrhenian basins, suggesting the occurrence of additional barriers to dispersal [ 113 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The literature gives several examples about the limited contact between shark and ray populations at both large and small scales. For example, recent studies applying the molecular approach have highlighted the main role of water circulation and temperature in sharks (Di Crescenzo et al, 2022;Melis et al, 2023a) and rays (Catalano et al, 2022;Melis et al, 2023b). Similarly, evidence based on molecular data showed how biotic and abiotic features such as bathymetry, hydrological constraints, and prey abundance can influence the presence, movement, and dispersion of sharks and rays (Catarino et al, 2015;Di Crescenzo et al, 2022).…”
Section: Final Considerations and Future Research Prospectsmentioning
confidence: 99%