“…Scuba divers reported on the recent occurrence of two other warm-water groupers, namely the white grouper Epinephelus aeneus (Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire 1817) [101] and the dogtooth grouper Epinephelus caninus (Valenciennes 1843) [102]. Not only fish but also warm-water algae and invertebrates, including exotic species, were seen to conform to such temporal pattern [27,31,32,36,93]. Even the only alien seagrass to have penetrated the Mediterranean Sea, Halophila stipulacea (Forsskål) (Ascherson 1867), showed a similar trend [103][104][105]: first recorded at Rhodes, SE Aegean Sea [106], it spread only throughout the eastern Mediterranean until the 1980s-1990s (first rapid warming period) to eventually enter the Tyrrhenian Sea in the early 2000s (second rapid warming period) [107]; between 2018 and 2022 (third rapid warming period), it reached NE Sardinia [108], W Corsica [109], and Cannes on the French part of the Ligurian Sea [110].…”