The tropical seagrass halophila stipulacea: reviewing what we know from its native and invasive habitats, alongside identifying knowledge gaps

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Winters, Gidon
Data de Publicação: 2020
Outros Autores: Beer, Sven, Willette, Demian A., Viana, Inés G., Chiquillo, Kelcie L., Beca-Carretero, Pedro, Villamayor, Betty, Azcárate-García, Tomás, Shem-Tov, Rachamim, Mwabvu, Bridget, Migliore, Luciana, Rotini, Alice, Oscar, Michelle A., Belmaker, Jonathan, Gamliel, Inbal, Alexandre, Ana, Engelen, Aschwin, Procaccini, Gabriele, Rilov, Gil
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/13999
Resumo: Halophila stipulacea is a small tropical seagrass, native to the Red Sea, Persian Gulf, and the Indian Ocean. It invaded the Mediterranean Sea 150 years ago as a Lessepsian migrant, but so far has remained in insulated, small populations across this basin. Surprisingly, in 2002 it was reported in the Caribbean Sea, where within less than two decades it spread to most of the Caribbean Island nations and reaching the South American continent. Unlike its invasion of Mediterranean, in the Caribbean H. stipulacea creates large, continuous populations in many areas. Reports from the Caribbean demonstrated the invasiveness of H. stipulacea by showing that it displaces local Caribbean seagrass species. The motivation for this review comes from the necessity to unify the existing knowledge on several aspects of this species in its native and invasive habitats, identify knowledge gaps and develop a critical strategy to understand its invasive capacity and implement an effective monitoring and conservation plan to mitigate its potential spread outside its native ranges. We systematically reviewed 164 studies related to H. stipulacea to create the "Halophila stipulacea database." This allowed us to evaluate the current biological, ecological, physiological, biochemical, and molecular knowledge of H. stipulacea in its native and invasive ranges. Here we (i) discuss the possible environmental conditions and plant mechanisms involved in its invasiveness, (ii) assess the impact of H. stipulacea on native seagrasses and ecosystem functions in the invaded regions, (iii) predict the ability of this species to invade European and transoceanic coastal waters, (iv) identify knowledge gaps that should be addressed to better understand the biology and ecology of this species both in its native and non-native habitats, which would improve our ability to predict H. stipulacea's potential to expand into new areas in the future. Considering the predicted climate change scenarios and exponential human pressures on coastal areas, we stress the need for coordinated global monitoring and mapping efforts that will record changes in H. stipulacea and its associated communities over time, across its native, invasive and prospective distributional ranges. This will require the involvement of biologists, ecologists, economists, modelers, managers, and local stakeholders.
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spelling The tropical seagrass halophila stipulacea: reviewing what we know from its native and invasive habitats, alongside identifying knowledge gapsHalophila stipulaceaClimate changeAalien speciesCaribbean seaInvasivenessRed seaMediterranean seaPredictionsHalophila stipulacea is a small tropical seagrass, native to the Red Sea, Persian Gulf, and the Indian Ocean. It invaded the Mediterranean Sea 150 years ago as a Lessepsian migrant, but so far has remained in insulated, small populations across this basin. Surprisingly, in 2002 it was reported in the Caribbean Sea, where within less than two decades it spread to most of the Caribbean Island nations and reaching the South American continent. Unlike its invasion of Mediterranean, in the Caribbean H. stipulacea creates large, continuous populations in many areas. Reports from the Caribbean demonstrated the invasiveness of H. stipulacea by showing that it displaces local Caribbean seagrass species. The motivation for this review comes from the necessity to unify the existing knowledge on several aspects of this species in its native and invasive habitats, identify knowledge gaps and develop a critical strategy to understand its invasive capacity and implement an effective monitoring and conservation plan to mitigate its potential spread outside its native ranges. We systematically reviewed 164 studies related to H. stipulacea to create the "Halophila stipulacea database." This allowed us to evaluate the current biological, ecological, physiological, biochemical, and molecular knowledge of H. stipulacea in its native and invasive ranges. Here we (i) discuss the possible environmental conditions and plant mechanisms involved in its invasiveness, (ii) assess the impact of H. stipulacea on native seagrasses and ecosystem functions in the invaded regions, (iii) predict the ability of this species to invade European and transoceanic coastal waters, (iv) identify knowledge gaps that should be addressed to better understand the biology and ecology of this species both in its native and non-native habitats, which would improve our ability to predict H. stipulacea's potential to expand into new areas in the future. Considering the predicted climate change scenarios and exponential human pressures on coastal areas, we stress the need for coordinated global monitoring and mapping efforts that will record changes in H. stipulacea and its associated communities over time, across its native, invasive and prospective distributional ranges. This will require the involvement of biologists, ecologists, economists, modelers, managers, and local stakeholders.FCT: SFRH/BPD/107878/2015/ UIDB/04326/2020/ CEECINST/00114/2018. Euro Marine, the Inter-University Institute in Eilat (IUI), Israel Oceanographic and Limnological Research (ILOR), The Israel Nature and Parks Authority (INPA), and the ADSSC (the Dead Sea-Arava Science Center). IV was awarded a postdoctoral fellowship of the LeibnizDAAD postdoctoral programme (Germany) and Xunta de Galicia (Consellería de Cultura, Educación e Ordenación Universitaria).Frontiers MediaSapientiaWinters, GidonBeer, SvenWillette, Demian A.Viana, Inés G.Chiquillo, Kelcie L.Beca-Carretero, PedroVillamayor, BettyAzcárate-García, TomásShem-Tov, RachamimMwabvu, BridgetMigliore, LucianaRotini, AliceOscar, Michelle A.Belmaker, JonathanGamliel, InbalAlexandre, AnaEngelen, AschwinProcaccini, GabrieleRilov, Gil2020-06-08T15:33:50Z2020-052020-05-01T00:00:00Zinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/13999eng2296-774510.3389/fmars.2020.00300info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)instname:Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãoinstacron:RCAAP2023-07-24T10:26:13Zoai:sapientia.ualg.pt:10400.1/13999Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireopendoar:71602024-03-19T20:05:04.783335Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos) - Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãofalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv The tropical seagrass halophila stipulacea: reviewing what we know from its native and invasive habitats, alongside identifying knowledge gaps
title The tropical seagrass halophila stipulacea: reviewing what we know from its native and invasive habitats, alongside identifying knowledge gaps
spellingShingle The tropical seagrass halophila stipulacea: reviewing what we know from its native and invasive habitats, alongside identifying knowledge gaps
Winters, Gidon
Halophila stipulacea
Climate change
Aalien species
Caribbean sea
Invasiveness
Red sea
Mediterranean sea
Predictions
title_short The tropical seagrass halophila stipulacea: reviewing what we know from its native and invasive habitats, alongside identifying knowledge gaps
title_full The tropical seagrass halophila stipulacea: reviewing what we know from its native and invasive habitats, alongside identifying knowledge gaps
title_fullStr The tropical seagrass halophila stipulacea: reviewing what we know from its native and invasive habitats, alongside identifying knowledge gaps
title_full_unstemmed The tropical seagrass halophila stipulacea: reviewing what we know from its native and invasive habitats, alongside identifying knowledge gaps
title_sort The tropical seagrass halophila stipulacea: reviewing what we know from its native and invasive habitats, alongside identifying knowledge gaps
author Winters, Gidon
author_facet Winters, Gidon
Beer, Sven
Willette, Demian A.
Viana, Inés G.
Chiquillo, Kelcie L.
Beca-Carretero, Pedro
Villamayor, Betty
Azcárate-García, Tomás
Shem-Tov, Rachamim
Mwabvu, Bridget
Migliore, Luciana
Rotini, Alice
Oscar, Michelle A.
Belmaker, Jonathan
Gamliel, Inbal
Alexandre, Ana
Engelen, Aschwin
Procaccini, Gabriele
Rilov, Gil
author_role author
author2 Beer, Sven
Willette, Demian A.
Viana, Inés G.
Chiquillo, Kelcie L.
Beca-Carretero, Pedro
Villamayor, Betty
Azcárate-García, Tomás
Shem-Tov, Rachamim
Mwabvu, Bridget
Migliore, Luciana
Rotini, Alice
Oscar, Michelle A.
Belmaker, Jonathan
Gamliel, Inbal
Alexandre, Ana
Engelen, Aschwin
Procaccini, Gabriele
Rilov, Gil
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.none.fl_str_mv Sapientia
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Winters, Gidon
Beer, Sven
Willette, Demian A.
Viana, Inés G.
Chiquillo, Kelcie L.
Beca-Carretero, Pedro
Villamayor, Betty
Azcárate-García, Tomás
Shem-Tov, Rachamim
Mwabvu, Bridget
Migliore, Luciana
Rotini, Alice
Oscar, Michelle A.
Belmaker, Jonathan
Gamliel, Inbal
Alexandre, Ana
Engelen, Aschwin
Procaccini, Gabriele
Rilov, Gil
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Halophila stipulacea
Climate change
Aalien species
Caribbean sea
Invasiveness
Red sea
Mediterranean sea
Predictions
topic Halophila stipulacea
Climate change
Aalien species
Caribbean sea
Invasiveness
Red sea
Mediterranean sea
Predictions
description Halophila stipulacea is a small tropical seagrass, native to the Red Sea, Persian Gulf, and the Indian Ocean. It invaded the Mediterranean Sea 150 years ago as a Lessepsian migrant, but so far has remained in insulated, small populations across this basin. Surprisingly, in 2002 it was reported in the Caribbean Sea, where within less than two decades it spread to most of the Caribbean Island nations and reaching the South American continent. Unlike its invasion of Mediterranean, in the Caribbean H. stipulacea creates large, continuous populations in many areas. Reports from the Caribbean demonstrated the invasiveness of H. stipulacea by showing that it displaces local Caribbean seagrass species. The motivation for this review comes from the necessity to unify the existing knowledge on several aspects of this species in its native and invasive habitats, identify knowledge gaps and develop a critical strategy to understand its invasive capacity and implement an effective monitoring and conservation plan to mitigate its potential spread outside its native ranges. We systematically reviewed 164 studies related to H. stipulacea to create the "Halophila stipulacea database." This allowed us to evaluate the current biological, ecological, physiological, biochemical, and molecular knowledge of H. stipulacea in its native and invasive ranges. Here we (i) discuss the possible environmental conditions and plant mechanisms involved in its invasiveness, (ii) assess the impact of H. stipulacea on native seagrasses and ecosystem functions in the invaded regions, (iii) predict the ability of this species to invade European and transoceanic coastal waters, (iv) identify knowledge gaps that should be addressed to better understand the biology and ecology of this species both in its native and non-native habitats, which would improve our ability to predict H. stipulacea's potential to expand into new areas in the future. Considering the predicted climate change scenarios and exponential human pressures on coastal areas, we stress the need for coordinated global monitoring and mapping efforts that will record changes in H. stipulacea and its associated communities over time, across its native, invasive and prospective distributional ranges. This will require the involvement of biologists, ecologists, economists, modelers, managers, and local stakeholders.
publishDate 2020
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2020-06-08T15:33:50Z
2020-05
2020-05-01T00:00:00Z
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dc.language.iso.fl_str_mv eng
language eng
dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv 2296-7745
10.3389/fmars.2020.00300
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dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Frontiers Media
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