Native macroalgal proliferations are emerging as an additional pathway of ecosystem disruption in the Mediterranean Sea, alongside classic invasions by non-indigenous species. Here, we report an unprecedented, large-scale proliferation of the native red alga Dudres- naya verticillata at the Tremiti Islands Marine Protected Area (southern Adriatic Sea), where the species formed extensive filamentous mats across shallow rocks, seagrass meadows, rhodolith and corallith beds, and incoherent bottoms. Underwater surveys documented the widespread occurrence of D. verticillata across the archipelago, and a quantitative photographic analysis was carried out at a representative site characterized by multiple habitat types across the observed depth range of proliferation (10–25 m). Stratified pho- tographic transects were used to estimate percent cover, quantify substrate associations, and evaluate co-occurring benthic components. Taxonomic identification was supported by ad hoc sampling and morphological characters. Overall, D. verticillata covered a mean of 48.7 ± 19.3% of the investigated area, with total cover differing significantly with depth. The highest mean cover occurred at 10–15 m on infralittoral rocky bottoms (60.8 ± 17.4%; 0–90%), intermediate values were recorded at 20–25 m on biogenic/incoherent substrates (49.0 ± 21.3%; 0–100%), and the lowest cover was observed at 15–20 m within a Posidonia oceanica meadow (38.7 ± 15.0%; 0–81%). Degradation forms were detected at all depths, but their relative contribution increased at 20–25 m. These results document a sustained native proliferation with elevated spatial dominance, characterized by rapid expansion and high local cover, highlighting the need to incorporate native “outbreak” dynamics into monitoring and management initiatives in the Mediterranean Sea.
Anomalous Proliferation of the Native Red Alga Dudresnaya verticillata in the Southern Adriatic Sea
Tursi, Andrea
;Chimienti, Giovanni;Mastrototaro, Francesco;Bottalico, Antonella
2026-01-01
Abstract
Native macroalgal proliferations are emerging as an additional pathway of ecosystem disruption in the Mediterranean Sea, alongside classic invasions by non-indigenous species. Here, we report an unprecedented, large-scale proliferation of the native red alga Dudres- naya verticillata at the Tremiti Islands Marine Protected Area (southern Adriatic Sea), where the species formed extensive filamentous mats across shallow rocks, seagrass meadows, rhodolith and corallith beds, and incoherent bottoms. Underwater surveys documented the widespread occurrence of D. verticillata across the archipelago, and a quantitative photographic analysis was carried out at a representative site characterized by multiple habitat types across the observed depth range of proliferation (10–25 m). Stratified pho- tographic transects were used to estimate percent cover, quantify substrate associations, and evaluate co-occurring benthic components. Taxonomic identification was supported by ad hoc sampling and morphological characters. Overall, D. verticillata covered a mean of 48.7 ± 19.3% of the investigated area, with total cover differing significantly with depth. The highest mean cover occurred at 10–15 m on infralittoral rocky bottoms (60.8 ± 17.4%; 0–90%), intermediate values were recorded at 20–25 m on biogenic/incoherent substrates (49.0 ± 21.3%; 0–100%), and the lowest cover was observed at 15–20 m within a Posidonia oceanica meadow (38.7 ± 15.0%; 0–81%). Degradation forms were detected at all depths, but their relative contribution increased at 20–25 m. These results document a sustained native proliferation with elevated spatial dominance, characterized by rapid expansion and high local cover, highlighting the need to incorporate native “outbreak” dynamics into monitoring and management initiatives in the Mediterranean Sea.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


