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Dive into the research topics where Charalampos Dimitriadis is active.

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Featured researches published by Charalampos Dimitriadis.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Five key attributes can increase marine protected areas performance for small-scale fisheries management

Antonio Di Franco; Pierre Thiriet; Giuseppe Di Carlo; Charalampos Dimitriadis; Patrice Francour; Nicolás L. Gutiérrez; Alain Jeudy de Grissac; Drosos Koutsoubas; Marco Milazzo; María del Mar Otero; Catherine Piante; Jeremiah G. Plass-Johnson; Susana Sainz-Trápaga; Luca Santarossa; Sergi Tudela; Paolo Guidetti

Marine protected areas (MPAs) have largely proven to be effective tools for conserving marine ecosystem, while socio-economic benefits generated by MPAs to fisheries are still under debate. Many MPAs embed a no-take zone, aiming to preserve natural populations and ecosystems, within a buffer zone where potentially sustainable activities are allowed. Small-scale fisheries (SSF) within buffer zones can be highly beneficial by promoting local socio-economies. However, guidelines to successfully manage SSFs within MPAs, ensuring both conservation and fisheries goals, and reaching a win-win scenario, are largely unavailable. From the peer-reviewed literature, grey-literature and interviews, we assembled a unique database of ecological, social and economic attributes of SSF in 25 Mediterranean MPAs. Using random forest with Boruta algorithm we identified a set of attributes determining successful SSFs management within MPAs. We show that fish stocks are healthier, fishermen incomes are higher and the social acceptance of management practices is fostered if five attributes are present (i.e. high MPA enforcement, presence of a management plan, fishermen engagement in MPA management, fishermen representative in the MPA board, and promotion of sustainable fishing). These findings are pivotal to Mediterranean coastal communities so they can achieve conservation goals while allowing for profitable exploitation of fisheries resources.


Hydrobiologia | 2011

Functional diversity and species turnover of benthic invertebrates along a local environmental gradient induced by an aquaculture unit: the contribution of species dispersal ability and rarity

Charalampos Dimitriadis; Drosos Koutsoubas

The relation of macrobenthic species turnover (beta diversity) and species plylogenetic variation with functional diversity patterns, across an environmental gradient induced by an aquaculture unit, in a coastal area of the island of Lesvos (NE Aegean) has been investigated in this study. The contribution of rare species response and species dispersal ability in the variation of functional diversity patterns along the environmental gradient, on a spatio-temporal scale, has been also examined. Our results revealed that benthic functional diversity was decreasing monotonically with increasing species turnover rate and hence with increasing spatial variability along the environmental gradient. Increased environmental stress which was detected in the immediate vicinity of the fish cages resulted to low species functional redundancy, since different species didn’t perform the same functional role at the most disturbed part of the established gradient. Functional diversity patterns were found to be correlated with species population size, whereas a strong linear relationship was also detected with phylogenetic diversity patterns, thus supporting the claim that wider local taxonomic trees can support a wider range of species functions even in small spatial scales. Rare species loss seemed to be one of the dominant factors ruling functional diversity variation. Species with the minimum possible dispersal ability, which were mostly rare, tend to diminish both in species number and population size faster than species with wider dispersal ability towards the most disturbed areas. The aforementioned results indicate that rare species variation and endemic species loss are critical factors in determining functional diversity loss across a human-induced environmental gradient in soft bottom benthic communities.


Journal of Natural History | 2008

Community properties of benthic molluscs as indicators of environmental stress induced by organic enrichment

Charalampos Dimitriadis; Drosos Koutsoubas

This study investigates the multivariate spatio‐temporal population patterns of molluscan taxocoenosis along an organic load gradient caused by the presence of a fish farm unit in the semi‐enclosed micro‐tidal Gera bay in the island of Lesvos (northeast Aegean), by exploring three different properties (species abundance, trophic web structure and geographic ranges) as indicators for detecting community disturbance. Results have shown that community properties related to ecosystem functioning (i.e. food web analysis) and macro‐ecological aspects (i.e. zoogeographical orientation community features) have proved to be more sensitive in detecting the effects of organic load perturbation than species abundance, thus indicating the use of such properties in environmental assessment approaches in the future.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Taxonomic and functional surrogates of sessile benthic diversity in Mediterranean marine caves

Vasilis Gerovasileiou; Charalampos Dimitriadis; Christos Arvanitidis; Eleni Voultsiadou

Hard substrates host globally a rich biodiversity, orders of magnitude higher in species number than that in surrounding soft substrates. Among them, marine caves support unique biodiversity and fragile communities but suffer lack of quantitative data on their structure and function, hindering their conservation status assessment. A first approach to the non-destructive ecological monitoring of marine caves by testing surrogates of structural and functional composition of sessile benthos was attempted in two species-rich Mediterranean marine caves. Photographic sampling was performed in different positions on the cave walls, across the horizontal axis, from the entrance inwards. Eighty-four taxa were identified and assigned to 6 biological traits and 32 modalities related to morphology, behavior and ecological affinities, with sponges being the dominant taxon in species richness and coverage. In quest of possible biological surrogates, we examined the spatial variability of the total community structure and function and separately the sponge community structure and function. The observed patterns of the above metrics were significantly correlated with the distance from the entrance, the small-scale variability and their interaction. A positive correlation was found between all examined pairs of those metrics, supporting that: (i) the developed functional approach could be used for the study of marine cave sessile communities, and (ii) sponges could be used as a surrogate taxon for the structural and functional study of these communities. The suggested method could be tested in other types of hard substrate habitats and in multiple locations of the Mediterranean waters, facilitating monitoring schemes and conservation actions.


Journal of Biological Research-thessaloniki | 2014

Benthic molluscan macrofauna structure in heavily trawled sediments (Thermaikos Gulf, North Aegean Sea): spatiotemporal patterns.

Charalampos Dimitriadis; Drosos Koutsoubas; Zoi Garyfalou; Anastasios Tselepides

BackgroundSpatio-temporal patterns on benthic molluscan macrofauna structure and function (feeding guilds) were investigated in a commercial fishing ground in Thermaikos Gulf (N Aegean Sea). Fishery management measures in this area include a trawling period of 8 months per year (October to May). Macrofauna samples were collected before and after 30 and 120 days of the commencement of the trawling period (temporal axis) along a southward transect (spatial axis) and down through the sediment profile (vertical axis).ResultsMain results revealed no recognizable changes in community diversity and structure at temporal scales. This finding can probably be attributed to the fact that the examined communities are subjected to continuous disturbances deriving from multiple natural and anthropogenic stressors acting simultaneously in Thermaikos Gulf. Molluscan assemblages were already stressed before the commencement of the trawling period, indicating that the time period in which bottom trawling is prohibited is not sufficient for the recovery of benthic communities. Significant shifts in the trophic structure of molluscan assemblages were also detected. The direct mortality of herbivorous species and the loss of filter feeding organisms may be attributed to the passage of the fishing gear and to sediment re-suspension, respectively. Trawling disturbance may have created the observed vertical patterns of the community structure since hauling induces profound changes in the geochemical profile of the sediment.ConclusionsOur findings sustained the notion that bottom trawling, alongside with other types of human induced stressors, can have considerable effects on the structure and function of the benthic domain. Therefore, our results highlighted the need of an Ecosystem Based Fishery Management (EBFM) perspective in Thermaikos Gulf to ensure both fisheries and ecosystem sustainability.


Hydrobiologia | 2018

Testing the robustness of a coastal biodiversity data protocol in the Mediterranean: insights from the molluskan assemblages from the sublittoral macroalgae communities

Dimitris Poursanidis; Giorgos Chatzigeorgiou; Charalampos Dimitriadis; Drosos Koutsoubas; Christos Arvanitidis

The NaGISA project (Natural Geography Ιn Shore Areas) is a global initiative within the framework of the Census of Marine Life. The Mediterranean Sea has joined with 4 stations, 2 in Italy and 2 on the island of Crete, Greece. Two different sites were sampled during two consecutive years (2007 and 2008) by means of SCUBA diving. On the basis of the evidence offered by the collected material from the hard substrates of Crete, and the literature mined datasets concerning the molluscan assemblages, two main issues are investigated: (a) is the molluscan fauna sampled in the two NaGISA sites representative of the regional Mediterranean one? and (b), is the molluscan fauna sampled from the two sites randomly assembled from the regional species pool across different spatial scales? Although a strong tendency of the local molluskan composition to be randomly sampled from the regional pools at all scales, it is not possible to demonstrate with a degree of certainty whether their observed local diversity is independent of local and regional processes or if it is determined by a combination of the two acting either in concert or antagonistically.


Marine Biodiversity | 2016

On the use of predator traits and distribution in environmental impact assessment: the trophic/dispersal sufficiency concept

Charalampos Dimitriadis; Drosos Koutsoubas; Christos Arvanitidis

Environmental change can alter both species distribution range patterns at a regional scale and their feeding habits at a local scale. While several studies have highlighted the mechanisms driving such changes separately, little is known on their combined effect on the local communities. In this manuscript, we used both feeding and distributional traits of macro-benthic species and examined their combined response across an environmental gradient induced by an aquaculture unit. Our results mainly suggest that specialized predators with narrow geographic distributions and niches were more sensitive to environmental change than the less specialized groups. Moreover, under harsh environmental conditions, predatory species with a wide dispersion capacity can sustain viable populations through niche generalization. In contrast, in areas of low environmental disturbance, predatory species with a more restricted dispersal capability (i.e. some endemic species) can coexist via niche differentiation. In this context, our findings contribute towards a better understanding of benthic communities’ functional response to environmental change and may be of use in environmental impact assessment.


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2012

Functional diversity and redundancy of soft bottom communities in brackish waters areas: Local vs regional effects

Charalampos Dimitriadis; Athanasios Evagelopoulos; Drosos Koutsoubas


Aquatic Conservation-marine and Freshwater Ecosystems | 2008

Spatial and seasonal variability of the macrobenthic fauna in Mediterranean solar saltworks ecosystems

Athanasios Evagelopoulos; Drosos Koutsoubas; Alberto Basset; Maurizio Pinna; Charalampos Dimitriadis; Franca Sangiorgio; Enrico Barbone; Maria Maidanou; Panayota Koulouri; Costas Dounas


Biodiversity Data Journal | 2016

CIGESMED for divers: Establishing a citizen science initiative for the mapping and monitoring of coralligenous assemblages in the Mediterranean Sea

Vasilis Gerovasileiou; Thanos Dailianis; Emmanouela Panteri; Nikitas Michalakis; Giulia Gatti; Maria Sini; Charalampos Dimitriadis; Yiannis Issaris; Maria Salomidi; Irene Filiopoulou; Alper Doğan; Laure Thierry de Ville D 'Avray; Romain David; Ertan Ҫinar; Drosos Koutsoubas; Jean-Pierre Féral; Christos Arvanitidis

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Christos Arvanitidis

National Museum of Natural History

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Vasilis Gerovasileiou

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Maria Sini

University of the Aegean

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