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Dive into the research topics where Concepción Marcos is active.

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Featured researches published by Concepción Marcos.


Hydrobiologia | 2002

Evidence of a planktonic food web response to changes in nutrient input dynamics in the Mar Menor coastal lagoon, Spain

Angel Pérez-Ruzafa; Javier Gilabert; J.M. Gutiérrez; A.I. Fernández; Concepción Marcos; S. Sabah

Nutrient input dynamics in the Mar Menor coastal lagoon has recently changed as a consequence of changes in agricultural practises. An interannual comparison of the environmental variables and the planktonic biomass size-spectra was performed between 1988 and 1997. While nitrate concentration was low in 1988, the values in 1997 increased considerably. Since 1995, two alloctonous jellyfish species (Rhyzostoma pulmo and Cotylorhiza tuberculata) occurred in large numbers in summer time and reached peak abundance in summer of 1997. The size-spectra analysis comparison revealed that, in spite of changes in nutrient input that stimulated the growth of larger phytoplankton cells, there were no significant differences in the spectra slope which followed a similar seasonal trend in both years. However, the plankton biovolume considered under the size range compared (between 2 and 1000 μm diameter) was, paradoxically, always lower in 1997. Given that there were higher nutrient levels in 1997, this finding suggest a strong top-down control mechanism of size structure. Gut contents of jellyfishes showed their preference for large diatoms, tintinnids, veliger larvae and copepods, corroborating that size structure in these assemblages can be subject to top-down control. The implication of these results is that the feeding activities of large gelatinous zooplankton (jellyfishes) may play an important role controlling the consequences of eutrophication within the Mar Menor coastal lagoon.


Hydrobiologia | 2007

Hydrographic, geomorphologic and fish assemblage relationships in coastal lagoons

Angel Pérez-Ruzafa; Ma Carmen Mompeán; Concepción Marcos

In this study, 40 Atlanto-Mediterranean coastal lagoons were analyzed in order to evaluate the extent to which their ecological characteristics depend on hydrographic, trophic or geomorphologic features. Fish species richness increases with lagoon volume and the openness parameter, which characterizes the potential influence of the sea on general lagoon hydrology and is related to the total transversal area of the inlets, which connect the lagoon to the sea. On the other hand, the number of species decreases exponentially with the phosphate concentration in water. The fishing yield increases with the chlorophyll a concentration in the water column and exponentially with shoreline development. With respect to the fish assemblage composition, geomorphologic features alone explain 22% of the variance in the canonical analyses and an additional 75% when including the hydrographic and trophic characteristics of the lagoon, the latter on its own explaining only 3% of the observed differences.


Marine Environmental Research | 2008

Differences in spatial and seasonal patterns of macrophyte assemblages between a coastal lagoon and the open sea.

Angel Pérez-Ruzafa; M.I. Hegazi; I.M. Pérez-Ruzafa; Concepción Marcos

Although benthic macrophytes must be considered in monitoring programs to establish the ecological status of transitional and coastal waters in the European Union, the patterns of variability in species composition of macrophyte assemblages in Mediterranean coastal lagoons has scarcely been studied. In this work the spatial (both vertical and horizontal) and seasonal dynamics of macrophyte assemblages in a coastal lagoon (Mar Menor) are compared with those of open coastal assemblages in the SW Mediterranean to analyze any biological variability in lagoon assemblages and the factors that determine such variability. Different assemblages, characterized by well defined groups of species, can be described according to their isolation from the open sea and the type of substratum; at the same time, a vertical zonation pattern, similar to that found in all marine communities but more compressed, exists. This implies that when applying the EU Water Framework Directive or assessing environmental impact, a lagoon should not be considered spatially uniform and unique unit but as a mosaic of assemblages.


Genetica | 2010

Genetic diversity and connectivity remain high in Holothuria polii (Delle Chiaje 1823) across a coastal lagoon-open sea environmental gradient

Carlos Vergara-Chen; Mercedes González-Wangüemert; Concepción Marcos; Angel Pérez-Ruzafa

Coastal lagoons represent habitats with widely heterogeneous environmental conditions, particularly as regards salinity and temperature, which fluctuate in both space and time. These characteristics suggest that physical and ecological factors could contribute to the genetic divergence among populations occurring in coastal lagoon and open-coast environments. This study investigates the genetic structure of Holothuria polii at a micro-geographic scale across the Mar Menor coastal lagoon and nearby marine areas, estimating the mitochondrial DNA variation in two gene fragments, cytochrome oxidase I (COI) and 16S rRNA (16S). Dataset of mitochondrial sequences was also used to test the influence of environmental differences between coastal lagoon and marine waters on population genetic structure. All sampled locations exhibited high levels of haplotype diversity and low values of nucleotide diversity. Both genes showed contrasting signals of genetic differentiation (non-significant differences using COI and slight differences using 16S, which could due to different mutation rates or to differential number of exclusive haplotypes. We detected an excess of recent mutations and exclusive haplotypes, which can be generated as a result of population growth. However, selective processes can be also acting on the gene markers used; highly significant generalized additive models have been obtained considering genetic data from 16S gene and independent variables such as temperature and salinity.


Marine Environmental Research | 2012

Physiological response and photoacclimation capacity of Caulerpa prolifera (Forsskål) J.V. Lamouroux and Cymodocea nodosa (Ucria) Ascherson meadows in the Mar Menor lagoon (SE Spain)

Marta García-Sánchez; Nathalie Korbee; I.M. Pérez-Ruzafa; Concepción Marcos; Belén Domínguez; Félix L. Figueroa; Angel Pérez-Ruzafa

The macroalga Caulerpa prolifera colonized the Mar Menor coastal lagoon after the enlargement of the main inlet in 1972, coexisting now with the previous Cymodocea nodosa meadows. The physiological response and the photoacclimation capacity of both species were studied. For this purpose in vivo chlorophyll a fluorescence, photoprotective mechanisms and oxidative stress were measured in both species in summer 2010 and exposure-recovery experiments were conducted to determine the acclimation capacity of both species. The results suggest that C. prolifera behaves as a shade-adapted species with a low photoprotective capacity, light being one of the main factors governing its distribution in the lagoon. The high photosynthetic capacity and lack of photoinhibition found in C. nodosa suggest that this species is highly photoprotected. It also possesses a high concentration of lutein and a high de-epoxidation degree, related to a much higher NPQ(max) value.


Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2010

Molecular systematics of the genus Holothuria in the Mediterranean and Northeastern Atlantic and a molecular clock for the diversification of the Holothuriidae (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea)

Giomar Helena Borrero-Pérez; Jesús Gómez-Zurita; Mercedes González-Wangüemert; Concepción Marcos; Angel Pérez-Ruzafa

This work investigates the systematics of the genus Holothuria in the Mediterranean Sea and Northeastern Atlantic in the light of a wider molecular phylogenetic hypothesis of Holothuriidae, and it also provides a time-scale for the family diversification using mitochondrial markers and the molecular clock hypothesis. The subgenera Holothuria and Roweothuria are retrieved as paraphyletic. At least four separate lineages, with quite different time frameworks were identified. There are at least three species with an apparent long evolutionary history, H. forskali, H. sanctori and H. impatiens and six species belonging to Holothuria, Roweothuria and Vaneyothuria, which have diverged relatively recently.


Estuaries and Coasts | 2015

Connectivity in Three European Coastal Lagoons

Michol Ghezzo; Francesca De Pascalis; Georg Umgiesser; Petras Zemlys; Marco Sigovini; Concepción Marcos; Angel Pérez-Ruzafa

The temporal variation and the spatial structure of marine populations strongly depend on the early life stages of the individuals and on their interaction with the environment. The physical dispersion of propagules (eggs and larvae) is a fundamental aspect, conditioning the successful recruitment of juveniles in the adult population. Coastal transitional ecosystems such as lagoons plays a role of nursery for species with economic relevance, such as demersal fishes, mollusks and crustaceans. Those environments promote the recruitment of the early stages for several organisms because they act as area of retention for propagules and concentration for resources. We applied in three different European coastal lagoon a lagrangian particle tracking model coupled with a hydrodynamic model, and developed a method to evaluate the connectivity inside a lagoon and between a lagoon and the sea. Each particle represents a generic passive pelagic larva with a duration of one month. The average connectivity has been estimated after two years of simulation under realistic tide and wind forcings. Our results allow to characterize the lagoons behavior considering different spatial scales and to compare the dynamics of different systems. This study is a first step toward a better knowledge of the factors influencing the ecological role of coastal lagoons.


Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries | 2015

Long term evolution of fisheries in a coastal lagoon related to changes in lagoon ecology and human pressures

Concepción Marcos; Inmaculada Torres; Antonio López‐Capel; Angel Pérez-Ruzafa

Mediterranean coastal lagoons are among the most productive of marine ecosystems but, at the same time, they are strongly affected by anthropogenic pressures that could alter their fisheries. This work looks at how the Mar Menor coastal lagoon fishery evolved from the eighteenth century to 2012, and provides data about landings, effort and gears. The relationships between fishing yields and the environmental consequences of the most important human activities in the lagoon (including the dredging and widening of inlets in the last two centuries and eutrophication episodes in the 1990s) are examined using uni- and multi-variate analysis. While mean total yield tended to remain constant, significant changes in the specific composition of the catch and in the dominance of the main target species have occurred. The lagoon seems to have the ability to support a wide range of pressures and environmental changes, since it has been seen to recover each time from specific human impacts, maintaining the fishery yields close to the total maximum sustainable yield. However, other factors, like climate change or the spread of aquaculture exploitations, may have overlapping effects, introducing long term trends in the fisheries concerned.


Archive | 2008

Coastal Lagoons in the Context of Water Management in Spain and Europe

Angel Pérez-Ruzafa; Concepción Marcos

Water management is one of the main problems facing humanity and follows a hierarchical perspective from the whole planet to water body. Spatio-temporal scales change at each level, as do driving forces, impacts, and the processes and responses involved. Recently, the European Union adopted the Water Framework Directive (WFD) to establish the basic principles of sustainable water policy in member states and one of the main concerns of the Directive is the need to consider the vulnerability of coastal aquatic ecosystems and to establish their ecological status. Water deficits and geographical water disequilibria in Spain have traditionally been faced with the development of hydraulic infrastructures, including long distance water transfers from water-rich basins to regions with scarcity, but the strong degree of decentralization existing actually in Spain and the number of administrations, authorities and institutions involved, hinders a common policy and administration of water resources. At water body level, coastal lagoons face conceptual and ecological difficulties in applying the WFD from their inclusion in a typology to the assignment of an ecological status as a consequence of inter and intra-lagoon variability in hydrology and biological assemblages and ecosystem homeostatic mechanisms.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2017

North East Atlantic vs. Mediterranean Marine Protected Areas as Fisheries Management Tool

Angel Pérez-Ruzafa; José Antonio García-Charton; Concepción Marcos

The effectiveness of management initiatives implemented in the context of the European Common Fisheries Policy has been questioned, especially with regard to the Mediterranean. Some of the analyses made to compare the fishing activity and management measures carried out in the North East Atlantic and in the Mediterranean do not take into account some of the differentiating peculiarities of each of these regions. At the same time, they resort to traditional fisheries management measures and do not discuss the role of marine protected areas as a complementary management tool. In this respect, the apparent failure of marine protected areas in the North-East Atlantic compared with the same in the Mediterranean is challenging European fishery scientists. Application of the classical holistic view of ecological succession to the functioning of fishery closures and no-use areas highlights the importance of combining both management regimes to fully satisfy both fishery- and biodiversity-oriented goals. We advocate that an optimal management strategy for designing an MPA to protect biodiversity and sustain fishing yields consists of combining a network of no-use areas (close to their mature state) with fish boxes (buffer zones maintained by fishing disturbance in a relatively early successional stage, where productivity is higher), under a multi-zoning scheme. In this framework, the importance of no-use areas for fisheries is based on several observations: 1) They preserve biological diversity at regional scale, at all levels –specific, habitat/seascape, and also genetic diversity and the structure of populations, allowing natural selection to operate. 2) They permit, the natural variability of the system to be differentiated from the effects of regulation and to be integrated in appropriate sampling schemes as controls. 3) They maintain the natural size and age structure of the populations, hence maximizing potential fecundity, allowing biomass export to occur from core to regulated areas, dampening the fluctuations derived from deviations from the theoretical optimal effort in the fishing zone.

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I.M. Pérez-Ruzafa

Complutense University of Madrid

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Ben Stobart

South Australian Research and Development Institute

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Isabel Pérez-Ruzafa

Complutense University of Madrid

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