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Dive into the research topics where Giacomo Milisenda is active.

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Featured researches published by Giacomo Milisenda.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Jellyfish as prey: frequency of predation and selective foraging of Boops boops (vertebrata, Actinopterygii) on the mauve stinger Pelagia noctiluca (Cnidaria, Scyphozoa)

Giacomo Milisenda; Sara Rosa; Veronica Fuentes; Ferdinando Boero; Letterio Guglielmo; Jennifer E. Purcell; Stefano Piraino

In recent years, jellyfish blooms have attracted considerable scientific interest for their potential impacts on human activities and ecosystem functioning, with much attention paid to jellyfish as predators and to gelatinous biomass as a carbon sink. Other than qualitative data and observations, few studies have quantified direct predation of fish on jellyfish to clarify whether they may represent a seasonally abundant food source. Here we estimate predation frequency by the commercially valuable Mediterranean bogue, Boops boops on the mauve stinger jellyfish, Pelagia noctiluca, in the Strait of Messina (NE Sicily). A total of 1054 jellyfish were sampled throughout one year to quantify predation by B. boops from bite marks on partially eaten jellyfish and energy density of the jellyfish. Predation by B. boops in summer was almost twice that in winter, and they selectively fed according to medusa gender and body part. Calorimetric analysis and biochemical composition showed that female jellyfish gonads had significantly higher energy content than male gonads due to more lipids and that gonads had six-fold higher energy content than the somatic tissues due to higher lipid and protein concentrations. Energetically, jellyfish gonads represent a highly rewarding food source, largely available to B. boops throughout spring and summer. During the remainder of the year, when gonads were not very evident, fish predation switched towards less-selective foraging on the somatic gelatinous biomass. P. noctiluca, the most abundant jellyfish species in the Mediterranean Sea and a key planktonic predator, may represent not only a nuisance for human leisure activities and a source of mortality for fish eggs and larvae, but also an important resource for fish species of commercial value, such as B. boops.


Zootaxa | 2014

Pelagia benovici sp. nov. (Cnidaria, Scyphozoa): a new jellyfish in the Mediterranean Sea

Stefano Piraino; Giorgio Aglieri; Luis Martell; Carlotta Mazzoldi; Valentina Melli; Giacomo Milisenda; Simonetta Scorrano; Ferdinando Boero

A bloom of an unknown semaestome jellyfish species was recorded in the North Adriatic Sea from September 2013 to early 2014. Morphological analysis of several specimens showed distinct differences from other known semaestome species in the Mediterranean Sea and unquestionably identified them as belonging to a new pelagiid species within genus Pelagia. The new species is morphologically distinct from P. noctiluca, currently the only recognized valid species in the genus, and from other doubtful Pelagia species recorded from other areas of the world. Molecular analyses of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) and nuclear 28S ribosomal DNA genes corroborate its specific distinction from P. noctiluca and other pelagiid taxa, supporting the monophyly of Pelagiidae. Thus, we describe Pelagia benovici sp. nov. Piraino, Aglieri, Scorrano & Boero.


PLOS ONE | 2014

First Evidence of Inbreeding, Relatedness and Chaotic Genetic Patchiness in the Holoplanktonic Jellyfish Pelagia noctiluca (Scyphozoa, Cnidaria)

Giorgio Aglieri; Chiara Papetti; Lorenzo Zane; Giacomo Milisenda; Ferdinando Boero; Stefano Piraino

Genetic drift and non-random mating seldom influence species with large breeding populations and high dispersal potential, characterized by unstructured gene pool and panmixia at a scale lower than the minimum dispersal range of individuals. In the present study, a set of nine microsatellite markers was developed and used to investigate the spatio-temporal genetic patterns of the holoplanktonic jellyfish Pelagia noctiluca (Scyphozoa) in the Southern Tyrrhenian Sea. Homozygote excess was detected at eight loci, and individuals exhibited intra-population relatedness higher than expected by chance in at least three samples. This result was supported by the presence of siblings in at least 5 out 8 samples, 4 of which contained full-sib in addition to half-sib dyads. Having tested and ruled out alternative explanations as null alleles, our results suggest the influence of reproductive and behavioural features in shaping the genetic structure of P. noctiluca, as outcomes of population genetics analyses pointed out. Indeed, the genetic differentiation among populations was globally small but highlighted: a) a spatial genetic patchiness uncorrelated with distance between sampling locations, and b) a significant genetic heterogeneity between samples collected in the same locations in different years. Therefore, despite its extreme dispersal potential, P. noctiluca does not maintain a single homogenous population, but rather these jellyfish appear to have intra-bloom localized recruitment and/or individual cohesiveness, whereby siblings more likely swarm together as a single group and remain close after spawning events. These findings provide the first evidence of family structures and consequent genetic patchiness in a species with highly dispersive potential throughout its whole life cycle, contributing to understanding the patterns of dispersal and connectivity in marine environments.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2017

Consequences of Stinging Plankton Blooms on Finfish Mariculture in the Mediterranean Sea

Mar Bosch-Belmar; Giacomo Milisenda; Albert Girons; Valentina Taurisano; Stefano Accoroni; Cecilia Totti; Stefano Piraino; Veronica Fuentes

In recent years, caged finfish mariculture across European seas suffered production losses by severe fish mortality, following episodic outbreaks of invertebrate cnidarian stingers. Due to their stinging cells and injectable venoms, medusozoan jellyfish or drifting propagules of polyp colonies at high density may impair caged fish health through toxic effects on vulnerable tissues of gills and skin, and related secondary bacterial infections. Gill disorders in European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) fish farms along the Spanish Mediterranean coast are commonly reported, but regular monitoring of the frequency of cnidarian outbreaks and their potential impacts on caged fish is still poorly enforced. In this study, two sea bass mariculture farms in Southern Spain (Malaga; Almeria) were monitored biweekly for zooplankton, phytoplankton and fish gills condition, over 13 or 30 months for the Malaga and Almeria facilities respectively, within the period 2012 – 2014. Significant, direct correlations were found among low water temperature, recorded fish mortalities, and high abundances of planktonic cnidarians, particularly of the hydrozoan siphonophores Muggiaea atlantica and M. kochii, and the larval stage of Ectopleura larynx, a common member of cage biofouling communities. A significant relationship between cnidarian densities and the quantitative scoring of gill pathology was also observed. In addition, high densities of long-bristled planktonic diatoms (Chaetoceros spp.) coincided with a major fish mortality event (April 2012, Almeria farm). Standardised monitoring of plankton dynamics and composition may help in promoting response capacities of Mediterranean mariculture managers to fish health challenges (such as stinging plankton blooms) by a) improving diagnostic tools and preventative countermeasures and b) supporting the development of science-based spatial planning and sustainable growth of coastal mariculture.


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2014

Digestion times and predation potentials of Pelagia noctiluca eating fish larvae and copepods in the NW Mediterranean Sea

Jennifer E. Purcell; Uxue Tilves; Veronica Fuentes; Giacomo Milisenda; Alejandro Olariaga; Ana Sabatés


Journal of Plankton Research | 2015

Digestion and predation rates of zooplankton by the pleustonic hydrozoan Velella velella and widespread blooms in 2013 and 2014

Jennifer E. Purcell; Giacomo Milisenda; Aldo Rizzo; Steven A. Carrion; Serena Zampardi; Sabina Airoldi; Giacomo Zagami; Letterio Guglielmo; Ferdinando Boero; Thomas K. Doyle; Stefano Piraino


Marine Policy | 2017

Jellyfish blooms perception in Mediterranean finfish aquaculture

Mar Bosch-Belmar; Ernesto Azzurro; Kristian Pulis; Giacomo Milisenda; Veronica Fuentes; Ons Kéfi-Daly Yahia; Anton Micallef; Alan Deidun; Stefano Piraino


Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2016

Reproductive and bloom patterns of Pelagia noctiluca in the Strait of Messina, Italy

Giacomo Milisenda; A. Martinez-Quintana; Veronica Fuentes; Mar Bosch-Belmar; Giorgio Aglieri; Ferdinando Boero; Stefano Piraino


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2018

Trophic interactions of the jellyfish Pelagia noctiluca in the NW Mediterranean: evidence from stable isotope signatures and fatty acid composition

Uxue Tilves; Veronica Fuentes; Giacomo Milisenda; Christopher C. Parrish; Salvatrice Vizzini; Ana Sabatés


Archive | 2016

The role of hydrozoans in European sea bass (Dicentrachus labrax) gill disorders in Mediterranean aquaculture

Mar Bosch Belmar; Giacomo Milisenda; A. Girons; Stefano Accoroni; Cecilia Totti; Stefano Piraino; Veronica Fuentes

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Veronica Fuentes

Spanish National Research Council

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Jennifer E. Purcell

Western Washington University

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Ana Sabatés

Spanish National Research Council

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Uxue Tilves

Spanish National Research Council

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Cecilia Totti

Marche Polytechnic University

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