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Featured researches published by João N. Franco.


Journal of Ecology | 2018

The ‘golden kelp’ Laminaria ochroleuca under global change: integrating multiple eco-physiological responses with species distribution models

João N. Franco; Fernando Tuya; Iacopo Bertocci; Laura Rodríguez; Brezo Martínez; Isabel Sousa-Pinto; Francisco Arenas

1.The loss of marine foundation species, in particular kelps at temperate latitudes, has been linked to climatic drivers and co-occurring human perturbations. Ocean temperature and nutrients typically co-vary over local and regional scales and play a crucial role on kelp dynamics. Examining their independent and interactive effects on kelp physiological performance is essential to understand and predict patterns of kelp distribution, particularly under scenarios of global change. n n2.Crossed combinations of ocean temperatures and availability of nutrients were experimentally tested on juveniles of the ‘golden kelp’, Laminaria ochroleuca, from the northwestern Iberian Peninsula. Eco-physiological responses included: survival, growth and total N content. Results were embedded into a Species Distribution Model (SDM), which relates presence records and climatic and non-climatic data to forecast distribution patterns of L. ochroleuca under different climate change scenarios. n n3.Temperatures above 24.6 °C were lethal irrespective of nutrients. Optimal growth of juvenile sporophytes occurred between 12 °C and 18 °C and no nutrient limitation. The SDM, where ocean temperature was the main predictor of kelp distribution in line with temperature thresholds given by eco-physiological responses, suggests a future expansion towards northern latitudes and a retreat from the southern limit/boundary of the current distribution. n n4.Synthesis. Range-shifting of the golden kelp can have severe ecological impacts at regional and local scales. The expansion or retraction of the species along the European coast seems to be modulated mainly by temperature, but nutrient availability would be key to maintain optimal physiological performance. Our work highlights that the combination of empirical and modelling approaches is accessible to researchers and crucial to building more robust predictions of ecological and biogeographic responses of habitat-forming species to forecasted environmental change. n nThis article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2015

A comparison of the degree of implementation of marine biodiversity indicators by European countries in relation to the Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD)

H. Hummel; Mt Frost; José A. Juanes; Judith Kochmann; Carlos F. Castellanos Perez Bolde; Fernando Aneiros; François Vandenbosch; João N. Franco; Beatriz Echavarri; Xabier Guinda; Araceli Puente; Camino Fernández; Cristina Galván; María Merino; Elvira Ramos; Paloma Fernández; Valentina Pitacco; Madara Alberte; Dagmara Wójcik; Monika Grabowska; Marlene Jahnke; Fabio Crocetta; Laura Carugati; Simonetta Scorrano; Simonetta Fraschetti; Patricia Pérez García; José Antonio Sanabria Fernández; Artem Poromov; Anna Iurchenko; Artem Isachenko

The degree of development and operability of the indicators for the Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD) using Descriptor 1 (D1) Biological Diversity was assessed. To this end, an overview of the relevance and degree of operability of the underlying parameters across 20 European countries was compiled by analysing national directives, legislation, regulations, and publicly available reports. Marked differences were found between countries in the degree of ecological relevance as well as in the degree of implementation and operability of the parameters chosen to indicate biological diversity. The best scoring EU countries were France, Germany, Greece and Spain, while the worst scoring countries were Italy and Slovenia. No country achieved maximum scores for the implementation of MSFD D1. The non-EU countries Norway and Turkey score as highly as the top-scoring EU countries. On the positive side, the chosen parameters for D1 indicators were generally identified as being an ecologically relevant reflection of Biological Diversity. On the negative side however, less than half of the chosen parameters are currently operational. It appears that at a pan-European level, no consistent and harmonized approach currently exists for the description and assessment of marine biological diversity. The implementation of the MSFD Descriptor 1 for Europe as a whole can therefore at best be marked as moderately successful.


Marine and Freshwater Research | 2016

Spatial and temporal variation of kelp forests and associated macroalgal assemblages along the Portuguese coast

Daniela Pinho; Iacopo Bertocci; Francisco Arenas; João N. Franco; David Jacinto; João J. Castro; Raquel Vieira; Isabel Sousa-Pinto; Thomas Wernberg; Fernando Tuya

Kelp communities are in decline in many regions. Detecting and addressing population declines require knowledge of patterns of spatial and temporal variation in the distribution and abundance of kelps and their associated organisms. We quantified kelp and associated macroalgal assemblages three times over a period of 2 years, at three regions along a natural gradient in temperature and nutrient availability across the Portuguese coast. Kelps were mostly found at the northern cool region (Viana do Castelo), which was also clearly separated from the two more southerly regions (Peniche, Sines) in terms of algal assemblage structure. This pattern was consistent, although varying in intensity, through time, providing support for this general spatial configuration. The overall richness of taxa increased towards lower latitudes. These findings indicated that kelp beds in southern Europe are currently restricted to northern Portugal, though supporting less diverse macroalgal assemblages compared with those located in central and southern Portugal.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2014

Transitional and freshwater bioassessments: one site, two perspectives?

João M. Neto; M.J. Feio; Heliana Teixeira; Joana Patrício; S.R.Q. Serra; João N. Franco; A.R. Calapez; E. Constantino

The freshwater-saltwater-transition-zone was analysed using two different sampling protocols and assessment methodologies, developed for freshwater and estuaries, to compare their agreement level in terms of community composition and quality assessments. The use of different protocols resulted in significant differences in macroinvertebrate communities, in index scores and initially in quality classes. After modifications in the sensitivity scores of the IBMWP and AMBI indices (average scores or the use of a score of the other index when both were present), the differences were largely reduced and quality classes became coincident for the assessments provided by IPtIs and BAT tools. Such harmonisation of quality assessments for adjacent water categories (e.g., large rivers vs. transitional waters), exemplified here as an harmonisation in one of the metrics comprised in the assessment tools, is essential as it has direct implications on the expansion and accomplishment of River Basin Management Plans committed by the Water Framework Directive.


Marine Environmental Research | 2018

Short-term variation of abundance of the purple sea urchin, Paracentrotus lividus (Lamarck, 1816), subject to harvesting in northern Portugal

Iacopo Bertocci; Andreu Blanco; João N. Franco; Sergio Fernández-Boo; Francisco Arenas

Paracentrotus lividus is a common and intensely harvested sea urchin at several European locations, including the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic coast of the Iberian Peninsula. The increasing human pressure on this resource due to the growing demand and market value of sea urchin gonads as seafood raises concerns on the ecological sustainability of present fisheries, which are showing a technological improvement and an expansion towards previously non-harvested areas. We examined the abundance of P. lividus of both commercial and non-commercial size before, during and after the harvesting season (from October to April) in the rocky shallow subtidal habitat along the northern Portuguese coast. The abundance of commercial (≥50u202fmm in test diameter) P. lividus individuals increased in the harvesting season, but drastically dropped by about 90% in the after-harvesting period. Such a pattern was consistent among three rocky shores spanning about 65u202fkm of coast. The multivariate population structure and most size classes of non-commercial sea urchins did not differ depending on the period. The only exception was Class 4 (test diameter between 30 and 40u202fmm), which was more abundant in the harvesting than in the before- and, further, the after-harvesting period, but only at one shore. Very small (Class 1, test diameter below 10u202fmm) urchins were never found. The present findings suggest that human harvesting may cause considerable reductions in the abundance of target P. lividus, but that such an effect would not be evident concomitantly with harvesting, but in the subsequent period. Even if just under a precautionary principle, protection strategies focused on sea urchin populations and the harvesting period are advisable to contribute to maintain a sustainable local fishery of P. lividus populations that are likely to be negatively affected also by other natural and anthropogenic perturbations.


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2012

Patterns of landscape and assemblage structure along a latitudinal gradient in ocean climate

Fernando Tuya; Eva Cacabelos; Pedro Duarte; David Jacinto; João J. Castro; Teresa Silva; Iacopo Bertocci; João N. Franco; Francisco Arenas; Josep Coca; Thomas Wernberg


Ecological Indicators | 2012

Ability of benthic indicators to assess ecological quality in estuaries following management

Helena Veríssimo; João M. Neto; Heliana Teixeira; João N. Franco; Brian D. Fath; João Carlos Marques; Joana Patrício


Ecological Indicators | 2014

Temporal changes in macrofauna as response indicator to potential human pressures on sandy beaches

Filipa Bessa; Sílvia C. Gonçalves; João N. Franco; José N. André; Pedro P. Cunha; João Carlos Marques


Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2012

Population dynamics of Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in mesohaline and oligohaline habitats: Invasion success in a Southern Europe estuary

João N. Franco; Filipe R. Ceia; Joana Patrício; V. Modesto; J.K. Thompson; João Carlos Marques; João M. Neto


Ecological Indicators | 2010

The influence of mesh size in environmental quality assessment of estuarine macrobenthic communities

T. Couto; Joana Patrício; João M. Neto; Filipe R. Ceia; João N. Franco; João Carlos Marques

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Iacopo Bertocci

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Thomas Wernberg

University of Western Australia

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