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Featured researches published by Paolo G. Albano.


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

A risk-based approach to cumulative effect assessments for marine management

Vanessa Stelzenmüller; Marta Coll; Antonios D. Mazaris; Sylvaine Giakoumi; Stelios Katsanevakis; Michelle E. Portman; Renate Degen; Peter Mackelworth; Antje Gimpel; Paolo G. Albano; Vasiliki Almpanidou; Joachim Claudet; Franz Essl; Thanasis Evagelopoulos; Johanna J. Heymans; Tilen Genov; Salit Kark; Fiorenza Micheli; Maria Grazia Pennino; Gil Rilov; B. Rumes; Jeroen Steenbeek; Henn Ojaveer

Marine ecosystems are increasingly threatened by the cumulative effects of multiple human pressures. Cumulative effect assessments (CEAs) are needed to inform environmental policy and guide ecosystem-based management. Yet, CEAs are inherently complex and seldom linked to real-world management processes. Therefore we propose entrenching CEAs in a risk management process, comprising the steps of risk identification, risk analysis and risk evaluation. We provide guidance to operationalize a risk-based approach to CEAs by describing for each step guiding principles and desired outcomes, scientific challenges and practical solutions. We reviewed the treatment of uncertainty in CEAs and the contribution of different tools and data sources to the implementation of a risk based approach to CEAs. We show that a risk-based approach to CEAs decreases complexity, allows for the transparent treatment of uncertainty and streamlines the uptake of scientific outcomes into the science-policy interface. Hence, its adoption can help bridging the gap between science and decision-making in ecosystem-based management.


Biological Invasions | 2018

Historical ecology of a biological invasion: the interplay of eutrophication and pollution determines time lags in establishment and detection

Paolo G. Albano; Ivo Gallmetzer; Alexandra Haselmair; Adam Tomašových; Michael Stachowitsch; Martin Zuschin

Human disturbance modifies selection regimes, depressing native species fitness and enabling the establishment of non-indigenous species with suitable traits. A major impediment to test the effect of disturbance on invasion success is the lack of long-term data on the history of invasions. Here, we overcome this problem and reconstruct the effect of disturbance on the invasion of the bivalve Anadara transversa from sediment cores in the Adriatic Sea. We show that (1) the onset of major eutrophication in the 1970s shifted communities towards species tolerating hypoxia, and (2) A. transversa was introduced in the 1970s but failed to reach reproductive size until the late 1990s because of metal contamination, resulting in an establishment and detection lag of ~25xa0years. Subfossil assemblages enabled us to (1) disentangle the distinct stages of invasion, (2) quantify time-lags and (3) finely reconstruct the interaction between environmental factors and the invasion process, showing that while disturbance does promote invasions, a synergism of multiple disturbances can shift selection regimes beyond tolerance limits and induce significant time lags in establishment. The quantification of these time lags enabled us to reject the hypothesis that aquaculture was an initial vector of introduction, making shipping the most probable source.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2018

Biological Invasions in Conservation Planning: A Global Systematic Review

Vesna Mačić; Paolo G. Albano; Vasiliki Almpanidou; Joachim Claudet; X. Corrales; Franz Essl; Athanasios Evagelopoulos; Ioannis Giovos; Carlos Jimenez; Salit Kark; Olivera Marković; Antonios D. Mazaris; Guðbjörg Ásta Ólafsdóttir; Marina Panayotova; Slavica Petović; Wolfgang Rabitsch; Mohammed Ramdani; Gil Rilov; Elena Tricarico; Tomás Vega Fernández; Maria Sini; Stelios Katsanevakis

Biological invasions threaten biodiversity in terrestrial, freshwater and marine ecosystems, requiring substantial conservation and management efforts. To examine how the conservation planning literature addresses biological invasions and if planning in the marine environment could benefit from experiences in the freshwater and terrestrial systems, we conducted a global systematic review. Out of 1149 scientific articles mentioning both ‘conservation planning’ and ‘alien’ or any of its alternative terms, 70 articles met our selection criteria. Most of the studies were related to the terrestrial environment, while only 10% focused on the marine one. The main conservation targets were species (mostly vertebrates) rather than habitats or ecosystems. Apart from being mentioned, alien species were considered of concern for conservation in only 46% of the cases, while mitigation measures were proposed in only 13% of the cases. The vast majority of the studies (73%) ignored alien species in conservation planning even if their negative impacts were recognized. In 20% of the studies, highly invaded areas were avoided in the planning, while in 6% of the cases such areas were prioritized for conservation. In the latter case, two opposing approaches led to the selection of invaded areas: either alien and native biodiversity were treated equally in setting conservation targets, i.e. alien species were also considered as ecological features requiring protection, or more commonly invaded sites were prioritized for the implementation of management actions to control or eradicate invasive alien species. When the ‘avoid’ approach was followed, in most of the cases highly impacted areas were either excluded or invasive alien species were included in the estimation of a cost function to be minimized. Most of the studies that followed a ‘protect’ or ‘avoid’ approach dealt with terrestrial or freshwater features but in most cases the followed approach could be transferred to the marine environment. Gaps and needs for further research are discussed and we propose an 11-step framework to account for biological invasions into the systematic conservation planning design.


Marine Biodiversity Records | 2015

New records of Echinolittorina punctata (Gastropoda: Littorinidae) in the Mediterranean Sea from Italy, France and Greece

Paolo G. Albano

Echinolittorina punctata was historically distributed in the southern sectors of the Mediterranean Sea. However, in the last decades a progressive range extension has occurred. In this context, new populations in France (Colliure, Cap d’Agde) and in Italy (Monte Argentario, Tuscany) are reported here. The population in Cap d’Agde is the northernmost in the entire Mediterranean Sea, the population in Monte Argentario is the northernmost along the Italian Tyrrhenian coastline and along the direction of range extension described in the last few years. Details on population density and size frequency distributions in Monte Argentario are provided, showing a decrease in density and an increase in minimum size from south to north. New records are also provided from Salamina Island and Rhodes Island in Greece. The latter likely dates back to 1836– 1837 and is the first record from the Mediterranean Sea. This record confirms that the species was widely distributed in the Levantine Sea at the time, although records from Greece and Turkey are extremely rare in the literature and in museum collections.


Zoosystematics and Evolution | 2018

An illustrated catalogue of Rudolf Sturany’s type specimens in the Naturhistorisches Museum Wien, Austria (NHMW): deep-sea Eastern Mediterranean molluscs

Paolo G. Albano; Sara-Maria Schnedl; Anita Eschner

The “Pola” expeditions were the first to explore the deep Eastern Mediterranean Sea in the 1890s. They remained the most intense surveys in that area for a century and constitute today a fundamental baseline to assess change in the basin, whose fauna is still inadequately described. Solid taxonomic foundations for the study of deep-sea organisms are needed and we here contribute by revising the name-bearing types of mollusc species introduced by Rudolf Sturany on the basis of the “Pola” material from the Eastern Mediterranean Sea stored in the Natural History Museum in Vienna. Sturany introduced 15 names (Marginella occulta var. minor Sturany, 1896 shall not be considered as the introduction of a new name). He described and established two manuscript names by Monterosato: Jujubinus igneus and Pseudomurex ruderatus. The genus Isorropodon was also introduced together with its type species I. perplexum. For each name, we list the available type material, provide the original description and a translation into English and illustrate the specimens in colour and with SEM imaging.


Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | 2017

Climate change and body size shift in Mediterranean bivalve assemblages: unexpected role of biological invasions

Rafał Nawrot; Paolo G. Albano; Devapriya Chattopadhyay; Martin Zuschin

Body size is a synthetic functional trait determining many key ecosystem properties. Reduction in average body size has been suggested as one of the universal responses to global warming in aquatic ecosystems. Climate change, however, coincides with human-enhanced dispersal of alien species and can facilitate their establishment. We address effects of species introductions on the size structure of recipient communities using data on Red Sea bivalves entering the Mediterranean Sea through the Suez Canal. We show that the invasion leads to increase in median body size of the Mediterranean assemblage. Alien species are significantly larger than native Mediterranean bivalves, even though they represent a random subset of the Red Sea species with respect to body size. The observed patterns result primarily from the differences in the taxonomic composition and body-size distributions of the source and recipient species pools. In contrast to the expectations based on the general temperature–size relationships in marine ectotherms, continued warming of the Mediterranean Sea indirectly leads to an increase in the proportion of large-bodied species in bivalve assemblages by accelerating the entry and spread of tropical aliens. These results underscore complex interactions between changing climate and species invasions in driving functional shifts in marine ecosystems.


Continental Shelf Research | 2016

Oil platforms in the Persian (Arabian) Gulf: Living and death assemblages reveal no effects

Paolo G. Albano; Nadezhda A. Filippova; Jan Steger; Darrell S. Kaufman; Adam Tomašových; Michael Stachowitsch; Martin Zuschin


Research Ideas and Outcomes | 2017

Advancing marine conservation in European and contiguous seas with the MarCons Action

Stelios Katsanevakis; Peter Mackelworth; Marta Coll; Simonetta Fraschetti; Vesna Mačić; Sylvaine Giakoumi; Peter Jones; Noam Levin; Paolo G. Albano; Fabio Badalamenti; Ruth Brennan; Joachim Claudet; Dubravko Culibrk; Giovanni D'Anna; Alan Deidun; Athanasios Evagelopoulos; José Antonio García-Charton; David Goldsborough; Draško Holcer; Carlos Jimenez; Salit Kark; Thomas Kirk Sørensen; Bojan Lazar; Georg Martin; Antonios D. Mazaris; Fiorenza Micheli; E. J. Milner-Gulland; Carlo Pipitone; Michelle E. Portman; Fabio Pranovi


Bollettino malacologico. | 2002

Mediterranean Gastrochaenidae (Mollusca: Bivalvia)

G Buccheri; In Ricordo Di Giuliano Ruggieri Bollettino Malacologico; Paolo G. Albano


Cahiers De Biologie Marine | 2011

Recent Brachiopoda of the Marine Protected Area Secche di Tor Paterno , Central Tyrrhenian Sea

Francesca Evangelisti; Paolo G. Albano; Bruno Sabelli

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Adam Tomašových

Slovak Academy of Sciences

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Antonios D. Mazaris

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Salit Kark

University of Queensland

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Vesna Mačić

University of Montenegro

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