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Dive into the research topics where Sabrina Clemente is active.

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Featured researches published by Sabrina Clemente.


Marine Environmental Research | 2008

The key role of the sea urchin Diadema aff. antillarum in controlling macroalgae assemblages throughout the Canary Islands (eastern subtropical Atlantic): an spatio-temporal approach.

José Carlos Hernández; Sabrina Clemente; Carlos Sangil; Alberto Brito

Diadema aff. antillarum performs a key role in organizing and structuring rocky macroalgae assemblages in the Canary Islands. Densities of D. aff. antillarum higher than 2 individuals m(-2) are found to drastically reduce non-crustose macroalgal cover to below 30% and wave exposure appears as a major factor determining sea urchin density, which decreases with exposure level. Substrates containing >20% sand limit urchin to under 1 individual m(-2) but high relief rocky habitats show higher density. Moreover, several anthropogenic factors (number of islanders and tourists per coastal perimeter, and number of operational fishing boats) were positively correlated with urchin abundance. A trend of increasing urchin density through time was found, although well structured marine systems found at Mar de Las Calmas Marine Protected Area and at the no-take area of La Graciosa Marine Protected Area do not seem to follow this general trend.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2007

An external tagging technique for the long-spined sea urchin Diadema aff. antillarum

Sabrina Clemente; José Carlos Hernández; Alberto Brito

An in situ tagging technique for the long-spined sea urchin Diadema ai. antillarum, suitable for carrying out short and medium term ecological studies is described. It is a simple method in which external nylon tags are anchored in holes drilled through the urchin test. The technique was tested in the ¢eld and found to be eiective for individuals of more than 20 mm test diameter in terms of survival and tag retention rates.


Coral Reefs | 2011

On the occurrence of the hydrocoral Millepora (Hydrozoa: Milleporidae) in the subtropical eastern Atlantic (Canary Islands): is the colonization related to climatic events?

Sabrina Clemente; Adriana Rodríguez; Alberto Brito; A. Ramos; Ó. Monterroso; José Carlos Hernández

The occurrence of a hydrocoral of the genus Millepora has been recorded for the first time in the eastern subtropical Atlantic (Tenerife, Canary Islands), at a latitude of 11º N of its previously known northernmost limit of distribution in the Cape Verde Islands. The moderate development of the colonies, their fast growth rate and very restricted location indicate a recent colonization process, possibly related to an extreme climatic event that took place in the summer of 2004, adding to the rising seawater temperatures in the region during recent years.


Coral Reefs | 2015

A genetic approach to the origin of Millepora sp. in the eastern Atlantic

Cataixa López; Sabrina Clemente; C. Almeida; Alberto Brito; M. Hernández

Many species have experienced recent range expansions due to human-mediated processes, such as the unintentional transport on ships or plastic waste and ocean warming, which facilitates many tropical species to tolerate living beyond their normal limit of distribution, with a potential impact on autochthonous assemblages. In September 2008, three colonies of the fire coral Millepora sp. (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) were found on the southeastern coast of Tenerife (Canary Islands), though this species had been previously described to have a circumtropical distribution with Cape Verde Islands as its northern limit of distribution in the eastern Atlantic. The aim of this study was to determine the origin of these new colonies in the Canary Islands (11°N of its previously known northernmost limit of distribution) using variation in the cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) gene as a molecular marker. In order to do that, Millepora samples from Tenerife and Cape Verde Islands were collected for molecular analyses, and COI sequences from Caribbean samples listed in GenBank were also included in the analysis. Our results showed that all the specimens from Tenerife were genetically identical, suggesting that the colonization of the Canary Islands was the result of a very recent and strong founder effect. The nucleotide sequences of the samples from the Cape Verde and the Canary Islands were closer to the Caribbean than between themselves, pointing to the Caribbean population as the source population for both archipelagos, through independent founder events. The fact that Millepora sp. arrived to Cape Verde long before arriving to the Canaries (pleistocene fossils have been found in that archipelago) suggests that the habitat requirements for this species did not exist before in the Canarian archipelago. Therefore, the rising seawater temperatures recently registered in the Canary Islands could have facilitated the settlement of reef-forming corals drifting across the two basins of the Atlantic.


Archive | 2013

Echinoderms of the Canary Islands, Spain

José Carlos Hernández; Sabrina Clemente; Fernando Tuya; Angel Pérez-Ruzafa; Carlos Sangil; Leopoldo Moro-Abad; Juan José Bacallado-Aránega

The work presented here summarizes the studies on echinoderms in the Canary Islands, Spain. The geographical and geological contexts of the islands, as well as oceanographic and general characteristics of ecosystems and communities of the archipelago are discussed to better understand the composition of echinoderm species in the islands. A research section is divided into three subsections: ‘pioneering studies’, studies done ‘between 1980 and 1990’ when the first taxonomic, bionomical, biogeographical and ethological studies were done, and finally ‘the recent past’ where the latest studies on echinoderm ecology are described. The subsequent section deals with the diversity and biogeographic relationships of the echinoderm fauna present in the islands. The final two sections consider echinoderm ecology and fisheries, with special emphasis on the conservation of echinoderm populations and of the whole benthic ecosystem. We make recommendations for future research on the biology and ecology of echinoderms in the Canary Islands.


Archive | 2013

Latin America Echinoderm Biodiversity and Biogeography: Patterns and Affinities

Angel Perez-Ruzafa; Juan José Alvarado; F. A. Solís-Marín; José Carlos Hernández; A. Morata; C. Marcos; M. Abreu-Pérez; Orangel A. Aguilera; J. Alió; J. J. Bacallado-Aránega; E. Barraza; M. Benavides-Serrato; F. Benítez-Villalobos; L. Betancourt-Fernández; Michela Borges; M. Brandt; M. I. Brogger; G. H. Borrero-Pérez; B. E. Buitrón-Sánchez; Lúcia S. Campos; J. R. Cantera; Sabrina Clemente; M. Cohen-Renfijo; Simon E. Coppard; L. V. Costa-Lotufo; R. del Valle-García; M. E. Díaz de Vivar; J. P. Díaz-Martínez; Y. Díaz; A. Durán-González

We investigated the current patterns of diversity by country and by class of echinoderms, and analyzed their biogeographical, depth, and habitat or substratum affinities, using the database of the appendix of this book. Traditionally, the area has been divided into five biogeographical Regions and nine Provinces that cover a wide climate range. Currently, the echinoderm fauna of Latin America and Canary islands is constituted by 1,539 species, with 82 species of Crinoidea, 392 species of Asteroidea, 521 species of Ophiuroidea, 242 species of Echinoidea and 302 species of Holothuroidea. Species richness is highly variable among the different countries. The number of species for the countries is highly dependent on its coast length. The echinoderm fauna of the Panamic, Galapagos and the Chilean regions are biogeographically related. Other regions that are closely related are the Caribbean, West Indian, Lusitania and Brazilian. Cosmopolitan species are an important component in all the regions. Affinities between faunas are a consequence of the combination of climatic and trophic factors, connectivity as a function of distance, currents patterns and historical processes. Moreover, different environmental factors would be responsible for the faunal composition and species distribution at different spatial scales. The bathymetrical distribution of the echinoderm classes and the species richness varies according to the depth range and the ocean. Most species occurred at depths between 20 and 200 m. The Caribbean-Atlantic regions are richest in shallow depths, while the Pacific coast has higher values in deeper waters. The domination of each class in each substrate and habitat categories also varies differentially along each coast.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2013

Assessing the impact of fishing in shallow rocky reefs: A multivariate approach to ecosystem management

Carlos Sangil; Laura Martín-García; Sabrina Clemente

In this paper we develop a tool to assess the impact of fishing on ecosystem functioning in shallow rocky reefs. The relationships between biological parameters (fishes, sea urchins, seaweeds), and fishing activities (fish traps, boats, land-based fishing, spearfishing) were tested in La Palma island (Canary Islands). Data from fishing activities and biological parameters were analyzed using principal component analyses. We produced two models using the first component of these analyses. This component was interpreted as a new variable that described the fishing pressure and the conservation status at each studied site. Subsequently the scores on the first axis were mapped using universal kriging methods and the models obtained were extrapolated across the whole island to display the expected fishing pressure and conservation status more widely. The fishing pressure and conservation status models were spatially related; zones where fishing pressure was high coincided with zones in the unhealthiest ecological state.


Ecology | 2013

Half a century (1954–2009) of dissection data of sea urchins from the North American Pacific coast (Mexico–Canada)

Thomas A. Ebert; José Carlos Hernández; Sabrina Clemente; M. P. Russell; L. V. Basch; R. A. Boolootian; P. M. Detwiler; Michael C. Kenner; A. L. Lawrence; J. M. Lawrence; David Leighton; J. S. Palleiro; John S. Pearse

Total body size, mass or linear measurements, and gonad mass or volumes have been recorded for the North American Pacific coast sea urchins Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, Mesocentrotus (Strongylocentrotus) franciscanus, and Lytechinus pictus by various workers at diverse sites and for varying lengths of time from 1954 to 2009. Some dissections included other body components such as the gut, body wall, and Aristotles lantern, and some dissections included both wet and dry mass. There are numerous peer-reviewed publications that have used some of these data, but some data have appeared only in graduate theses or in the gray literature. There also are data that have never appeared outside the original data sheets. Historically, data were used to describe reproductive cycles and then to compare responses to stressors such as food limitation or pollution. Differences in temperature among sites also have been explored. More recently, dissection data have linked gonad development to ocean conditions, so called bottom-up forcing. The data set presented here is a historical record of gonad development for a common group of marine invertebrates in intertidal and nearshore environments, which can be used to test hypotheses concerning future changes associated with climate change and ocean acidification along the Pacific Coast of North America.


Marine Environmental Research | 2018

Robustness of larval development of intertidal sea urchin species to simulated ocean warming and acidification

Eliseba García; José Carlos Hernández; Sabrina Clemente

Ocean warming and acidification are the two most significant side effects of carbone dioxide emissions in the worlds oceans. By changing water, temperature and pH are the main environmental factors controlling the distribution, physiology, morphology and behaviour of marine invertebrates. This study evaluated the combined effects of predicted high temperature levels, and predicted low pH values, on fertilization and early development stages of the sea urchins Arbacia lixula, Paracentrotus lividus, Sphaerechinus granularis and Diadema africanum. Twelve treatments, combining different temperatures (19, 21, 23 and 25 °C) and pH values (8.1, 7.7 and 7.4 units), were tested in laboratory experiments. All of the tested temperatures and pH values were within the open coast seawater range expected within the next century. We examined fertilization rate, cleavage rate, 3-day larvae survival, and development of the different sea urchin species at set time intervals after insemination. Our results highlight the susceptibility of subtidal species to environmental changes, and the robustness of intertidal species to ocean warming and acidification.


Marine Environmental Research | 2018

Effects of ocean acidification on algae growth and feeding rates of juvenile sea urchins

Adriana Rodríguez; Sabrina Clemente; Alberto Brito; José Carlos Hernández

The recent decrease in seawater pH has stimulated a great deal of research on the effects of ocean acidification on various organisms. Most of these studies have mainly focused on the direct effects of acidification on organisms. However, the effects on ecological interactions have been poorly studied. In this paper we have focused on determining the effects of acidification on feeding rates of two species of sea urchins, Paracentrotus lividus and Diadema africanum through laboratory experiments. Nine algae species were reared under two pH treatmens (ph = 8.1 vs. pH = 7.6) for 10 days. We evaluated possible changes in calcification rates, growth and internal structure. Then these algae were offered to juvenile sea urchins for 7 days, evaluating the consumption rates of juvenile sea urchins under these different pH conditions. The algae reared in the control treatment showed higher growth rates and concentration of calcium carbonate, however no internal structural changes were observed in any algae. Juvenile Paracentrotus lividus showed higher consumption rates on algae previously subjected to pH 7.6 than on algae reared under control conditions and between algae species in low pH.The algae most consumed were C. liebetruthii, C. abies-marina and C. elongata by P. lividus juveniles from low pH treatment. However in D. africanum the feeding rates were similar between treatments. This study demonstrated the negative effects of low pH on various species of algae in growth, and indirectly the increase in herbivory rates of juvenile sea urchins on algae reared under low pH.

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