90 research outputs found

    Comparison of fish community structure on artificial reefs deployed at different depths on turkish Aegean sea coast

    Get PDF
    A profundidade da implantação de recifes artificiais é uma das questões mais importantes no planejamento de etapas e do futuro êxito. A maior parte dos estudos visando determinar a comunidade de peixes em volta de recifes artificiais foi realizada, principalmente , a profundidades de 10-25m no Mediterrâneo e Mar Egeu. Os objetivos deste estudo são determinar e comparar a estrutura da comunidade de peixes em volta de recifes artificiais que foram implantados a profundidades de 20, 30 e 40 m. A técnica de censo visual foi usada para determinar as espécies e obter uma estimativa do número e tamanho dos peixes. Não houve nenhuma diferença estatística (p> 0.05) entre as profundidades, na média da biomassa de peixes e no número de indivíduos. Entretanto, a média do número de espécies foi significativamente maior nos 20 m em comparação com as profundidades de 30 m e de 40 m (pDeployment depth of artificial reefs is one of the most important issue in planning stage and future success. Most of the studies aimed at determination of fish community around artificial reefs were conducted mainly 10-25m depths in Mediterranean and Aegean Sea. The goals of this study are determine and compare of fish community structure around artificial reefs which deployed 20, 30 and 40 m depths. Underwater visual census technique was used to determine fish species, number of individual and size estimation. There was no statistical difference (p>0.05) in mean fish biomass and number of individual between the depths. But mean species number was significantly greater on 20 m in comparison to 30 m and 40 m depths (

    New records of rare species in the Mediterranean Sea (May 2020)

    Get PDF
    This Collective Article presents information about 17 taxa belonging to four Phyla (one Cnidaria, two Arthropoda, four Mollusca, and ten Chordata) and extending from the Western Mediterranean to the Levantine Sea. The new records were reported from nine countries as follows: Algeria: first published records of the clingfishes Apletodon dentatus and Lepadogaster lepadogaster after 1955; France: first record of the tripletail Lobotes surinamensis in French Mediterranean waters; Italy: new records of the rare bonito Orcynopsis unicolor and the recently described nudibranch Elysia rubeni from Sicily; first records of the parasitic cirriped Sacculina eriphiae and the nudibranch Dondice trainitoi in the Ionian Sea; first record of the nudibranch Taringa tritorquis in the Mediterranean Sea; first record of the tripletail Lobotes surinamensis in the North Ionian Sea; first documented record of the cephalopod Macrotritopus defilippi in the Adriatic Sea; Slovenia: first record of the Mediterranean endemic cryptobenthic goby Odondebuenia balearica; Montenegro: several recent occurrences of the critically endangered bull ray Aetomylaeus bovinus in the South-eastern Adriatic Sea; Greece: records of the nudibranch Dondice trainitoi in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea; new record of the occurrence of the Mediterranean spearfish Tetrapturus belone from Greece (Rhodes Island); Turkey: recent captures of the vulnerable ocean sunfish Mola mola, caught by purse-seine, in the Aegean Sea and the Dardanelles; new record of the luvar Luvarus imperialis along the Aegean coast of Turkey; Cyprus: first record of the habitat-forming hydroid Lytocarpia myriophyllum, often in considerable densities; first confirmed record of the agujon needlefish Tylosurus imperialis; Syria: first record of the decapod Ethusa mascarone

    İstanbul Artificial Reef Project

    No full text
    The coasts of Turkey, especially the Aegean and Mediterranean coasts, have intense economic use with activities for fishing and tourism. This situation causes problems such as fisheries management and protection of ecological balance. At the same time, it is necessary to ensure the sustainable continuation of economic activities. At this point, artificial reefs are used as a tool both to protect the ecological balance, to manage fisheries and to support marine tourism activities. Within the framework of the "National Artificial Reef Master Plan" prepared in 2009, the first application was carried out in 2011 in Edremit Bay, along the coastline corresponding to 12 nautical miles. The positive results of the monitoring study, which continued for 5 years after the placement period, led to the development of the idea of the Istanbul Artificial Reef project. Istanbul Artificial Reef Project is the second largest artificial reef project on the Turkish coast. Intense illegal and unregistered fishing activities in the area where the Sea of Marmara meets the Istanbul Strait not only threatens the ecological balance, but also destroys the fishing grounds used for small-scale fishing. This study has been prepared to provide information about the objectives of the Istanbul Artificial Reef Project, its planning and implementation stages, its current situation and the works to be done in the near future

    Bilirkişi Raporu

    No full text

    Akuatik Biyotelemetri

    No full text
    corecore