Abstract
The Mediterranean Sea faces unprecedented challenges by the increasing of non-indigenous species (NIS) introductions. Cyprus is the first European country affected by Lessepsian immigration, being along the natural pathway of many of the Indo-Pacific taxa spreading from the Red Sea; thus, it has a pioneer role in detecting alien species and in demonstrating that a concerted action is necessary at early stages of invasion, as required by the recent EU Regulation on NIS (EC/1143/2014). The present study reports for the first time Goniobranchus obsoletus from Cyprus and confirms the spread of the species in the basin, after its first sightings in Israel. Moreover, the records were collected in the context of a citizen project, this taxon being first detected by a scuba diver and then posted on a dedicated Facebook group. This study, therefore, proves once more the importance of technology utilization in early detection of non-indigenous species and suggests that citizen-science can form an integral tool for the implementation of the EU Regulation and should be further promoted by the national and international management authorities.
Publication Date
2019-04-04
Publication Title
BioInvasions Records
Publisher
Regional Euro-Asian Biological Invasions Centre
ISSN
2242-1300
Embargo Period
2024-11-22
Keywords
Non-indigenous species, Alien spreading, Levantine Sea, Suez Canal, Red Sea
Recommended Citation
Kleitou, P., Giovos, I., Wolf, W., & Crocetta, F. (2019) 'On the importance of citizen-science: the first record of Goniobranchus obsoletus (Rüppell & Leuckart, 1830) from Cyprus (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Nudibranchia)', BioInvasions Records, . Regional Euro-Asian Biological Invasions Centre: Retrieved from https://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk/bms-research/1845