Spatial and temporal monitoring of species threatened with extinction is of critical importance for conservation and ecosystem management. In the Mediterranean coast, the fan mussel () is listed as critically endangered after suffering from a mass mortality event since 2016, leading to 100% mortality in most marine populations. Conventional monitoring for this macroinvertebrate is done using scuba, which is challenging in dense meadows or with low visibility.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWith the intensification of maritime traffic, recently emerged infectious diseases have become major drivers in the decline and extinction of species. Since 2016, mass mortality events have decimated the endemic Mediterranean Sea bivalve Pinna nobilis, affecting ca. 100% of individuals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnderstanding dispersal patterns is a major focus for conservation biology as it influences local survival and resilience in case of local disturbance, particularly for sessile species. Dispersal can be assessed through parentage analyses by estimating family structure and self-recruitment. This study documents the family structure of a pelagic spawner, , which is facing a major crisis that threatens its survival as most of its populations have been decimated by a parasite, .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe fan mussel, Pinna nobilis, endemic to the Mediterranean Sea, is a critically endangered species facing mass mortality events in almost all of its populations, following the introduction of the parasite Haplosporidium pinnae. Such a unique pandemic in a marine organism, which spreads rapidly and with mortality rates reaching up to 100%, could lead to the potential extinction of the species. Only few regions, involving lagoon habitats, remain healthy throughout the entire Mediterranean Sea.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe fan mussel, Pinna nobilis is a highly endangered bivalve species endemic to the Mediterranean Sea. During the last few decades, populations have been greatly reduced due to anthropic impacts and they are now under strict protection in most Mediterranean countries. Today, the species is facing a major crisis following the introduction of an haplosporidan parasite which is driving mass mortality in almost all P.
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