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Journal ArticleDOI

No longer the pristine confines of the world ocean: a survey of exotic marine species in the southwestern Atlantic

TLDR
A comprehensive survey of existing knowledge about exotic marine organisms introduced to the southwestern Atlantic Ocean, including coastal and shelf areas of Uruguay and Argentina, presents a comprehensive picture of recorded introductions and some prominent ecological consequences.
Abstract
We conducted a comprehensive survey of existing knowledge about exotic marine organisms introduced to the southwestern Atlantic Ocean, including coastal and shelf areas of Uruguay and Argentina. This domain is equivalent to the so-called Patagonian Shelf Large Marine Ecosystem, and corresponds to two biogeographic provinces: warmtemperate (Argentine Province) and cold temperate (Magellanic Province). The search included species that can be confidently categorized as introduced (31) and cryptogenic species (46). We present a comprehensive picture of recorded introductions (the first for this region) and some prominent ecological consequences. Most coastal ecosystems between the La Plata River estuary and central Patagonia have already been modified, or are expected to be so in the short term. Five recent, human-mediated biological invasions have already had a significant ecological impact. A barnacle (Balanus glandula) belt has developed on all rocky shores where none was present 30 years ago, a macro-fouler (Limnoperna fortunei) and a reef-builder (Ficopomatus enigmaticus) have strongly modified estuarine ecosystems, Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas) reefs are expanding in shallow bays at a fast rate, and kelp (Undaria pinnatifida) is rapidly modifying nearshore benthic communities along the coasts of central Patagonia. At this point, it is uncertain how many of the cordgrasses (Spartina spp.) found in coastal salt marshes correspond to exotic forms. Only exposed sandy beaches appear to be free from the pervasive ecological impact of invasion by exotic species. Poor knowledge of the regional biota makes it difficult to track invasions.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Oyster Reefs at Risk and Recommendations for Conservation, Restoration, and Management

TL;DR: This article examined the condition of oyster reefs across 144 bays and 44 ecoregions and found that more than 90% of them have been lost in bays (70%) and ecoregs (63%).
Journal ArticleDOI

Introduction of Non-Native Oysters: Ecosystem Effects and Restoration Implications

TL;DR: Oysters have been introduced worldwide to 73 countries, but the ecological consequences of the introductions are not fully understood and substantial population, community, and habitat changes have accompanied new oysters.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Global Review of the Distribution, Taxonomy, and Impacts of Introduced Seaweeds

TL;DR: The authors reviewed over 407 global seaweed introduction events and showed that several algal families contain more successful invaders than would be expected by chance, highlighting groups that should be targeted for management.

A Global Review of the Distribution, Taxonomy, and Impacts of Introduced

TL;DR: Using binomial tests it is shown that several algal families contain more successful invaders than would be expected by chance, highlighting groups that should be targeted for management.
Journal ArticleDOI

Error Cascades in the Biological Sciences: The Unwanted Consequences of Using Bad Taxonomy in Ecology

TL;DR: In order to improve the intercommunication among disciplines, a set of specific requirements that peer reviewed journals should request from all authors is proposed and an advocate for urgent institutional and financial support directed at reinvigorating the formation of scientific collections that integrate taxonomy and ecology is advocated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Ecological Roulette: The Global Transport of Nonindigenous Marine Organisms

TL;DR: Plankton samples from Japanese ballast water released in Oregon contained 367 taxa, and most taxa with a planktonic phase in their life cycle were found in ballastWater, as were all major marine habitat and trophic groups.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accelerating invasion rate in a highly invaded estuary

TL;DR: Analysis of the San Francisco Bay and Delta ecosystem revealed a large number of exotic species that dominate many habitats in terms of number of species, number of individuals and biomass, and a high and accelerating rate of invasion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Invasion of Coastal Marine Communities in North America: Apparent Patterns, Processes, and Biases

TL;DR: Overall, the emergent patterns reflect interactive effects of propagule supply, invasion resistance, and sampling bias, and the relative contribution of each component re...
Journal Article

Transoceanic and interoceanic dispersal of coastal marine organisms: the biology of ballast water

TL;DR: Le role des eaux utilisees comme ballast dans les reservoirs de cargos ou de petroliers dans la dispersion des organismes planctoniques is discussed in this paper.
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