The carbon dioxide vents of Ischia, Italy, a natural system to assess impacts of ocean acidification on marine ecosystems: an overview of research and comparisons …

SA Foo, M Byrne, E Ricevuto… - … and marine biology, 2018 - taylorfrancis.com
As the ocean continues to take up carbon dioxide (CO2), it is difficult to predict the future of
marine ecosystems. Natural CO2 vent sites, mainly of volcanic origin, that provide a pH …

Biodiversity, climate change, and adaptation in the Mediterranean

D Aurelle, S Thomas, C Albert, M Bally, A Bondeau… - …, 2022 - Wiley Online Library
Potential for, and limits to, adaptation to environmental changes are critical for resilience and
risk mitigation. The Mediterranean basin is a mosaic of biodiversity‐rich ecosystems long …

Biomineralization in bryozoans: present, past and future

PD Taylor, C Lombardi, S Cocito - Biological Reviews, 2015 - Wiley Online Library
Many animal phyla have the physiological ability to produce biomineralized skeletons with
functional roles that have been shaped by natural selection for more than 500 million years …

Adaptation and acclimatization to ocean acidification in marine ectotherms: an in situ transplant experiment with polychaetes at a shallow CO2 vent system

P Calosi, SPS Rastrick, C Lombardi… - … of the Royal …, 2013 - royalsocietypublishing.org
Metabolic rate determines the physiological and life-history performances of ectotherms.
Thus, the extent to which such rates are sensitive and plastic to environmental perturbation …

Detrimental effects of ocean acidification on the economically important Mediterranean red coral (Corallium rubrum)

L Bramanti, J Movilla, M Guron, E Calvo… - Global change …, 2013 - Wiley Online Library
The mean predicted decrease of 0.3–0.4 pH units in the global surface ocean by the end of
the century has prompted urgent research to assess the potential effects of ocean …

The importance of natural acidified systems in the study of ocean acidification: what have we learned?

S González-Delgado, JC Hernández - Advances in marine biology, 2018 - Elsevier
Human activity is generating an excess of atmospheric CO 2, resulting in what we know as
ocean acidification, which produces changes in marine ecosystems. Until recently, most of …

To brood or not to brood: Are marine invertebrates that protect their offspring more resilient to ocean acidification?

NM Lucey, C Lombardi, L DeMarchi, A Schulze… - Scientific Reports, 2015 - nature.com
Anthropogenic atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) is being absorbed by seawater resulting
in increasingly acidic oceans, a process known as ocean acidification (OA). OA is thought to …

Coralline algae in a naturally acidified ecosystem persist by maintaining control of skeletal mineralogy and size

NA Kamenos, G Perna, MC Gambi… - … of the Royal …, 2016 - royalsocietypublishing.org
To understand the effects of ocean acidification (OA) on marine calcifiers, the trade-offs
among different sublethal responses within individual species and the emergent effects of …

[图书][B] The Mediterranean Sea: Its history and present challenges

S Goffredo, Z Dubinsky - 2013 - books.google.com
This volume is an indispensable addition to the multidisciplinary coverage of the science of
the Mediterranean Sea. The editors have gathered leading authorities from the fields of …

Settlement pattern of Posidonia oceanica epibionts along a gradient of ocean acidification: an approach with mimics

L Donnarumma, C Lombardi… - Mediterranean …, 2014 - ejournals.epublishing.ekt.gr
Abstract Effects of ocean acidification (OA on the colonization/settlement pattern of the
epibiont community of the leaves and rhizomesof the Mediterranean seagrass …