Population dynamics and conservation biology of the over-exploited Mediterranean red coral

被引:83
作者
Santangelo, Giovanni
Bramanti, Lorenzo
Iannelli, Mininio
机构
[1] Dept Ecol Ethol & Evolut, I-56126 Pisa, Italy
[2] Univ Trent, Dept Math, I-38050 Trento, Italy
关键词
red coral; conservation biology; global change; age-structured discrete model; population dynamics;
D O I
10.1016/j.jtbi.2006.08.027
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The main goal of ecologists is nowadays to foster habitat and species conservation. Life-history tables and Leslie-Lewis transition matrices of population growth can be powerful tools suitable for the study of age-structured over harvested and/or endangered species dynamics. Red coral (Corallium rubrum L 1758) is a modular anthozoan endemic to the Mediterranean Sea. This slow growing, long lived species has been harvested since ancient times. In the last decades harvesting pressure increased and the overall Mediterranean yield Moreover, mass mortality (putatively-linked to global warming) recently affected some coastal populations of this species. reduced by (2)/(3). Red coral populations are discrete genetic units, gonochoric, composed by several overlapping generations and provided of a discrete (annual) reproduction. A population of this precious octocoral was studied in detail and its static life table was compiled. In order to simulate the trends overtime of the population under different environmental conditions and fishing pressures, a discrete, non-linear model, based on Leslie-Lewis transition matrix, was applied to the demographic data. In this model a bell-shaped curve, based on experimental data, representing the dependence of recruitment on adult colonies density was included. On these bases the stability of the population under different density, reproduction and mortality figures was analysed and simulations of the population trends overtime were set out. Some simulations were also carried out applying to the studied population the mortality values measured during the anomalous mass mortality event which really affected some red coral populations in 1999. The population under study showed high stability and a strong resilience capability, surviving to a 61% reduction of density, to a 27.7% reduction of reproduction rate and to an unselective harvesting affecting 95% of the reproductive colonies. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:416 / 423
页数:8
相关论文
共 29 条
[1]   GENETIC-VARIATION WITHIN AND BETWEEN 2 TYRRHENIAN POPULATIONS OF THE MEDITERRANEAN ALCYONARIAN CORALLIUM-RUBRUM [J].
ABBIATI, M ;
SANTANGELO, G ;
NOVELLI, S .
MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 1993, 95 (03) :245-250
[2]   HARVESTING, PREDATION AND COMPETITION EFFECTS ON A RED CORAL POPULATION [J].
ABBIATI, M ;
BUFFONI, G ;
CAFORIO, G ;
DICOLA, G ;
SANTANGELO, G .
NETHERLANDS JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH, 1992, 30 :219-228
[3]  
Beissinger S.R., 2002, POPULATION VIABILITY
[4]   PERSISTENCE OF DIFFERENT-SIZED POPULATIONS - AN EMPIRICAL-ASSESSMENT OF RAPID EXTINCTIONS IN BIGHORN SHEEP [J].
BERGER, J .
CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 1990, 4 (01) :91-98
[5]   Recruitment, early survival and growth of the Mediterranean red coral Corallium rubrum (L 1758), a 4-year study [J].
Bramanti, L ;
Magagnini, G ;
De Maio, L ;
Santangelo, G .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY, 2005, 314 (01) :69-78
[6]   Settlement and recruitment:: the first stages in the life cycle of two epibenthic suspension feeders (Corallium rubrum and Anomia ephippium) [J].
Bramanti, L ;
Magagnini, G ;
Santangelo, G .
ITALIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY, 2003, 70 (02) :175-178
[7]   Recruitment and the local dynamics of open marine populations [J].
Caley, MJ ;
Carr, MH ;
Hixon, MA ;
Hughes, TP ;
Jones, GP ;
Menge, BA .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECOLOGY AND SYSTEMATICS, 1996, 27 :477-500
[8]  
Caswell Hal, 2001, pi
[9]   A catastrophic mass-mortality episode of gorgonians and other organisms in the Ligurian Sea (Northwestern Mediterranean), summer 1999 [J].
Cerrano, C ;
Bavestrello, G ;
Bianchi, CN ;
Cattaneo-vietti, R ;
Bava, S ;
Morganti, C ;
Morri, C ;
Picco, P ;
Sara, G ;
Schiaparelli, S ;
Siccardi, A ;
Sponga, F .
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2000, 3 (04) :284-293
[10]  
CICOGNA F, 1999, RED CORAL OTHER MEDI