2023
DOI: 10.1111/ddi.13805
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The climate crisis affects Mediterranean marine molluscs of conservation concern

Lotta Schultz,
Johannes Wessely,
Stefan Dullinger
et al.

Abstract: AimThe Mediterranean Sea is a hotspot of endemism and it is warming at two to three times the rate of the global ocean. The continental masses that surround it constrain species range shifts. Therefore, as seawater temperature increases, distributions of marine species may contract into few small cooler refugia, with consequent risk of extinction from range contraction and fragmentation, particularly for endemics. We assess this risk for 15 molluscs of conservation concern occurring in the Mediterranean Sea. I… Show more

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“…However, this astonishing biodiversity is presently threatened by climate change. Seawater warming favors the establishment of exotic species of (sub)tropical origin [21][22][23] and drives endemic species to the brink of extinction [24]; frequent marine heat waves (discrete periods of extreme local seawater warming), in particular, are causing mass mortality of native species [25][26][27]. These threats are even more evident in the Ligurian Sea [28], located at the north-western corner of the Mediterranean.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, this astonishing biodiversity is presently threatened by climate change. Seawater warming favors the establishment of exotic species of (sub)tropical origin [21][22][23] and drives endemic species to the brink of extinction [24]; frequent marine heat waves (discrete periods of extreme local seawater warming), in particular, are causing mass mortality of native species [25][26][27]. These threats are even more evident in the Ligurian Sea [28], located at the north-western corner of the Mediterranean.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%