All Stories

  1. Passive acoustics reveals environmental drivers of dusky grouper reproductive activity to inform MPA planning
  2. Worldwide Soundscapes: A Synthesis of Passive Acoustic Monitoring Across Realms
  3. Species-Specific Spillover Patterns Detected by Biomass Gradients in Mediterranean Marine Protected Areas
  4. Environmental Drivers and Social Structure Features behind the Low Reproductive Success of Dusky Groupers Epinephelus marginatus (Lowe, 1834) in a Mediterranean Marine Protected Area
  5. Sharing goals by timely communication improves fishermen's satisfaction with marine protected areas: A case study in the Mediterranean
  6. Low satisfaction and failed relational coordination among relevant stakeholders in Spanish Mediterranean marine protected areas
  7. Recreational boat traffic effects on fish assemblages: First evidence of detrimental consequences at regulated mooring zones in sensitive marine areas detected by passive acoustics
  8. Assessing the influence of gilthead sea bream escapees in landings of Mediterranean fisheries through a scale-based methodology
  9. Modeling population dynamics and small-scale fisheries yields of fish farming escapes in Mediterranean coastal areas
  10. Effects of coastal fish farms on body size and isotope composition of wild penaeid prawn
  11. Exportation of excess feed from Mediterranean fish farms to local fisheries through different targeted fish species
  12. Response of Rocky Reef Top Predators (Serranidae: Epinephelinae) in and Around Marine Protected Areas in the Western Mediterranean Sea
  13. Simulating escapes of farmed sea bass from Mediterranean open sea-cages: low recaptures by local fishermen
  14. Análisis y evaluación ecosistémicos de la piscicultura marina con "Ecopath with Ecosim" (EwE)
  15. Differentiating the wild or farmed origin of Mediterranean fish: a review of tools for sea bream and sea bass
  16. Reared fish, farmed escapees and wild fish stocks—a triangle of pathogen transmission of concern to Mediterranean aquaculture management
  17. Trophic structure and energy fluxes around a Mediterranean fish farm
  18. Does fin damage allow discrimination among wild, escaped and farmedSparus aurata(L.) andDicentrarchus labrax(L.)?
  19. Habitat colonisation by amphipods: Comparison between native and alien algae
  20. Post-escape dispersion of farmed seabream (Sparus aurata L.) and recaptures by local fisheries in the Western Mediterranean Sea
  21. Does the invasion of Caulerpa racemosa var. cylindracea affect the feeding habits of amphipods (Crustacea: Amphipoda)?
  22. Discriminating farmed gilthead sea bream Sparus aurata and European sea bass Dicentrarchus labrax from wild stocks through scales and otoliths
  23. Monitoring the influence of marine aquaculture on wild fish communities: benefits and limitations of fatty acid profiles
  24. Morphological differences between wild and farmed Mediterranean fish
  25. Immediate post-escape behaviour of farmed seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax L.) in the Mediterranean Sea
  26. Coastal Fish Farms as Fish Aggregation Devices (FADs)
  27. Waste feed from coastal fish farms: A trophic subsidy with compositional side-effects for wild gadoids
  28. Proxy Measures of Fitness Suggest Coastal Fish Farms Can Act as Population Sources and Not Ecological Traps for Wild Gadoid Fish
  29. Review of the effects of protection in marine protected areas: current knowledge and gaps
  30. Restauración del medio marino en la reserva marina de Tabarca (Alicante, España): estructura y variaciones temporales de la ictiofauna asociada al arrecife artificial
  31. Direct interaction between wild fish aggregations at fish farms and fisheries activity at fishing grounds: a case study with Boops boops
  32. Movements of grey mullet Liza aurata and Chelon labrosus associated with coastal fish farms in the western Mediterranean Sea
  33. Effects of Caulerpa racemosa var. cylindracea on prey availability: an experimental approach to predation of amphipods by Thalassoma pavo (Labridae)
  34. Coastal fish farming does not affect the total parasite communities of wild fish in SW Mediterranean
  35. Structure and spatio-temporal dynamics of artisanal fisheries around a Mediterranean marine protected area
  36. Effects of a marine protected area on fish assemblage associated withPosidonia oceanicaseagrass beds: temporal and depth variations
  37. Comparison between amphipod assemblages associated with Caulerpa racemosa var. cylindracea and those of other Mediterranean habitats on soft substrate
  38. Coastal fish farms are settlement sites for juvenile fish
  39. Coastal salmon farms attract large and persistent aggregations of wild fish: an ecosystem effect
  40. A conceptual framework for the integral management of marine protected areas
  41. Habitat continuity effects on gradients of fish biomass across marine protected area boundaries
  42. Caprellid assemblages (Crustacea: Amphipoda) in shallow waters invaded by Caulerpa racemosa var. cylindracea from southeastern Spain
  43. Interactions between bluefish Pomatomus saltatrix (L.) and coastal sea-cage farms in the Mediterranean Sea
  44. Gradients of abundance and biomass across reserve boundaries in six Mediterranean marine protected areas: Evidence of fish spillover?
  45. Seasonal patterns and diets of wild fish assemblages associated with Mediterranean coastal fish farms
  46. Changes in amphipod (Crustacea) assemblages associated with shallow-water algal habitats invaded by Caulerpa racemosa var. cylindracea in the western Mediterranean Sea
  47. Marine reserves: size and age do matter
  48. Posidonia oceanica meadows are not declining globally. Analysis of population dynamics in marine protected areas of the Mediterranean Sea
  49. Temporal variability of wild fish assemblages associated with a sea-cage fish farm in the south-western Mediterranean Sea
  50. Changes in body condition and fatty acid composition of wild Mediterranean horse mackerel (Trachurus mediterraneus, Steindachner, 1868) associated to sea cage fish farms
  51. Addition of dissolved nitrogen and dissolved organic carbon from wild fish faeces and food around Mediterranean fish farms: Implications for waste-dispersal models
  52. Detecting conservation benefits in spatially protected fish populations with meta-analysis of long-term monitoring data
  53. Diel and vertical movements of preflexion fish larvae assemblage associated with Posidonia oceanica beds
  54. Coastal aquaculture and conservation can work together
  55. Recovery of deep Posidonia oceanica meadows degraded by trawling
  56. Vertical variability of wild fish assemblages around sea-cage fish farms: implications for management
  57. Extensive Aggregations of Wild Fish at Coastal Sea-Cage Fish Farms
  58. Multi-scale spatial heterogeneity, habitat structure, and the effect of marine reserves on Western Mediterranean rocky reef fish assemblages
  59. Weight-length relationships for selected fish species of the western Mediterranean Sea
  60. Attraction of wild fish to sea-cage fish farms in the south-western Mediterranean Sea: spatial and short-term temporal variability
  61. Trace elements in otoliths of the two-banded bream from a coastal region in the south-west Mediterranean: are there differences among locations?
  62. Trace elements in otoliths of the two-banded bream from a coastal region in the south-west Mediterranean: are there differences among locations?
  63. Density dependence in marine protected populations: a review