List of Lessepsian migrant species

Lessepsian migrants, named after Ferdinand de Lesseps, the French engineer in charge of the Suez Canal's construction, are marine species that are native to the waters on one side of the Suez Canal, and which have been introduced by passage through the canal to the waters on its other side, giving rise to new colonies there and often becoming invasive.

The Indian mackerel, Rastrelliger kanagurta, an example of Lessepsian migrant

Most Lessepsian migrations are of Red Sea species invading the Mediterranean Sea; few occur in the opposite direction.

Red Sea species to Mediterranean Sea

The year given denotes first record in the Mediterranean.

Species Group Year Ref.
Actaea savigniiCrustacea: Xanthidae2010[1]
Alepes djedabaActinopterygii: Carangidae1927[2]
Alepes kleiniiActinopterygii: Carangidae1966[3]
Alpheus edwardsiiCrustacea: Alpheidae1924[4]
Alpheus inopinatusCrustacea: Alpheidae1958[4]
Alpheus lobidensCrustacea: Alpheidae1936[4]
Alpheus migransCrustacea: Alpheidae1978[4]
Alpheus rapacidaCrustacea: Alpheidae1964[4][5]
Apogonichthyoides pharaonisActinopterygii: Apogonidae1947[6]
Aquilonastra burtoniEchinodermata: Asterinidae1966[7]
Arcuatula arcuatulaMollusca: Mytilidae[8]
Arcuatula perfragilisMollusca: Mytilidae1960[8][9]
Arcuatula senhousiaMollusca: Mytilidae2004[10]
Ashtoret lunarisCrustacea: Matutidae1990[4]
Atergatis roseusCrustacea: Xanthidae1964[4]
Atherinomorus lacunosusActinopterygii: Atherinidae1902[11]
Belzebub hanseniCrustacea: Luciferidae1927[4]
Callionymus filamentosusActinopterygii: Callionymidae1953[2]
Caloria indicaMollusca: Facelinidae1986[12][13]
Carcharhinus brevipinnaChondrichthyes: Carcharhinidae[14]
Carcharhinus melanopterusChondrichthyes: Carcharhinidae2005[15]
Carupa tenuipesCrustacea: Portunidae1996[16]
Ceratonereis mirabilisAnnelida: Nereididae
Champsodon capensisActinopterygii: Champsodontidae2012[17]
Champsodon nudivittis Actinopterygii: Champsodontidae2008[18]
Champsodon voraxActinopterygii: Champsodontidae2010[19]
Chaetodon austriacusActinopterygii: Chaetodontidae2011[20]
Chaetodon larvatusActinopterygii: Chaetodontidae2011[21]
Charybdis helleriiCrustacea: Portunidae1929[4]
Charybdis longicollisCrustacea: Portunidae1961[4]
Cheilodipterus novemstriatusActinopterygii: Apogonidae2010[22]
Coleusia signataCrustacea: Leucosiidae1990[4]
Conus arenatusMollusca: Conidae[8]
Coryogalops ocheticusActinopterygii: Gobiidae1927
Crenidens crenidensActinopterygii: Sparidae1970
Cryptocentrus caeruleopunctatusActinopterygii: Gobiidae2015[23]
Cymothoa indicaCrustacea: Cymothoidae2009[24]
Cynoglossus sinusarabiciActinopterygii: Cynoglossidae1953
Cucurbitula cymbiumMollusca: Gastrochaenidae[8]
Decapterus russelliActinopterygii: Carangidae2005[25]
Diodora ruppelliiMollusca: Fissurellidae[8]
Dussumieria acutaActinopterygii: Clupeidae1953[2]
Epinephelus coioidesActinopterygii: Serranidae1969[26]
Epinephelus malabaricusActinopterygii: Serranidae1969
Equulites elongatusActinopterygii: Leiognathidae2011[27]
Equulites klunzingeriActinopterygii: Leiognathidae1931[2]
Etrumeus teresActinopterygii: Clupeidae1963
Eucrate crenataCrustacea: Goneplacidae1997[4][28]
Eudactylina asperaCrustacea: Eudactylinidae1977[14]
Fenneropenaeus indicaCrustacea: Penaeidae1981[4]
Ferosagitta galeritaChaetognatha: Sagittidae2003[29]
Fistularia commersoniiActinopterygii: Fistulariidae2001[30]
Fulvia fragilisMollusca: Cardiidae2005[31]
Gafrarium pectinatumMollusca: Veneridae[8]
Glyphidohaptor plectocirra Platyhelminthes: Ancyrocephalidae1972[14]
Goniobranchus annulatusMollusca: Chromodorididae2004[32]
Hemiramphus farActinopterygii: Hemiramphidae1927
Herklotsichthys punctatusActinopterygii: Clupeidae1976
Heterosaccus dollfusiCrustacea: Sacculinidae1992[33]
Himantura uarnakChondrichthyes: Dasyatidae1955[34]
Hippocampus fuscusActinopterygii: Syngnathidae2001[35]
Hyastenus hilgendorfiCrustacea: Epialtidae1964[4]
Hyporhamphus affinisActinopterygii: Hemiramphidae1967
Hypselodoris infucataMollusca: Chromodorididae1973
Isanda holdsworthianaMollusca: Trochidae[8]
Istiophorus platypterusActinopterygii: Istiophoridae[36]
Ixa monodiCrustacea: Leucosiidae1958[4]
Jaydia quekettiActinopterygii: Apogonidae2006[37]
Jaydia smithiActinopterygii: Apogonidae2013[38]
Lagocephalus sceleratusActinopterygii: Tetraodontidae2005[39]
Lagocephalus spadiceusActinopterygii: Tetraodontidae1953[2]
Lagocephalus suezensisActinopterygii: Tetraodontidae1977
Laternula anatinaMollusca: Laternulidae[8]
Leonnates decipiensAnnelida: Nereididae
Leonnates indicusAnnelida: Nereididae
Leonnates persicusAnnelida: Nereididae2001[40]
Leptochela aculeocaudataCrustacea: Pasiphaeidae1936[4]
Leptochela pugnaxCrustacea: Pasiphaeidae1958[4]
Liza carinataActinopterygii: Mugilidae1971[2]
Lophioturris indicaMollusca: Turridae[8]
Lutjanus argentimaculatusActinopterygii: Lutjanidae1977
Mactra olorinaMollusca: Mactridae[8]
Marsupenaeus japonicusCrustacea: Penaeidae1926[4][41]
Metapenaeus monocerosCrustacea: Penaeidae1927[4]
Metapenaeus stebbingiCrustacea: Penaeidae1927[4]
Metapenaeopsis aegyptiCrustacea: Penaeidae1990[42]
Metapenaeopsis mogiensisCrustacea: Penaeidae1997[28]
Modiolus auriculatusMollusca: Mytilidae1960[8]
Muraenesox cinereusActinopterygii: Muraenesocidae1982
Myrax fugaxCrustacea: Leucosiidae1930[4]
Neanthes willeyiAnnelida: Nereididae
Nemipterus japonicusActinopterygii: Nemipteridae2006[43]
Nemipterus randalliActinopterygii: Nemipteridae2006[44]
Nereis gilchristiAnnelida: Nereididae
Nereis zonata persicaAnnelida: Nereididae
Nipergasilus boraCrustacea: Ergasilidae1971[14]
Notopus dorsipesCrustacea: Raninidae1964[4]
Ogyrides mjoebergiCrustacea: Ogyrididae1958[4]
Ostorhinchus fasciatusActinopterygii: Apogonidae2008[45]
Oxyurichthys petersiiActinopterygii: Oxudercidae1983[46]
Palaemonella rotumanaCrustacea: Palaemonidae1958[4]
Pampus argenteusActinopterygii: Stromateidae1896[47]
Panulirus ornatusCrustacea: Palinuridae1989[4]
Papilloculiceps longicepsActinopterygii: Platycephalidae1990
Paraexocoetus mentoActinopterygii: Exocoetidae1935
Pelates quadrilineatusActinopterygii: Terapontidae1970[2]
Pempheris mangulaActinopterygii: Pempheridae1979[2][48]
Penaeus hathorCrustacea: Penaeidae1997[38]
Penaeus semisulcatusCrustacea: Penaeidae1928[4]
Periclimenes calamiCrustacea: Palaemonidae1927[4]
Perinereis nuntiaAnnelida: Nereididae
Petroscirtes ancylodonActinopterygii: Blenniidae1989
Phidiana militarisMollusca: Facelinidae2016[49]
Pilumnopeus vauqueliniCrustacea: Xanthidae1927[4]
Pilumnus hirsutusCrustacea: Xanthidae1936[4]
Plagusia tuberculataCrustacea: Grapsidae1967[4]
Platax teiraActinopterygii: Ephippidae2010[50]
Platycephalus indicusActinopterygii: Platycephalidae1953
Platymaia wyvillethompsoniCrustacea: Majidae1967[4]
Plotosus lineatusActinopterygii: Plotosidae2001[51]
Pomacanthus imperatorActinopterygii: Pomacanthidae2010[50]
Pomacanthus maculosusActinopterygii: Pomacanthidae2009[52]
Pomadasys stridensActinopterygii: Haemulidae1969
Portunus pelagicusCrustacea: Portunidae1924[4]
Potamides conicusMollusca: Potamididae[8]
Priacanthus sagittariusActinopterygii: Priacanthidae2009[50]
Processa aequimanaCrustacea: Processidae1946[4]
Pseudonereis anomalaAnnelida: Nereididae
Pteragogus pelycusActinopterygii: Labridae1992
Pterois milesActinopterygii: Scorpaenidae1992
Rachycentron canadumActinopterygii: Rachycentridae1986
Rastrelliger kanagurtaActinopterygii: Scombridae1971
Rhabdosargus haffaraActinopterygii: Sparidae1992
Rhopilema nomadicaCnidaria: Rhizostomatidae1970s[53]
Rhynchoconger trewavasaeActinopterygii: Congridae1993
Sardinella gibbosaActinopterygii : Clupeidae2008[54]
Sargocentron rubrumActinopterygii: Holocentridae1947[2]
Saron marmoratusCrustacea: Hippolytidae2013[38]
Saurida undosquamisActinopterygii: Synodontidae1953[55]
Scarus ghobbanActinopterygii: Scaridae1999[56]
Scomberomorus commersonActinopterygii: Scombridae1935
Sepia dollfusi Mollusca: Sepiidae2015[57]
Sepia pharaonisMollusca: Sepiidae2003[58][59]
Sepioteuthis lessonianaMollusca: Loliginidae2002[60]
Siganus luridusActinopterygii: Siganidae1964
Siganus rivulatusActinopterygii: Siganidae1927
Silhouettea aegyptiaActinopterygii: Gobiidae1991
Sillago sihamaActinopterygii: Sillaginidae1977[2]
Sorsogona prionotaActinopterygii: Platycephalidae1947
Sphaerozius nitidusCrustacea: Xanthidae1972[4]
Sphyraena chrysotaeniaActinopterygii: Sphyraenidae1930[2]
Sphyraena flavicaudaActinopterygii: Sphyraenidae1992
Spratelloides delicatulusActinopterygii: Clupeidae1978
Stephanolepis diasprosActinopterygii: Monacanthidae1927[2]
Synalpheus hululensisCrustacea: Alpheidae1964[4]
Synanceia verrucosaActinopterygii: Scorpaenidae2010[61]
Synchirops sechellensisActinopterygii: Callionymidae[62]
Terapon putaActinopterygii: Terapontidae1976
Tetrosomus gibbosusActinopterygii: Ostraciidae1988[63]
Thalamita poissoniiCrustacea: Portunidae1958[4]
Trachysalambria curvirostrisCrustacea: Penaeidae1927[4]
Trachysalambria palaestinensisCrustacea: Penaeidae1998[16]
Trochus erithreusMollusca: Trochidae[8]
Trypauchen vaginaActinopterygii: Oxudercidae2011[64]
Tylerius spinosissimusActinopterygii: Tetraodontidae2005[65]
Tylosurus choramActinopterygii: Belonidae1963
Upeneus moluccensisActinopterygii: Mullidae1947[2]
Upeneus poriActinopterygii: Mullidae1950[2]
Urocaridella pulchellaCrustacea: Palaemonidae2008[16]
Vanderhorstia mertensiActinopterygii: Gobiidae2008[66]
Zafra savignyiMollusca: Columbellidae[8]

Mediterranean species to Red Sea

References

  1. Selahattin Ünsal Karhan; Mehmet Baki Yokeş; Paul F. Clark; Bella S. Galil (2013). "First Mediterranean record of Actaea savignii (H. Milne Edwards, 1834)(Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Xanthidae), an additional Erythraean alien crab". BioInvasions Records. 2 (2): 145–148. doi:10.3391/bir.2013.2.2.09.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Ertan Taskavak & Murat Bilecenoglu (2001). "Length–weight relationships for 18 Lessepsian (Red Sea) immigrant fish species from the eastern Mediterranean coast of Turkey". Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom. 81 (5): 895–896. doi:10.1017/S0025315401004805.
  3. Adam, B.T. (1966). "Red Sea Fishes Recently Found in the Mediterranean". Copeia. American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists. 1966 (2): 254–275. doi:10.2307/1441133. JSTOR 1441133.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 Gilberto Rodríguez & Héctor Suárez (2001). "Anthropogenic dispersal of decapod crustaceans in aquatic environments". Interciencia. 26 (7): 282–288.
  5. Tahir Özcan, A. Suat Ateş & Tuncer Katağan (2008). "On the presence of the snapping shrimp, Alpheus rapacida (Decapoda: Caridea) on the Aegean Sea coast of Turkey" (PDF). Marine Biodiversity Records. 1: e86. doi:10.1017/S1755267207008792. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-21.
  6. M. Otero; E. Cebrian; P. Francour; B. Galil; D. Savini (2013). Monitoring Marine Invasive Species in Mediterranean Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) A strategy and practical guide for managers (PDF). International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources IUCN Centre for Mediterranean Cooperation. ISBN 979-2-8317-1615-2.
  7. E. Tortones (1953). "Gli Echinodermi viventi presso le coste dello Stato di Israele. (Mar di Levante, Golfo di Elath)". Bolletino dei Musei di Zoologia e di anatomia comparata della R. Universita di Torino. 4 (4): 39–72.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Barash, A. & Z. Danin (1973). "The Indo-Pacific species of Mollusca in the Mediterranean and notes on a collection from the Suez Canal". Israel Journal of Zoology. 21 (3–4): 301–374. Summarised at "OBIS Indo-Pacific Molluscan Database". Academy of Natural Sciences. May 17, 2006. Retrieved February 8, 2012.
  9. "Musculista perfragilis". ciesm.org. Retrieved 2 March 2017.
  10. Mistri, M.; R. Rossi; E.A. Fano (2004). "The spread of an alien bivalve (Musculista Senhousia) in the Sacca di Goro Lagoon (Adriatic Sea, Italy)". Journal of Molluscan Studies. 70 (3): 257–261.
  11. Giuseppe Bucciarelli, Daniel Golani & Giacomo Bernardi (2002). "Genetic cryptic species as biological invaders: the case of a Lessepsian fish migrant, the hardyhead silverside Atherinomorus lacunosus". Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology. 273 (2): 143–149. doi:10.1016/S0022-0981(02)00138-7.
  12. Gat G. (1993). "Flabellina rubrolineata (O'Donoghue) and Phidiana indica (Bergh) (Nudibranchia: Aeolidioidea), two new Lessepsian immigrants in the Eastern Mediterranean". Journal of Molluscan Studies. 59 (1): 120.
  13. Shevy B-S Rothman; Henk K. Mienis; Bella S. Galil (2017). "Alien facelinid nudibranchs in the Eastern Mediterranean: first report of Phidiana militaris (Alder and Hancock, 1864) and report of Caloria indica (Bergh, 1896) 30 years after its previous sighting". BioInvasions Records. 6 (2): 125–128. doi:10.3391/bir.2017.6.2.06.
  14. 1 2 3 4 C. Maillard; A. Raibaut (2012). "18. Human activities and modifications of ichtyofauna of the Mediterranean Sea: effects on parasitosis". In F. di Castri; A.J. Hansen; M Debussche. Biological Invasions in Europe and the Mediterranean Basin Volume 65 of Monographiae Biologicae. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 300. ISBN 9400918763.
  15. Heupel, M. (2009). "Carcharhinus melanopterus". The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: 2009: e.T39375A10219032. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2009-2.RLTS.T39375A10219032.en.
  16. 1 2 3 Baki Yokes; Bella S. Galil (2006). "New records of alien decapods (Crustacea) from the Mediterranean coast of Turkey, with a description of a new palaemonid species" (PDF). Zoosystema. 28 (3): 747–755.
  17. Cem Dalyan; Emre Yemisken & L. Eryılmaz (2012). "A new record of gaper (Champsodon capensis Regan, 1908) in the Mediterranean Sea". Journal of Applied Ichthyology. 28 (5). doi:10.1111/j.1439-0426.2012.02019.x.
  18. Erdoğan Çiçek & Murat Bilecenoglu (2009). "A new alien fish in the Mediterranean Sea: Champsodon nudivittis (Actinopterygii: Perciformes: Champsodontidae)". Acta Ichthyologica et Piscatoria. 39 (1): 67–69. doi:10.3750/AIP2009.39.1.14.
  19. Michel Bariche (2010). "Champsodon vorax (Teleostei: Champsodontidae), a new alien fish in the Mediterranean". Aqua International Journal of Ichthyology. 16 (4): 197–200.
  20. Menachem Goran, Roy Gvili & Bella Galil (2011). "The reef-associating butterfly fish Chaetodon austriacus Rüppell, 1836 in the Mediterranean: The implication of behavioral plasticity for bioinvasion hazard assessment". Aquatic Invasions. 6 (supplement 1): s143–s145. doi:10.3391/ai.2011.6.S1.032.
  21. Pierre Salameh; Oren Sonin; Dor Edelist; Daniel Golani (2011). "First record of the Red Sea orangeface butterflyfish Chaetodon larvatus (Cuvier, 1831) in the Mediterranean". Aquatic Invasions. 6 (1, supplement): s53–s56. doi:10.3391/AI.2011.6.S1.012.
  22. Michel Bariche; Ernesto Azzuro (2012). "New records and establishment of the Indian Ocean twospot cardinalfish Cheilodipterus novemstriatus (Rüppell, 1838) in the Mediterranean Sea" (PDF). Aquatic Invasions. 1 (4): 299–301. doi:10.3391/bir.2012.1.4.10.
  23. Shevy B.S. Rothman; Menachem Goren (2015). "First record of the Red Sea shrimp-goby Cryptocentrus caeruleopunctatus in the Mediterranean Sea". Marine Biodiversity Records. 8. doi:10.1017/s1755267215001323.
  24. Jean-Paul Trilles & Michel Bariche (2009). "First record of the Indo-Pacific Cymothoa indica (Crustacea, Isopoda, Cymothoidae), a Lessepsian species in the Mediterranean Sea". Acta Parasitologica. 51 (3): 223–230. doi:10.2478/s11686-006-0035-3.
  25. D. Golani; L. Orsi-Relini; E. Massuti; J. P. Quignard; J. Dulcic; E. Azzurro (2013). "Acceleration of Fish Invasions in the Mediterranean - A Future Sea Change". In Les Présidents des comités scientifiques de la CIESM, 2010-2013 et al. Rapport du 40e Congres de la CIESM 40th CIESM Congress Proceedings Volume 40. Commission Internationale pour l'Exploration Scientifique de la Mer Mediterranée. p. 601.
  26. John E. Randall (1995). Coastal Fishes of Oman. Honolulu, Hawaii: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 9780824818081.
  27. Daniel Golani; Ronald Fricke & Brenda Appelbaum-Golani (2011). "First record of the Indo-Pacific slender ponyfish Equulites elongatus (Günther, 1874) (Perciformes: Leiognathidae) in the Mediterranean". Aquatic Invasions. 6 (1, supplement): s75–s77. doi:10.3391/ai.2011.6.S1.017.
  28. 1 2 Bella S. Galil (1997). "Two Lessepsian migrant decapods new to the coast of Israel". Crustaceana. 70 (1): 111–114. doi:10.1163/156854097x00393. JSTOR 20105834.
  29. Tuba Terbiyik; Cem Cevik; Benin Toklu-Alicli; Ercan Sarihan (2007). "First record of Ferosagitta galerita (Dallot, 1971) [Chaetognatha] in the Mediterranean Sea". Journal of Plankton Research. 29 (8): 721–726. doi:10.1093/plankt/fbm053.
  30. M. Corsini; G. Kondilatos & P. S. Economidis (2002). "Lessepsian migrant Fistularia commersonii from the Rhodes marine area". Journal of Fish Biology. 61 (4): 1061–1062. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8649.2002.tb01865.x.
  31. Bilal Öztürk & Jean-Maurice Poutiers (2005). "Fulvia fragilis (Bivalvia: Cardiidae): a lessepsian mollusc species from Izmir Bay (Aegean Sea)". Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the UK. 85 (2): 351–356. doi:10.1017/S0025315405011252h.
  32. Galia Pasternak; Roni Ziv; Gal Eyal; Sigal Shefer; Henk K. Mienis; Oz Rittner; Bella S. Galil (2011). "On the population of Chromodoris annulata Eliot, 1904 (Mollusca: Opistobranchia: Chromodorididae) off the Mediterranean coast of Israel". Aquatic Invasions. 6 (1, supplement). pp. s91–s93. doi:10.3391/ai.2011.6.S1.021.
  33. Bella S. Galil (2000). "Lessepsian immigration: Human impact on Leventine Biogeography". In J. Carel von Vaupel Klein. The Biodiversity Crisis and Crustacea - Proceedings of the Fourth International Crustacean Congress Crustacean Issues. CRC Press. pp. 50–51.
  34. Fabricio Serena (2005). Field Identification Guide to the Sharks and Rays of the Mediterranean and Black Sea. FAO Species Identification Guide for Fisheries Purposes. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization.
  35. D. Golani & M. Fine (2002). "On the occurrence of Hippocampus fuscus in the eastern Mediterranean". Journal of Fish Biology. 60 (3): 764–766. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8649.2002.tb01700.x.
  36. Collette, B.; Acero, A.; Amorim, A.F.; et al. (2011). "Istiophorus platypterus". The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2011: e.T170338A6754507. Retrieved 12 May 2018.
  37. L. Eryilmaz & C. Dalyan (2006). "First record of Apogon queketti Gilchrist (Osteichthyes: Apogonidae) in the Mediterranean Sea". Journal of Fish Biology. 69 (4): 1251–1254. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8649.2006.01185.x.
  38. 1 2 3 A. Zenetos; E.H. Kh. Akel; C. Apostolidis; et al. (2015). "New Mediterranean Biodiversity Records (April 2015)" (PDF). Mediterranean Marine Science. 16 (1): 266–284.
  39. O. Akyol; V. Ünal; T. Ceyhan; M. Bilecenoglu (2005). "First confirmed record of Lagocephalus sceleratus (Gmelin, 1789) in the Mediterranean Sea". Journal of Fish Biology. 66 (4): 1183–1186. doi:10.1111/j.0022-1112.2005.00667.x.
  40. M. E. Çinar, Z. Ergen & E. Dagli (2002). "Occurrence of the lessepsian species Leonnates persicus (Polychaeta: Nereididae) in Izmir Bay, Aegean Sea". Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the UK. 82 (5): 811–815. doi:10.1017/S0025315402006173.
  41. B. S. Galil (November 6, 2006). "Marsupenaeus japonicus" (PDF). Delivering Alien Invasive Species Inventories for Europe. Retrieved February 7, 2012.
  42. B. S. Galil & D. Golani (1990). "Two new migrant decapods from the eastern Mediterranean" (PDF). Crustaceana. 58 (3): 229–236. doi:10.1163/156854090x00147.
  43. D. Golani & O. Sonin (2006). "The Japanese threadfin bream Nemipterus japonicus, a new Indo-Pacific fish in the Mediterranean Sea". Journal of Fish Biology. 68 (3): 940–943. doi:10.1111/j.0022-1112.2006.00961.x.
  44. S. Lelli; F. Colloca; P. Carpentieri; B. C. Russell (2008). "The threadfin bream Nemipterus randalli (Perciformes: Nemipteridae) in the eastern Mediterranean Sea". Journal of Fish Biology. 73 (3): 740–745. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8649.2008.01962.x.
  45. Menachem Goren; Bella S. Galil; Ariel Diamant; Kfir Gayer; Nir Stern (2009). "First record of the Indo-Pacific cardinal fish Apogon fasciatus (White, 1790) in the Mediterranean Sea" (PDF). Aquatic Invasions. 4 (2): 409–411. doi:10.3391/ai.2009.4.2.21.
  46. Frank L. Pezold & Helen K. Larson (2015). "A revision of the fish genus Oxyurichthys (Gobioidei: Gobiidae) with descriptions of four new species" (PDF). Zootaxa. 3988 (1): 001–095.
  47. Jakov Dulčić; Ivan Jardas; Armin Pallaoro; Lovrenc Lipej (2004). "On the validity of the record of silver pomfret Pampus argenteus (Stromateidae) from the Adriatic Sea" (PDF). Cybium. 28 (1): 69–71. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-12-27.
  48. John E. Randall; Sergey V. Bogorodsky; Tilman J. Alpermann; et al. (2013). "Pempheris flavicycla, a new pempherid fish from the Indian Ocean, previously identified as P. vanicolensis Cuvier" (PDF). Journal of the Ocean Science Foundation. 9: 1–23.
  49. Shevy B-S Rothman; Henk K. Mienis; Bella S. Galil (2017). "Alien facelinid nudibranchs in the Eastern Mediterranean: first report of Phidiana militaris (Alder and Hancock, 1864) and report of Caloria indica (Bergh, 1896) 30 years after its previous sighting". BioInvasions Records. 6 (2): 125–128. doi:10.3391/bir.2017.6.2.06.
  50. 1 2 3 Daniel Golani; Oren Sonin & Dor Edelist (2011). "Second records of the Lessepsian fish migrants Priacanthus sagittarius and Platax teira and distribution extension of Tylerius spinosissimus in the Mediterranean". Aquatic Invasions. 6 (1, supplement): s7–s11. doi:10.3391/ai.2011.6.S1.002.
  51. Daniel Golani (2002). "The Indo-Pacific striped eel catfish, Plotosus lineatus (Thunberg, 1787), (Osteichtyes: Siluriformes) a new record from the Mediterranean" (PDF). Scientia Marina. 66 (3): 321–323. doi:10.3989/scimar.2002.66n3321.
  52. Michel Bariche (2010). "First record of the angelfish Pomacanthus maculosus (Teleostei: Pomacanthidae) in the Mediterranean" (PDF). aqua, International Journal of Ichthyology. 16 (1): 31–33.
  53. B. S. Galil (November 5, 2006). "Rhopilema nomadica" (PDF). Delivering Alien Invasive Species Inventories for Europe. Retrieved July 29, 2012.
  54. Nir Stern; Buki Rinkevich & Menachem Goren (2015). "First record of the Goldstripe sardinella - Sardinella gibbosa (Bleeker, 1849) in the Mediterranean Sea and confirmation for its presence in the Red Sea" (PDF). BioInvasions Records. 4 (1): 47–51. doi:10.3391/bir.2015.4.1.08.
  55. M. Ben-Yami & T. Glaser (1974). "The invasion of Saurida undosquamis (Richardson) into the Levant Basin – an example of biological effect of interoceanic canals" (PDF). Fishery Bulletin. 72 (2): 359–373.
  56. M. Bariche & M. Saad (2005). "Settlement of the lessepsian blue-barred parrotfish Scarus ghobban (Teleostei: Scaridae) in the eastern Mediterranean". Marine Biodiversity Records. 1. doi:10.1017/S1755267205000497.
  57. Rafik Riad (2015). "First record of the cuttlefish Sepia dollfusi (Cephalopoda: Sepioidea) from the Egyptian Mediterranean waters" (PDF). Egyptian Journal of Aquatic Biology. 19 (3): 1–7. doi:10.21608/ejabf.2015.2266.
  58. Giambattista Bello (2006). "Cuttlebones of three exotic Sepia species (Cephalopoda, Sepiidae) stranded on the Apulian coast (Italy), south-western Adriatic Sea". Basteria. 70 (1–3): 1–12.
  59. Mienis, H.K. (2003). "Mariene mollusken uit het oostelijk deel van de Middellandse Zee - 15. Invasie van rugschilden van Sepia pharaonis langs de kust van Israel". Spirula (in Dutch). 335: 127–129. Retrieved 20 February 2018. English abstract
  60. E. Lefkaditou, M. Corsini-Foka & G. Kondilatos (2009). "Description of the first Lessepsian squid migrant, Sepioteuthis lessoniana (Cephalopoda: Loliginidae), in the Aegean Sea (Eastern Mediterranean)" (PDF). Mediterranean Marine Science. Hellenic Centre for Marine Research (HCMR). 10/2: 87–97. ISSN 1791-6763. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-30.
  61. Edelist, D.; Spanier, E.; Golani, D. (June 2011). "Evidence for the cccurrence of the Indo-Pacific stonefish, Synanceia verrucosa (Actinopterygii: Scorpaeniformes: Synanceiidae), in the Mediterranean Sea". Acta Ichthyologica et Piscatoria. 41 (2): 129–131. doi:10.3750/AIP2011.41.2.09.
  62. M. Gökoǧlu; Y. Özvarol; R. Fricke (2014). "Synchiropus sechellensis Regan, 1908 (Teleostei: Callionymidae), a new Lessepsian migrant in the Mediterranean Sea" (PDF). Mediterranean Marine Science. 15 (2): 440–442. doi:10.12681/mms.906.
  63. Spanier E., Goren M. (1988). "An Indo-Pacific trunkfish Tetrosomus gibbosus (Linnaeus): first record of the family Ostracionidae in the Mediterranean". Journal of Fish Biology. 32 (5): 797–798. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8649.1988.tb05420.x.
  64. Erhan Akamca, Sinan Mavruk, Caner Enver Ozyurt & Volkan Baris Kiyaga (2011). "First record of the Indo-Pacific burrowing goby Trypauchen vagina (Bloch and Schneider, 1801) in the North-Eastern Mediterranean Sea" (PDF). Aquatic Invasions. 6 (Supplement 1): S19–S21. doi:10.3391/ai.2011.6.S1.004.
  65. Maria Corsini; Panagiotis Margies; Gerasimos Kondilatos; Panos S. Economidis (2005). "Lessepsian migration of fishes to the Aegean Sea : First record of Tylerius spinosissimus (Tetraodontidae) from the Mediterranean, and six more fish records from Rhodes". Cybium (in French). 29 (4): 347–354.
  66. Murat Bilecenoglu1; Mehmet Baki Yokeş; Ahmet Eryigit (2008). "First record of Vanderhorstia mertensi Klausewitz, 1974 (Pisces, Gobiidae) in the Mediterranean Sea" (PDF). Aquatic Invasions. pp. 475–478.

General references

  • Dulcic, J. and A. Pallaoro (2003). Lessepsian Fish Migrants Reported in the East Adriatic Sea: An Annotated List, Ser. hist. nat..
  • Golani, D. (1998). Impact of Red Sea Fish Migrants through the Suez Canal on the Aquatic Environment of the Eastern Mediterranean, Yale FE&S Bulletin 103.
  • Tortonese E (1966). "Echinoderms from the coast of Lebanon". Misc Pap Nat Sci Am Univ Beirut. 5: 2–5.
  • "Check-list of exotic species". CIESM Atlas of Exotic Fishes in the Mediterranean Sea.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.