The caprellid amphipod, Caprella mutica, is a well-known invasive species, originating in the Sea of Japan, which has been rapidly expanding along the coasts of North America, Europe and Oceania for the last forty years. Caprella mutica is frequently associated with man-made structures, especially those dedicated to aquaculture activities, where it can reach high densities of up to 300,000 ind./m2. A well-established population of C. mutica was recently found by SCUBA-divers in Galician waters (north-west Spain) at 6 different man-made floating structures along Ría de Arousa. The record of this species in this location implies a new southernmost limit of distribution, extending the known distribution range in Atlantic European waters and co...
Studying offshore natural and artificial hard substrates in the southern North Sea (51ºN–57ºN/1ºW–9º...
Caprella scaura is thought to come from the western Indian Ocean and was first recorded in the Atlan...
<p>Studying offshore natural and artificial hard substrates in the southern North Sea (51ºN–57ºN/1ºW...
The caprellid amphipod, Caprella mutica, is a well-known invasive species, originating in the Sea of...
The amphipod Caprella mutica is one of the most rapidly invading species in Europe and has extendedi...
Paracaprella pusilla Mayer (Fauna und Flora des Golfes von Neapel 17:1–55, 1890), originally descri...
We report the first discovery of the marine amphipod Caprella mutica (Schurin, 1935), commonly known...
The invasive caprellid Caprella scaura Templeton, 1836 is rapidly spreading along marinas of Souther...
Caprella scaura, originally described by Templeton (1836) from Mauritius and later reported as sever...
Paracaprella pusilla MAYER, 1980 is a tropical caprellid amphipod species first described from Brasi...
(IF 2.49 [2018]; Q1)International audienceParacaprella pusilla Mayer, 1890 is a tropical caprellid s...
1 - Alien species represent a recognized worldwide threat to the integrity of the native communities...
Caprella scaura is an invasive amphipod, native to the Indian Ocean, which has already spread to sev...
A new caprellid amphipod, Caprella tavolarensis n. sp., is described based on specimens collected fr...
Detection of new non-indigenous species is often delayed when taxa are taxonomically challenging, su...
Studying offshore natural and artificial hard substrates in the southern North Sea (51ºN–57ºN/1ºW–9º...
Caprella scaura is thought to come from the western Indian Ocean and was first recorded in the Atlan...
<p>Studying offshore natural and artificial hard substrates in the southern North Sea (51ºN–57ºN/1ºW...
The caprellid amphipod, Caprella mutica, is a well-known invasive species, originating in the Sea of...
The amphipod Caprella mutica is one of the most rapidly invading species in Europe and has extendedi...
Paracaprella pusilla Mayer (Fauna und Flora des Golfes von Neapel 17:1–55, 1890), originally descri...
We report the first discovery of the marine amphipod Caprella mutica (Schurin, 1935), commonly known...
The invasive caprellid Caprella scaura Templeton, 1836 is rapidly spreading along marinas of Souther...
Caprella scaura, originally described by Templeton (1836) from Mauritius and later reported as sever...
Paracaprella pusilla MAYER, 1980 is a tropical caprellid amphipod species first described from Brasi...
(IF 2.49 [2018]; Q1)International audienceParacaprella pusilla Mayer, 1890 is a tropical caprellid s...
1 - Alien species represent a recognized worldwide threat to the integrity of the native communities...
Caprella scaura is an invasive amphipod, native to the Indian Ocean, which has already spread to sev...
A new caprellid amphipod, Caprella tavolarensis n. sp., is described based on specimens collected fr...
Detection of new non-indigenous species is often delayed when taxa are taxonomically challenging, su...
Studying offshore natural and artificial hard substrates in the southern North Sea (51ºN–57ºN/1ºW–9º...
Caprella scaura is thought to come from the western Indian Ocean and was first recorded in the Atlan...
<p>Studying offshore natural and artificial hard substrates in the southern North Sea (51ºN–57ºN/1ºW...