First geo-marine survey of living cold-water Lophelia reefs in the Ionian Sea (Mediterranean basin)

Prosperous deep coral mounds including living colonies of Lophelia pertusa together with Madrepora oculata and Desmophyllum dianthus (= D. cristagalli) have been discovered in 2000, by fishery operations on the eastern side of the Ionian Sea. The living coral mounds are located between ca. 300 and 1...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: TAVIANI M., REMIA A., CORSELLI C., FREIWALD A., MALINVERNO E., SAVINI A., MASTROTOTARO, FRANCESCO, TURSI, Angelo Raffaele
Other Authors: Taviani, M., Remia, A., Corselli, C., Freiwald, A., Malinverno, E., Mastrototaro, Francesco, Savini, A., Tursi, Angelo Raffaele
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11586/131733
Description
Summary:Prosperous deep coral mounds including living colonies of Lophelia pertusa together with Madrepora oculata and Desmophyllum dianthus (= D. cristagalli) have been discovered in 2000, by fishery operations on the eastern side of the Ionian Sea. The living coral mounds are located between ca. 300 and 1,100 m on a gently dipping shelf off Apulia at Santa Maria di Leuca (SML), and characterized by a complex seabed topography. Side scan sonar, shallow high-resolution seismics and sampling indicate that these Lophelia-bearing coral mounds colonize quasi-indurate (firmground) Pleistocene sediment. At places live corals were found on Pleistocene coral-hardgrounds. The fauna associated with these Ionian modern coral mounds is less diversified than modern Eastern Atlantic counterparts. The core of living coral mounds colonies is at present located in 500–700 m and is tentatively suggested that their survival is mostly controlled by oceanographic factors. The SML coral banks represent so far a unique example of living Lopheliabearing coral mounds in the Mediterranean basin.