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Tag Archives: tuna

Mediterranean biodiversity versus a globalising planet: from Suez Canal to your tuna pizza

Posted on March 4, 2012 by Rolf Schuttenhelm

“In reserves off Spain and Italy, we found the largest fish biomass in the Mediterranean. Unfortunately, around Turkey and Greece, the waters were bare” – Enric Sala, National Geographic Society.

Posted in Bits of Biodiversity, Bits of Ecology, Bits of Geoscience | Tagged biodiversity, biomass, conservation, coral reef, ecosystems, endangered species, evolution, fish, globalisation, globalising a planet, invasive species, isthmus, marine biology, marine life, marine reserves, Mediterranean, National Geographic Society, oceans, overfishing, Panama Canal, PLoS ONE, predators, sea urchins, seagrass, species migration, Suez Canal, tuna
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