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The clearest signs of a warming Mediterranean are now coming from the Ligurian Sea. In the depths, around 500 meters, the red shrimp is reappearing—a comeback that confirms how fish communities are reorganizing under thermal pressure. Speaking in an interview by Elisa Folli for Il Secolo XIX, Fabio Fiorentino, research director at IRBIM-CNR and associate at the Anton Dohrn Zoological Station, explains the trend.
Fiorentino notes that the red shrimp—long confused with the purple shrimp in commercial classifications—is returning in notable quantities. Alongside it, the white shrimp is increasing: thirty years ago it was marginal, while today it is a stable component of trawl catches. This is evidence that as deep habitats warm, they favor thermophilic species and reduce the competitiveness of those linked to colder waters.
The same dynamic is visible in pelagic populations. Sardine numbers show a marked decline, while round sardinella is filling the gap, with different implications both nutritionally and for product management. Among cephalopods, the horned octopus (historically important for Ligurian fisheries) is retreating sharply. In parallel, small octopuses (Scaeurgus unicirrhus) adapted to higher temperatures are spreading—a turnover that shifts long-standing trophic balances.
Mackerel also needs a clearer reading. Much of what reaches Italian markets comes from the Atlantic, while the “cavalla” mackerel remains the truly local species. The distinction, Fiorentino stresses, is not a detail but a substantive point, because it affects how we correctly interpret the basin’s real availability.
The most emblematic case is the boarfish. In the 1980s Ligurian trawlers landed two to three tonnes a year; today catches are down to just a few dozen kilos. This collapse expresses, better than any chart, the vulnerability of certain species once sea temperatures exceed their ecological tolerance thresholds.
These observations are consistent with the latest scientific research. According to a recent CSIC study from Barcelona, the Catalan coast has already seen cold-water species decrease and warm-affinity species increase, with direct effects on fishing profitability. Analyses published in Frontiers in Marine Science show that small pelagics in the western Mediterranean—especially sardine and anchovy—have poorer body condition in warmer, more stratified waters, reducing their resilience. In parallel, studies on the deep-water rose shrimp (Parapenaeus longirostris) confirm that temperature and depth are the main drivers of its abundance and distribution.
Against this backdrop, Fiorentino’s assessment restores to the Ligurian Sea its role as a natural laboratory. The red shrimp’s return, the rise of white shrimp, and the retreat of boarfish, horned octopus, and sardine—alongside the advance of round sardinella—are not isolated events but indicators of a basin undergoing structural change. Understanding these trajectories requires continuous monitoring, rigorous taxonomy, and a critical reading of historical time series.
The analysis will be the focus of a public event with Fiorentino at the Castiglione Chiavarese library on Friday at 5 p.m., promoted by the Pro Loco in collaboration with the Municipality.
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L’articolo Warming Mediterranean: Clear Signals from the Ligurian Sea proviene da Pesceinrete.
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