Passive trans-Atlantic dispersal of the pearl-oyster Pinctada imbricata Rö- ding, 1798 to the Canaries

  1. Hernández, José Carlos 1
  2. Moro- Abad, Leopoldo 2
  3. González-Delgado, Sara 1
  4. Alfonso, Beatriz 1
  5. Aliende, Marina 1
  6. Sangil, Carlos 1
  7. Herrera, Rogelio 2
  1. 1 Universidad de La Laguna
    info

    Universidad de La Laguna

    San Cristobal de La Laguna, España

    ROR https://ror.org/01r9z8p25

  2. 2 Servicio de Biodiversidad, Gobierno de Canarias
Revista:
Scientia Insularum: Revista de Ciencias Naturales en islas

ISSN: 2659-6644

Año de publicación: 2024

Número: 5

Páginas: 149-151

Tipo: Artículo

DOI: 10.25145/J.SI.2024.05.10 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openRIULL editor

Otras publicaciones en: Scientia Insularum: Revista de Ciencias Naturales en islas

Resumen

From 2013, the Pearl-oyster (Pinctada imbricata) have been more frequently observed in the Canary Islands. Most of the observations have been uploaded at the citizen science platform RedPromar (redpromar.org). There has been a total of thirty-three observation, most of them from the East coast of Tenerife Island. However, isolated individuals have also been observed in El Hierro Island and Lanzarote. Other observations have been directly registered by the authors of this study in Gran Canaria and La Palma Islands. This specie occurs from the intertidal habitat to the shallow waters, but at no more than 10 meters’ depth, and 2-4 cm in shell length. The presence, and more likely the establishment, of this specie in the Canary Island is important because it is a species originally distributed in the warm western Atlantic, North Caroline, West Indies, the Caribbean, Venezuela and Brasil (Cunha et al. 2011). Therefore, the Canaries is a new location, off its normal distributional range.