Marika Galanidi
Dokuz Eylül University
16 Papers
97 Citations
Marika Galanidi is an academic researcher from Dokuz Eylül University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mediterranean climate & Biology. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 9 publications. Previous affiliations of Marika Galanidi include Bangor University.
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Papers
Mediterranean non indigenous species at the start of the 2020s: recent changes
Argyro Zenetos,Marika Galanidi +1 more
TL;DR: The Hellenic Centre for Marine Research (HCMR) offline database has been used for a continuous literature search and update of the Mediterranean marine non-indigenous species (NIS) inventory for the period 2017-2019.
Established non-indigenous species increased by 40% in 11 years in the Mediterranean Sea
Argyro Zenetos,Paolo G. Albano,Eduardo Lopez Garcia,Nir Stern,Konstantinos Tsiamis,Marika Galanidi +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper , a review of non-indigenous species (NIS) reported in the Mediterranean Sea as a baseline is used to re-evaluate the established, casual and failed introduction events of over 1366 taxa.
Changes in species richness with stocking density of marine bivalves
TL;DR: Overall, mussel beds changed the infaunal community, but the effects were localized (0–10 m) and not detectable at larger scales (10–100 m).
Distribution and behaviour of Common Scoter Melanitta nigra relative to prey resources and environmental parameters
Michel J. Kaiser,Marika Galanidi,David A. Showler,A. J. Elliott,Richard W. G. Caldow,E.I.S. Rees,Richard A. Stillman,William J. Sutherland +7 more
TL;DR: Common Scoters were observed in lowest numbers or were absent from areas in which anthropogenic disturbance was relatively intense, even when these areas held a high prey biomass, and commercial fishing activities did not appear to contribute to this disturbance.
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Assessing the socio-economic impacts of priority marine invasive fishes in the Mediterranean with the newly proposed SEICAT methodology
TL;DR: In this article, the authors applied EICAT and SEICAT to seven invasive marine fishes that are already considered high risk and have been singled out for monitoring in relation to fisheries in the Mediterranean (Plotosus lineatus, Pterois miles/volitans, Fistularia commersonii, Lagocephalus sceleratus, Siganus rivulatus/Siganus luridus and Saurida lessepsianus ).