AUTHOR=Bracchi Valentina Alice , Bazzicalupo Pietro , Fallati Luca , Varzi Andrea Giulia , Savini Alessandra , Negri Mauro Pietro , Rosso Antonietta , Sanfilippo Rossana , Guido Adriano , Bertolino Marco , Costa Gabriele , De Ponti Elena , Leonardi Riccardo , Muzzupappa Maurizio , Basso Daniela TITLE=The Main Builders of Mediterranean Coralligenous: 2D and 3D Quantitative Approaches for its Identification JOURNAL=Frontiers in Earth Science VOLUME=10 YEAR=2022 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/earth-science/articles/10.3389/feart.2022.910522 DOI=10.3389/feart.2022.910522 ISSN=2296-6463 ABSTRACT=
Along the Mediterranean Sea shelf, algal reefs made of crustose coralline algae and Peyssonneliales are known as Coralligenous. It ranks among the most important ecosystems in the Mediterranean Sea because of its extent, complexity, and heterogeneity, supporting very high levels of biodiversity. Descriptive approaches for monitoring purposes are often aimed at assessing the surficial ephemeral canopy, which is sustained and controlled by the occurrence of the long-lasting rigid structure at the base. This practice led to the non-univocal definition of Coralligenous, sometimes indicated as “animal Coralligenous” because of the surficial dominance of these components. The quantitative assessment of the builders that actively build up the persistent structure through geological time is therefore a fundamental topic. We collected two discrete coralligenous samples in front of Marzamemi village (Sicily, Ionian Sea), the first from an area of a dense coralligenous cover (- 37 m) and the second one from an area with sparse build-ups (- 36 m). By using image analysis and computerized axial tomography, we distinguished and quantified the different components both on the surface and inside the framework. In both cases, our results confirm the primary role of crustose coralline algae as major builders of the Mediterranean Coralligenous, this aspect matching with the evidence from the Quaternary fossil record. We suggest that the role of encrusting calcareous red algae in the Coralligenous should be considered in conservation and management policies.