The dawn of the tropical Atlantic invasion into the Mediterranean Sea

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Abstract

The Mediterranean Sea is a marine biodiversity hotspot already affected by climate-driven biodiversity collapses. Its highly endemic fauna is at further risk if global warming triggers an invasion of tropical Atlantic species. Here, we combine modern species occurrences with a unique paleorecord from the Last Interglacial (135 to 116 ka), a conservative analog of future climate, to model the future distribution of an exemplary subset of tropical West African mollusks, currently separated from the Mediterranean by cold upwelling off north-west Africa. We show that, already under an intermediate climate scenario (RCP 4.5) by 2050, climatic connectivity along north-west Africa may allow tropical species to colonize a by then largely environmentally suitable Mediterranean. The worst-case scenario RCP 8.5 leads to a fully tropicalized Mediterranean by 2100. The tropical Atlantic invasion will add to the ongoing Indo-Pacific invasion through the Suez Canal, irreversibly transforming the entire Mediterranean into a novel ecosystem unprecedented in human history.

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Albano, P. G., Schultz, L., Wessely, J., Taviani, M., Dullinger, S., & Danise, S. (2024). The dawn of the tropical Atlantic invasion into the Mediterranean Sea. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 121(15). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2320687121

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