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1 Scientific Conference Integrated Marine Research in the Mediterranean and the Black Sea E. Papathanassiou, N. Streftaris & L. Giannoudi 3 The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme [FP7/2007 2013] under grant agreement n° 287600 project PERSEUS (Policy oriented marine Environmental Research for the Southern European Seas) For the Conference Proceedings the best possible effort has being made for the quality of all communications. The responsibility for the text and the illustrations of the submitted work lies upon the authors. 4 Scientific Conference Integrated Marine Research in the Mediterranean and the Black Sea ...........................................................................................................................................................................3 .............................................................................................................................................................5 ...............................................................................................................................................................15 Dr. Luis Valdes Santurio .............................................................................................................................................17 Dr. Ferdinato Boero .............................................................................................................................................19 Dr Zdenka Saba Willis .............................................................................................................................................21 Professor Anil Markandya .............................................................................................................................................23 ............................................................................................................................................................25 Trends of pH decrease in the Mediterranean Sea through sustained observations in Strait of Gibraltar.....................................................27 Acidification of the North Aegean Sea from anthropogenic carbon ...........................................................................................................................................................32 Circulation, ecosystem dynamics and climate sensitiveness in the Central Mediterranean region .................................................................................................................37 Back to basics: Measuring IOPs in the Aegean Sea to support chlorophyllá retrieval from ocean colour .................................................................................41 Shelfdeep sea exchanges in the Black Sea an integrated analysis .....................................................................................................................................46 Bacterioplankton variability in the Levantine basin (SE Mediterranean Sea), implications on the related Marine Strategy Framework Directive descriptor ................................................................................51 Response of the Black Sea coastal phytoplankton variability during the last decade to climate change and anthropogenic inputs ........................................................................................55 Phytoplankton dynamics in the hydrologically complex NE Aegean frontal area (NE Mediterranean) .....................60 The eutrophication status of the Western Black Sea a step towards GES assessment ..................................................................................................65 ...........................................................................................................................................................71 The force of the Atlantic on the Mediterranean, not always a positive influence: an interannual analysis on fish and jellyfish. ...................................................................................................73 Contrasting marine food web structures and time trends across the Mediterranean .............................................78 9 Characterising spatial and temporal patterns of species biomass distributions in landings from the Mediterrenan and Black Sea .............................................................................................82 Effects of deep water formation processes in the population dynamics of the commercial deepsea shrimp Aristeus antennatus .....................................................................................................................................86 Seagrass distribution patterns and ecological quality status for the evaluation of GEnS under MSFD: comparative case studies in the SES ........ .90 NIS in PERSEUS hotspot areas: Testing trends in introduction as an indicator of GES ..........................................................................................................................................................95 Anthropogenic impacts on deep submarine canyons of the NW Mediterranean Sea .........................................................................................100 Whats the Lifespan of Plastic Bottles in the Marine Environment?.........................................105 Chemical pollution in the South European Seas: methodological approaches and assessment elements ...........................................................108 Use of invitro bioassays to characterize the environmental quality of sediments from the Adriatic and the Black Seas ..............112 Linking the microbial community processes to the contamination by priority organic substances: in situ observations on coastal sediments of the Adriatic Sea (Italy) ..................................................................116 Accumulation and trophic transfer of 116 POPs in plankton and small pelagic fish in the Western Mediterranean and Adriatic Sea .................................................................................................................................................120 ..........................................................................................................................................................125 Lagrangian Observing Systems in the Southern European Seas: Review, Gaps and Upgrade .............127 Glider monitoring under PERSEUS as a contribution to ocean observing in the SES with implications for future integrated observing system development.................................................................................................................................................131 properties of a cyclonic eddy in the channel of sardinia monitored by Glider and Satellites Observations .............136 AlborEx: a multiplatform interdisciplinary view of Meso and Submesoscale processes ........141 Observing the origin of Levantine Intermediate Water: A design study for a hydrographic mooring ..................................................................................................................146 Methods to analyse Vessel Monitoring System data ........................................................................................151 Development of a Tool for the identification and assessment of Environmental Aspects in Ports (TEAP) ..............................................................................................................................................155 Remote Sensing Algorithm to Identify Dominant Phytoplankton Groups in the Mediterranean Sea: A Tool for MSFD at Basin Scale...............................................................................159 Towards sustainability for Atlantic Bluefin tuna in the Mediterranean Sea: Perseus research findings ................................164 Response of the Black Seas benthos ecological functions to an environmental gradient ...............................................................................168 10 Preliminary model assessment of basic marine ecosystem properties of the Northern Adriatic Sea. ..........................................................................................173 Scenarios of ecosystem health from EndtoEnd models of the Mediterranean Sea and Black Sea ............................................................................................178 What are marine ecosystem services worth? The VMESSES database ..............................................................................................................183 Socioeconomic analysis of pressures of the coastal areas and open seas in the Mediterranean and the Black Sea .....................................................................................................................................187 Inventory and critical assessment of marine policy in the Southern European Seas .................................................................................................191 Assessing the cost of marine degradation: A critical reading of the MSFD Initial Assessment reports ..............................................................................................195 Stakeholder Dialogue: Expectations and Feedback of the End Users of the Adaptive Marine Policy Toolbox ..........................199 Building regional cooperation between scientists and stakeholders in the SES nonEU countries. .................................................................................................................................204 Policy guidance for adaptive marine and coastal policy making ...............................................208 Potential application of the AMP Toolbox for designing and implementing adaptive policies in the Eastern Black Sea in the light of EUGeorgia Association Agreement ...........................................213 Linking targets and costeffective management measures for marine governance The MeTaLi model MERMAID project ................217 .......................................................................................................................................221 ADREX campaigns with emphasis on the dense water evolution in the Adriatic pits during 201314: physical and biogeochemical properties ......................................................................................................223 XBT monitoring of robust circulation features along the GenovaPalermo route ................................................................................................................225 Response of pelagic ecosystem to deep convection in the northwestern Mediterranean (LIONEX experiment WP1 PERSEUS) ....................................................................................................227 The general circulation in the SE Levantine ..............................229 A deep ventilation of aerobic zone in the NE Black Sea due to vertical turbulent mixing ........................................................................................................................................231 Wave climate changes in the Black sea in the last years .............................................233 Different C pathways associated with water masses in the Adriatic Sea: should we consider the microbes for the MSFD? ....................................................235 The multidisciplinary ADREX survey in the Southern European Seas: the microbial biogeochemistry in the IonianAdriatic coupled systems. ........................................................................................................237 Dissolved organic matter as a key parameter to assess the good environmental status: results from the ADREX2014 experiment .............239 11 Anthropogenic carbon in the Southern Adriatic and Ionian Seas during the Adrex experiment. ...................................................................................................................................241 Influence of Black Sea Water on the carbonate system in the North Aegean Sea in fall ........................................................................................................ .243 Tracing dissolved organic matter sources in the Dardanelles outflow through fluoresence spectroscopy .. .. . .. .. .. . . . . .. . . .. .. . .. .. .. .. 245 Marmara Experiment (MAREX) Results and Future Projections........247 Recent oscillations of freshwater and nutrient loads of N Adriatic rivers and Danube .................................................................................................................................................249 Thermohaline and nutrient dynamics in the Levantine surface and intermediate water masses, Southeastern Mediterranean Sea.......................................................251 Mechanism of horizontal and vertical exchange of nutrients driven by largescale circulation in the Black Sea ...................................................................................................................................253 Chemical Exchanges between the Marmara and Black Seas through the Bosphorus and Impacts of the increased nutrient inputs on Marmara TwoLayer Chemistry...............255 Diagenetic processes affecting nutrient pore water profiles near the wastewater treatment plant outfall of Athens, Saronikos Gulf, Greece ............................257 Interconnections between the Danube River discharge, nutrients level and phytoplankton characteristics in the northwestern part of the Black Sea (Zmiinyi Island area) .....................................................................................................259 Assessment of euthrophication level in the eastern part of the Adriatic Sea ...............................................................................261 Harmful and Toxic Marine Phytoplankton in coastal waters of the Zmiinyi island in the NorthWestern part of the Black Sea (20122014) ..............................................................263 Assessing Biodiversity in the Southern European Seas countries within the PERSEUS project ............................................................265 Analyses of eutrophication, invasive ctenophores, anchovy spawning areas in the Southern Black Sea ..............267 Small cyclopoid copepod Oithona davisae invasion into the Black Sea as a factor of the changes in zooplankton and ichthyoplankton in Crimean coastal waters................................................................................................269 Hydrobiota of the Georgian Black Sea coastal zone ...............................................................................................................271 Progress in understanding scyphomedusae outbreaks in the Mediterranean Sea: distribution and phenology ..............................................................................................................................................273 Effect of invasive ctenophores Mnemiopsis leidyi and Beroe ovata on microplankton communities of the Black Sea ..........................................275 Invasion of Halophila stipulacea in the Mediterranean Sea: an introduced carbon reservoir ........................................................................................277 Habitat mapping with emphasis on sea grass meadows in the area of Sidi Rais (Tunisia) .....................................................................................................................................279 12 EcologicalPhysiological Condition Indices of Mass Species Heterotrophic Components in the Black Sea Pelagic Ecosystem ............................................................................................................................281 Ecological state of seagrass dominated habitats along the Bulgarian Black Sea coast ..........................................................................................................................................283 The Black Sea Region a system of changing systems: Case study Romanian shelf ...........................................................................285 Dynamics of size, age and sex structure of Rapana venosa Population near Anapa BayBar, the Black Sea ..............................................................................................................................................287 DNA barcodes of the Levantine basin fish species. .......................................................................................................................289 Diet of Pelagic Fish in Zmiinyi Island Coastal Waters (Black Sea) ..........................................................291 Toxic Metals in Fish and Mollusks of the Zmiiniy Island Coastal Waters (NorthWestern part of the Black Sea) in 20122014 ......................................................293 Assessment of the contamination status of the Romanian Black Sea ecosystem during 2012 2014, within implementation of the European Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD).........295 Benthic fluxes of dissolved heavy metals in polluted sediments of the Adriatic Sea .......................................................................................................................................297 Export of pollutants from a big Mediterranean city: modelling the dissolved and particulate transport of contaminants in the bay of Marseilles ............................................................................................................................................299 Combination of field data and modelling capabilities to support design of contaminants monitoring programs under the Marine Strategy Framework Directive ...................................................................................................................................301 Sedimentary aliphatic hydrocarbons, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and trace metals in the open Aegean and NW Levantine Seas: Towards the assessment of MSFD D8 ........................................303 Spatiotemporal patterns of organic pollutants and heavy metals in Adriatic sediments ...............................................................305 Floating litter in the Mediterranean and Black Seas: occurrence and distribution....................307 The Outline of Marine Litter Collected During Demersal Fishing Surveys Organised in the Period 2011 2014 along the Romanian Black Sea Coast ..............309 Marine Litter Pilot Studies in Cilician Basin ...........................311 Acoustic presence of sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) and delphinids in the Ionian and Aegean Seas, Greece............................................313 Drifter measurements during the Alborex experiment ..............................315 The Mediterranean components of the Spanish Institute of Oceanography Observing System, IEOOS....................................................................317 An hydraulic winch to support deep CTD casts using small boats ...........319 13 Recent Decline of the Black Sea Oxygen Inventory .................................................................................................................................................321 Modelling pelagic ecosystem health in the Western Mediterranean. A PERSEUS contribution. ......................................................................................................323 Remote sensing and regional biooptical models for the Black sea ecosystem productivity assessment in line with MSFD ...........................................................325 Hindcast and future scenario of the Black Sea dynamics and ecosystem changes ......................................................................................................................................327 Dynamics of the marine ecosystem on the continental shelves of the Northwestern Mediterranean (WP4 PERSEUS) ......................................................329 Upgrades and expansion of the existing observing systems in the Mediterranean and the Black Sea .............................................................................................331 Interannual variability of the Black sea chlorophyll related with wind and circulation patterns identified by the SelfOrganization Map analysis .................................................................333 Improving the monitoring and simulations of the Black Sea influence on the Aegean.................................................................................................................335 Establishment of a long term offshore sampling transect in the Eastern ........................................................................................................................................................337 A new generation endtoend model producing forecast products to enhance marine GMES applications in the Black Sea ........................................................................................339 Micro, nano and picophytoplankton distribution in the Mediterranean Sea from ocean colour data ...........................................................................................341 Jellyfish monitoring in Cyprus with the help of public .....................................................................................................................................343 A website platform for uploading data from a new systematic jellyfish monitoring system in the Balearic Islands: a joint sciencesociety approach. ................................................................................................................345 Oceanographic data assembled for a large regional project (PERSEUS) .........................................................................................347 Towards coordinated marine monitoring for MSFD in Mediterranean and Black Sea..........................349 Marine environmental targets linked to regional management schemes based on indicators developed for the Mediterranean Sea The MERMAID Project ..................................................351 Assesment of the environmental status of the coastal zone of the NE Black Sea: Application of the MSFD criteria .........................353 From WFD to MSFD and from the Coast to the high seas: Study of the suitability and performance of status indicators .................................................................................................................................................355 Assessing the power of size spectrum analysis in estimating the pelagic ecosystem status of Mediterranean areas over a wide range of combined pressures. ......................................................................357 The factors and opinions that impact the writing of an action plan for Maltese sharks..................................359 14 A stepwise guide for drafting adaptive marine policies ...............................................................................................................361 Identification and selection of tools and methods for developing adaptive marine policies in the Mediterranean and Black Seas .......................................................363 Marine policies making for the Saronikos Gulf (Greece) a case for adaptive policy making .............................................................................................................................365 Past, Present and Future of Turkeys Marine Ecosystems in the Light of Research, Policy and Societal needs ..................................................................................................367 Setting the scene for defining adaptive policies in marine areas: application of a riskbased approach for multihazard assessment in the Adriatic sea .................369 Analysis of pressures of the coastal and open seas in socioeconomic terms in the Mediterranean and the Black Seas: Oil and Gas Transport ...............371 AMP Toobox´s resources to design and implement adaptive policies through stakeholders engagement: Application to the case of the Marine tourism in the Mediterranean Sea .............................................................................................................................373 Adaptive Marine Policy (AMP) Toolbox: Supporting policymakers developing adaptive policies to cope with Marine litter in the Mediterranean and Black Sea ............................................................375 15 Scientific Conference Integrated Marine Research in the Mediterranean and the Black Sea It has been widely reported that although ports around the world are major centres for the economic development of the areas where they are located, port and shipping activities also pose negative externalities and impacts to their surrounding natural habitats (OECD, 2011; Dinwoodie et al., 2012). It is, therefore, important for those with responsibilities concerning port environmental management to be aware of the issues that are at stake with regards to the environment in European ports (ESPO, 2012). An effective port environmental management requires awareness and knowledge of its environmental aspects in order to know what is required to be properly managed from the environmental point of view (ESPO, 2011). According to ISO 14001 (2004), an environmental aspect is an element of an organisations activities, products and services that can interact with the environment. Examples of them are water discharges, emissions to air, or waste generation. Each port has different environmental aspects depending on the activities that are carried out within the port area. It is highly recommended that port authorities select, from those, the most significant ones, called the Significant Environmental Aspects (SEA). Being aware of the SEA allows a port to focus its time, efforts and resources on those issues with major potential for environmental impact, providing the greatest assurance that the environment will be protected (Puig, 2012). In addition, the establishment of a SEAs identification procedure is one of the requirements and essential tasks for the development and implementation of an Environmental Management System (EMS). Although all the EMS standards provide some advice and criteria on this selection, they also recognise that there is no single, standardised procedure for identifying environmental aspects since each port is unique and each organisation has its own characteristics and distinctive features. Therefore, it may be difficult for some ports to identify and select aspects in a credible and scientific way in line with their activities. This was confirmed with a research conducted by PERSEUS on the Mediterranean and Black Sea ports. For this reason, it raised the need for the development of a method that would assist ports to perform this task in a more reliable manner. 157 In order to develop the tool, six main tasks were carried out: · Task 1: Identification of port activities Since aspects are derived from activities, the initial step was to identify the range of possible activities that are likely to be carried out in a port. A total amount of 35 port activities were identified. · Task 2: Identification of port environmental aspects A review of the existing environmental aspects in ports was also conducted. The information was obtained from port websites, port environmental or annual reports, and EMS reports of port authorities, marinas and terminal operators. A total amount of 55 aspects was initially compiled. Since this number of aspects was perceived as being overcomplex in terms of developing a userfriendly, practicable and pragmatic tool, it was reduced to a final list of 17 aspects (divided in seven categories). · Task 3: Creation of the relationships between activities and aspects The next step was the definition of the interactions between the port activities identified in task 1 and the port environmental aspects determined in task 2. For each activity, all the aspects that interact with it were determined. In addition, a weighting was allocated to each aspect. · Task 4: Definition of the criteria to assess the significance In order to assess the significance of the aspects, a set of 8 criteria was established such as frequency and duration of the aspect, stakeholders complaints, etc. They were obtained from an extensive literature review (e.g. Easibind, 2012), including best examples of ports that provide their criteria, and the EMS standards advice (EC, 2009; ISO, 2004), among others. · Task 5: Establishment of the weighting of the criteria responses For each criterion, several possible responses were established, with an associated weighting, based on the significance of the impact generated on the environment. · Task 6: Creation of the connections between aspects and criteria Since not all the criteria are applicable to all the aspects, an assessment of which criteria have influence on each aspect was carried out by creating a table of the interactions between them. In order to obtain the results, 5 steps have to be carried out, as summarized in Figure 1: 158 Anyone willing to use the tool has to enter to the website www.eports.cat. Initially, the respondent has to enter the contact details. All this information is confidential and only the user of the tool will have access to his/her results. Once the contact details have been introduced, the respondent has to select the activities that are carried out in the port, out of the 35 possible activities. As mentioned before, each activity is associated with several environmental aspects, and therefore, when an activity is selected, the related environmental aspects are activated. The tool sums the total number of points that have been activated for each aspect, derived from the activities that have been selected, and ranks them accordingly in descending order. As a result, an extensive list of the ports aspects is generated. In order to find out the list of the main environmental aspects that have the potential to be significant for the port, a threshold value has been established within this methodology: the aspects with a score equal or higher than the 50% of the maximum score are selected. This percentage is based on experts opinions and on other methodologies identified in the literature review (e.g. Autoridad Portuaria de Valencia or Marina Port Vell). One weakness of the existing methods is that they do not include criteria for the assessment of aspects, whereas this method does. The port environmental aspects obtained in the previous step are reviewed and assessed against the criteria presented before. Each aspect is assessed only with the criteria that apply to it, which is based on the nature of the aspect. Each criterion has generally four or five possible response options, with different weights. An average value for each aspect is achieved, based on the punctuations obtained in the criteria. These values will be used to assess the significance of the aspect, ranking them in descending order, so that the aspects located in the top positions are the ones with a higher significance. It is considered that the aspects with a punctuation of three or more are the Significant Environmental Aspects. The respondent receives an email with these results, together with a list of potential environmental indicators that can be applied to monitor the identified SEAs. Ports and harbours may be located in highly valuable and vulnerable natural areas, hosting endangered habitat and species, and some of them being protected under EU / national / regional / local nature conservation legislation. For this reason, a broad mix of measures has to be applied for the effective management of potential environmental impacts which are directly linked with the Significant Environmental Aspects. In this paper, the importance of identifying SEAs as an integrated action of the environmental management of a port has been demonstrated. However, the ports that use either one of the established methodologies or its own method and make it publicly available are still a minority. For this reason, a new methodology has been developed, available to all European ports. No matter the size or the commercial profile of the port, since it is applicable to all types, providing specific results for each one. To develop the methodology, the wide range of environmental activities and aspects existing in ports were identified through an extensive research and review. After identifying the ports activities and applying a set of criteria, a final list of Significant Environmental Aspects is generated. It is suggested that the tool could assist port managers in identifying the SEAs of their own port area in a userfriendly, practicable and timeeffective manner. The use of this methodology could be beneficial not only for individual port authorities but also for the whole port sector. The authors acknowledge with grateful thanks the funding from the PERSEUS (EC, 287600) research project as well as the collaboration of the pilot ports and feedback from other EU ports. 159 160