Abstract

Echinolittorina punctata (Gmelin, 1791), a thermophilic supralittoral species, was historically distributed along the Atlantic coasts from southern Spain to Senegal, and in the southern and eastern sectors of the Mediterranean. In the latter sea it has spread its range northwards only in recent years, moving up the Tyrrhenian coasts of Italy up to Tuscany, the Adriatic ones up to Croatia, and the southern coasts of Western Europe up to France. Sardinia, in an intermediate position between the Italian Tyrrhenian coasts and the southern Spanish and French ones, both recently colonized by E. punctata, presented itself as a foreseeable new settlement area. The discovery of some populations of this species in north-western Sardinia, along the coasts of the municipality of Porto Torres, represents the first report for Sardinia. It fills the last missing range gap for this species to be defined as widely distributed in the Mediterranean. The expansion of this species further northward in the Mediterranean seems linked to the general increase in sea water temperatures resulting from climate change.

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