Saturday, May 21, 2011

New marine biology papers

1. Mifsud, C. & Cachia, C., 2011. New additions and corrections, with annotations, to the check-list of the marine Mollusca of the Maltese Islands. Triton, 23: 10-18.

This paper is an addendum to the four volumes on marine mollusc records from the Maltese Islands by Cachia, Mifsud & Sammut (1991; 1996; 2001; 2004 - see full references below). In this paper, 99 additional records are mentioned together with a number of corrections of previous records.

Of particular interest is a second species of Paludinella for Malta. This minute snail is rare and lives in marshes, and previously only Paludinella littorina (Delle Chiaje, 1828) was known to occur. Samples from Salina Bay have yielded some individuals of Paludinella sicana (Brugnone, 1876).

A comparison of Paludinella sicana (Brugnone, 1876) and Paludinella littorina (Delle Chiaje, 1828), pictures taken from the Natuurhistorisch Museum Rotterdam collection

Also worthy of mention is the first Central Mediterranean record of the pyramidellid Leucotina eva Thiele, 1925.

2. Deidun, A., Galea Bonavia, F. & Schembri, P. J., 2011. Distribution of Tylos spp. in the Maltese Islands and population dynamics of Tylos europaeus. Journal of Coastal Research, SI 57: 369-372.

Tylos is a genus of woodlice, two species of which - Tylos europaeus Arcangeli, 1938 and Tylos sardous Arcangeli, 1938 - occur on two sandy beaches on island of Gozo. This paper examines their habitat and gives an account of yearly fluctuations in the former's population.

References:

Cachia, C., Mifsud, C. & Sammut, P., 1991. The Marine Shelled Mollusca of the Maltese Islands Part 1: Archaeogastropoda. Malta: Grima Printing & Publishing Industries; 112 pp.
Cachia, C., Mifsud, C. & Sammut, P., 1996. The Marine Mollusca of the Maltese Islands, Part 2: Neotaenioglossa. Netherlands: Backhuys Publishers; 228 pp.
Cachia, C., Mifsud, C. & Sammut, P., 2001. The Marine Mollusca of the Maltese Islands Part 3: Sub-class Prosobranchia to sub-class Pulmonata, order Basommatophora. Netherlands: Backhuys Publishers; 266 pp.
Cachia, C., Mifsud, C. & Sammut, P., 2004. The Marine Mollusca of the Maltese Islands Part 4: Caudofoveata, Solenogastres, Bivalvia, Scaphopoda and Cephalopoda. Netherlands: Backhuys Publishers; 270 pp.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Endangered Species Day 2011

On the occasion of Endangered Species Day 2011, I present one of the most characteristic floral endemics of Malta, namely the Maltese Everlasting (Helichrysum melitense). This plant grows on the cliffs of Dwejra (Gozo) and Fungus Rock, and is most probably extinct in the wild from Malta. The remnants of the population are threatened by quarrying (mostly illegal), dumping of construction materials, alien species and habitat deterioration.

Helichrysum melitense (Pignatti), Dwejra - Għawdex, 21.VI.2008

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Sealed destiny?

Monachus monachus (Herrmann, 1779), picture from marinebio.org
The Mediterranean monk seal, Monachus monachus (Herrmann, 1779), sometimes appearing also around Malta (Lanfranco, 1969), is one of the species cited as being 'close to extinction' by the EU environment commissioner Janez Potocnik. About 400 individuals are left around the Mediterranean and many factors heavily influence the decline of the population, including viral diseases, though most threats are anthropogenic.

The Mediterranean Monk Seal on a 2004 stamp from Maltapost

References:

Lanfranco, G. G., 1969. Maltese Mammals (Central Mediterranean). Progress Press: Malta.
MarineBio, undated. Monachus monachus, Mediterranean Monk Seal. [www document, url=http://marinebio.org/species.asp?id=343, last accessed 17.V.2011]

Saturday, May 14, 2011

The Roman Villa in Żejtun

Today's edition of the Times of Malta reports that remains of a Roman Villa in Żejtun will be cleaned up and conserved. The following are some pictures taken in 2009 at this site. 

It is interesting to note that, in the course of about two millennia, yellow colonies of the lichen Xanthoria parietina have colonized most of the limestone blocks available, and only rarely are they found growing on the earthenware tiles. This is probably a direct effect of the materials' porosity relative to each other.