PUBLICATIONS

Azzurro E., D’Amen M., Chiappi M., Ferri F., Grifoni P., Napoli E., Luna G.M., Strafella P., Smeraldo S., Biancone N.
ORMEF: a geospatial web platform for mapping and visualizing exotic fish records in the Mediterranean and surrounding seas. Management of Biological Invasions 15(4): 601–616 (2024)
D’Amen M., Bonora N., & Azzurro E.
Exploring the impact of temporal resolution on detecting shifts in the invasive species niche: Insights from Lessepsian fishes. Journal of Animal Ecology, 00, 1–11 (2024)
D‘Amen M., Smeraldo S. & Azzurro E.
Salinity, not only temperature, drives tropical fish invasions in the Mediterranean Sea, and surface-only variables explain it better. Coral Reefs 42, 467–472 (2023)
Azzurro E., Smeraldo S. and D’Amen M.
(2022) Spatio-temporal dynamics of exotic fishes in the Mediterranean Sea: over a century of invasion reconstructed Climate Change Biology 00, 1–12.
Azzurro E., Smeraldo S., Minelli A., D’Amen M.
(2022) ORMEF: a Mediterranean database of exotic fish records. Scientific Data 9, 363.
Azzurro E. and D’Amen M.
(2022) Climate change paves the way for a new inter-ocean fish interchange. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
D'Amen M. and Azzurro E.
(2020a) Lessepsian fish invasion in Mediterranean Marine Protected Areas: a risk assessment under climate change scenarios. ICES Journal of Marine Science 77(1): 388–397.
D'Amen M. and Azzurro E.
(2020b) Integrating univariate niche dynamics in species distribution models: a step forward for marine research on biological invasions Journal of Biogeography 47: 686–697
Azzurro E., Maynou F., Belmaker J., Golani D., & Crooks J. A.
(2016) Lag times in Lessepsian fish invasion. Biological Invasions, 18(10), 2761-2772.
Parravicini V., Azzurro E., Kulbicki M. and Belmaker J.
(2015) Niche shift can impair the ability to predict invasion risk in the marine realm: an illustration using Mediterranean fish invaders. Ecology Letters, 18(3), pp.246-253.
D’Amen M., Smeraldo S., Di Franco A., Azzurro E. (2022)
The spread of Lessepsian fishes does not track native temperature conditions. ICES Journal of Marine Science. 79, 1864–1873