| Literature DB >> 26585708 |
Gabriella Caruso1, Rosabruna La Ferla1, Maurizio Azzaro1, Annamaria Zoppini2, Giovanna Marino3, Tommaso Petochi3, Cinzia Corinaldesi4, Marcella Leonardi1, Renata Zaccone1, Serena Fonda Umani5, Carmela Caroppo6, Luis Monticelli1, Filippo Azzaro1, Franco Decembrini1, Giovanna Maimone1, Rosa Anna Cavallo6, Loredana Stabili6, Nadezhda Hristova Todorova7, Ventzislav K Karamfilov7, Eugenio Rastelli4, Simone Cappello1, Maria Immacolata Acquaviva6, Marcella Narracci6, Roberta De Angelis3, Paola Del Negro8, Mario Latini9, Roberto Danovaro4,10.
Abstract
The EU Marine Strategy Framework Directive 2008/56/EC (MSFD) defines a framework for Community actions in the field of marine environmental policy in order to achieve and/or maintain the Good Environmental Status (GES) of the European seas by 2020. Microbial assemblages (from viruses to microbial-sized metazoa) provide a major contribution to global biodiversity and play a crucial role in the functioning of marine ecosystems, but are largely ignored by the MSFD. Prokaryotes are only seen as "microbial pathogens," without defining their role in GES indicators. However, structural or functional prokaryotic variables (abundance, biodiversity and metabolism) can be easily incorporated into several MSFD descriptors (i.e. D1. biodiversity, D4. food webs, D5. eutrophication, D8. contaminants and D9. contaminants in seafood) with beneficial effects. This review provides a critical analysis of the current MSFD descriptors and illustrates the reliability and advantages of the potential incorporation of some prokaryotic variables within the set of indicators of marine environmental quality. Following a cost/benefit analysis against scientific and economic criteria, we conclude that marine microbial components, and particularly prokaryotes, are highly effective for detecting the effects of anthropogenic pressures on marine environments and for assessing changes in the environmental health status. Thus, we recommend the inclusion of these components in future implementations of the MSFD.Keywords: Good Environmental Status; indicators; marine policy (Marine Strategy Framework Directive); microbes
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26585708 DOI: 10.3109/1040841X.2015.1087380
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Rev Microbiol ISSN: 1040-841X Impact factor: 7.624