The Japan Times - With waters at 32C, Mediterranean tropicalisation shifts into high gear

EUR -
AED 4.302619
AFN 72.638318
ALL 95.603094
AMD 431.878807
ANG 2.097662
AOA 1075.507446
ARS 1630.8359
AUD 1.615579
AWG 2.110304
AZN 1.99945
BAM 1.956238
BBD 2.359669
BDT 143.812209
BGN 1.95644
BHD 0.441978
BIF 3486.028541
BMD 1.171577
BND 1.490921
BOB 8.096055
BRL 5.888817
BSD 1.171582
BTN 112.066143
BWP 15.783006
BYN 3.264603
BYR 22962.916957
BZD 2.356308
CAD 1.60594
CDF 2625.505158
CHF 0.91581
CLF 0.026408
CLP 1039.329512
CNY 7.956124
CNH 7.950219
COP 4445.398123
CRC 533.328553
CUC 1.171577
CUP 31.046801
CVE 110.655135
CZK 24.327919
DJF 208.212632
DKK 7.472548
DOP 69.416143
DZD 155.118147
EGP 61.994247
ERN 17.573661
ETB 184.376952
FJD 2.560893
FKP 0.866041
GBP 0.866089
GEL 3.139424
GGP 0.866041
GHS 13.242448
GIP 0.866041
GMD 85.525666
GNF 10283.522856
GTQ 8.938002
GYD 245.111173
HKD 9.172924
HNL 31.1758
HRK 7.533714
HTG 153.009493
HUF 358.229119
IDR 20516.663355
ILS 3.410104
IMP 0.866041
INR 112.115446
IQD 1534.766388
IRR 1538281.120455
ISK 143.612268
JEP 0.866041
JMD 185.285963
JOD 0.830666
JPY 184.939933
KES 151.344328
KGS 102.454005
KHR 4699.197143
KMF 493.234395
KPW 1054.43934
KRW 1745.468735
KWD 0.361116
KYD 0.976348
KZT 549.878462
LAK 25716.123453
LBP 105150.026727
LKR 380.231651
LRD 214.57466
LSL 19.226057
LTL 3.459363
LVL 0.708675
LYD 7.410193
MAD 10.747758
MDL 20.0931
MGA 4891.33573
MKD 61.635919
MMK 2459.473576
MNT 4193.865493
MOP 9.450699
MRU 46.863218
MUR 54.84144
MVR 18.053649
MWK 2040.295627
MXN 20.113167
MYR 4.599628
MZN 74.860808
NAD 19.225688
NGN 1605.623002
NIO 43.002772
NOK 10.739627
NPR 179.312517
NZD 1.975525
OMR 0.450414
PAB 1.171602
PEN 4.016757
PGK 5.108019
PHP 71.952469
PKR 326.382702
PLN 4.2477
PYG 7164.604642
QAR 4.268647
RON 5.208363
RSD 117.382677
RUB 86.904361
RWF 1710.502998
SAR 4.402872
SBD 9.410412
SCR 16.330594
SDG 703.542135
SEK 10.926465
SGD 1.490557
SHP 0.874701
SLE 28.823398
SLL 24567.394667
SOS 669.559557
SRD 43.575646
STD 24249.286687
STN 24.89602
SVC 10.251296
SYP 129.551813
SZL 19.313411
THB 37.889169
TJS 10.971838
TMT 4.112237
TND 3.374732
TOP 2.820877
TRY 53.230856
TTD 7.948916
TWD 36.980249
TZS 3043.348516
UAH 51.5192
UGX 4393.058898
USD 1.171577
UYU 46.541218
UZS 14150.311878
VES 595.237083
VND 30868.721224
VUV 138.221382
WST 3.166467
XAF 656.120751
XAG 0.013399
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.166246
XCG 2.111455
XDR 0.81421
XOF 654.332389
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.567675
ZAR 19.234782
ZMK 10545.588979
ZMW 22.113613
ZWL 377.247443
  • RBGPF

    -0.2100

    60.79

    -0.35%

  • BCE

    -0.0800

    24.39

    -0.33%

  • AZN

    3.1800

    187.72

    +1.69%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    23.56

    -0.17%

  • NGG

    -0.2600

    86.98

    -0.3%

  • GSK

    0.0900

    50.99

    +0.18%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.05

    -0.26%

  • RIO

    2.5400

    112.04

    +2.27%

  • BP

    -0.2600

    44.14

    -0.59%

  • BTI

    1.7100

    65.35

    +2.62%

  • RELX

    -1.1500

    31.62

    -3.64%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.13

    -0.08%

  • BCC

    -0.9500

    66.98

    -1.42%

  • VOD

    0.4150

    15.51

    +2.68%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1700

    16.03

    -1.06%

With waters at 32C, Mediterranean tropicalisation shifts into high gear
With waters at 32C, Mediterranean tropicalisation shifts into high gear / Photo: IBRAHIM CHALHOUB - AFP

With waters at 32C, Mediterranean tropicalisation shifts into high gear

When Murat Draman went scuba diving off the coast of the southern Turkish province of Antalya and saw the temperature in the depths was pushing 30C, it didn't surprise him.

Text size:

"We were at a depth of 30 metres (100 feet) this morning and the water was 29C," said Draman, a diving instructor in an area which is experiencing firsthand the rapid "tropicalisation" of the Mediterranean Sea.

Encouraged by increasingly warm waters, hundreds of species native to the Red Sea have moved through the Suez Canal and into the eastern Mediterranean, disrupting ecosystems, scientists say.

The threat is facing the entire Mediterranean, one of the fastest-warming seas, which this year saw its hottest June and July on record, figures from the Mercator Ocean International research centre show.

Draman, who remembers when the water temperatures were 25C in August in the early 2000s, said he had seen dozens of Red Sea species colonising the clear waters of Antalya, where surface temperatures reached nearly 32C this week.

The striking but highly venomous lionfish (Pterois miles) with its long spotted fins that measure around 26 centimetres (10 inches), is now at home in such warm temperatures and wreaking havoc in the local ecosystem.

"About a decade ago, we saw one or two of them. Now we're talking about 15 or 20 per dive -- even more than when we go to the Red Sea," Draman told AFP.

"They are big predators. Small fish like gobies suffer a lot, we hardly see them anymore.

- 'A warning' -

Such invasive species are disrupting ecosystems across the eastern Mediterranean, the warmest area of the sea and the area that is heating up fastest, explained Professor Gil Rilov, a researcher at the Israel Oceanographic and Limnological Research institute (IOLR), who also lectures at Haifa University.

"The invasion started almost immediately after the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869," he said.

"But now it's getting warmer, and also (in 2015), the canals got deeper and wider, so more and more new species move in every year," the marine biologist told AFP, admitting some new arrivals could also be beneficial in waters that are becoming too warm for the native species.

And many of these species -- which have become ubiquitous off the coasts of Turkey, Lebanon and Israel -- are now moving further west, he said, pointing to the rabbitfish (Siganus rivulatus) which has recently colonised the waters off Malta, more than 1,700 kilometres (over 1,000 miles) from the Suez Canal.

What is happening in the eastern Mediterranean, where many native species have already disappeared, "is a warning", Rilov added, pointing to two possible causes for their disappearance: excessively warm waters and fierce competition with these invasive species.

"What is happening here will happen in five, 10 or 20 years in the north and west of the Mediterranean," he predicted.

Last week, Mercator figures showed the sea had registered its warmest July on record with an average surface temperature of 26.68C -- a figure that is worrying experts.

- 'Absence of predators' -

This "tropicalisation" could also occur in the coming years through the Strait of Gibraltar at the far end of the Mediterranean basin, according to a study published in the prestigious US science journal PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences) in April 2024.

In it, the authors warned that even in an intermediate climate scenario, the warming of the Atlantic Ocean could see certain species migrate from the southern coasts of west Africa to the western Mediterranean by 2050.

A more pessimistic scenario could even see the Mediterranean "entirely tropicalised" by 2100, they warned.

Faced with such a threat, Draman said invasive species must be kept as far as possible from protected marine areas "in order to preserve biodiversity".

"It is clear that with the absence of Mediterranean predators, species such as lionfish are very comfortable here and their population is increasing year on year," he said.

"In the Red Sea, lionfish have predators. There are sharks and barracudas. Here, we have none of that."

M.Fujitav--JT