Simonović, Predrag

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Authority KeyName Variants
orcid::0000-0002-4819-4962
  • Simonović, Predrag (41)
  • simonović, Predrag (2)
Projects
Evolution in Heterogeneous Environments: Adaptation Mechanisms, Biomonitoring and Conservation of Biodiversity Managing the effects of multiple stressors on aquatic ecosystems under water scarcity
Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 451-03-68/2020-14/200007 (University of Belgrade, Institute for Biological Research 'Siniša Stanković') Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 451-03-68/2020-14/200178 (University of Belgrade, Faculty of Biology)
Monitoring and Modeling of Rivers and Reservoirs (MORE) - Physical, Chemical, Biological and Morphodynamic Parameters Fishes as water quality indicators in open waters of Serbia
2014 FCT Investigator Programme (IF/01606/2014/CP1230/CT0001) Belarus Republican Foundation for Fundamental Research
Belmont Forum-Biodiversa project InvasiBES (PCI2018-092939) Bilateral project of the Republic of Serbia and the Republic of Slovenia (BI-RS/18-19-029)
BiodivERsA (FFII project; DFG grant JE 288/7-1) Bolyai János Fellowship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
CABI Development Fund Cefas and the UK Department of Environment, Food & Rural Affairs
Commission for Knowledge and Use of Biodiversity (CONABIO), Mexico COST Action TD1209
Croatian Science Foundation (grant IP-2016-06-2563) Croatian Science Foundation grant IP-2016-06-2563
Croatian Science Foundation (IP-06-2016) and the University of Zagreb (1-28-121) Croatia-Serbia bilateral programme 2019-2022 and by the EIFAAC/FAO Project "Management/Threat of Aquatic Invasive Species in Europe"
Darwin plus, DPLUS074 DFG project JE 288/9-1,9-2
ERAChair projects, under grant agreement no. 621329 ERAChair projects, under grant agreement no. 692241
FRISK Project (FCT Ref. PTDC/AAG-MAA/0350/2014) Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia grants SFRH/BPD/91357/2012 and SFRH/BPD/86215/2012
Grant #337-00-205/2019-09/04 Status of Diversity in Brown Trout in the Danube River Basin and Implications for Fisheries and Conservation Grant #451-03-02263/2018-09/19 Sustainable utilization of water courses in Montenegro and Serbia and conservation of genetic diversity of their fish fauna
Analysis of the structural genome changes as a diagnostic and prognostic parameter of human diseases Biosensing Technologies and Global System for Long-Term Research and Integrated Management of Ecosystems

Author's Bibliography

Terrestrial prey, an important part in Salmo trutta diet or a stochastic event?

Čanak Atlagić, Jelena; Marić, Ana; Marinković, Nikola; Đuknić, Jelena; Anđus, Stefan; Ilić, Marija; Tubić, Bojana; Stojanović, Katarina; Paunović, Momir; Simonović, Predrag

(European Ichthyological Society, 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Čanak Atlagić, Jelena
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Marinković, Nikola
AU  - Đuknić, Jelena
AU  - Anđus, Stefan
AU  - Ilić, Marija
AU  - Tubić, Bojana
AU  - Stojanović, Katarina
AU  - Paunović, Momir
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6679
AB  - The brown trout is a valuable species for recreational fishing and its diet is of great interest. It feeds on 
various aquatic invertebrates, but also consumes terrestrial prey, whose contribution is often unjustly 
underestimated. The importance of terrestrial prey in diets of two trout populations was assessed at two 
sites (April-October) with different quantity of available aquatic prey (Site 1 high, Site 2 low quantity). 
Four indices of importance were used: frequency of occurrence (FO), number of prey items (AN), weight 
(AW), and index of relative importance (IRI). Preference for terrestrial prey was also estimated based on 
the electivity index (EI), where the availability of aquatic and terrestrial prey was expressed as their 
percentage in the drift samples.
Significantly less terrestrial prey was available at Site 1 (0.39% ± 0.57%) in contrast to Site 2 (13.21% ± 
10.38%), terrestrial prey was significantly more abundant in the trout diet than in the drift samples at 
both sites (t test). The EI was positive for terrestrial prey, additionally FO showed that this prey was 
present in 36% ± 16.65% (site 1) and in 87.55% ± 8.94% individuals (site 2), indicating a high preference for 
this type of prey. The importance (IRI) of terrestrial prey was higher than expected at Site 1 (1.39% ± 
1.53%; maximum 4.7% in September) and high at Site 2 (58.6% ± 23.56%; maximum 84.67% in 
September). Terrestrial prey became more present in the drift and more important in the diet toward the 
end of the study period, while the importance of aquatic prey decreased based on all four indices at both 
sites. The correlation between the increasing importance of terrestrial prey (AN, IRI) in the diet and the 
presence of aquatic prey in the drift (%) towards the end of the season was not significant (Pearson). Thus, 
the positive trend in the importance of terrestrial prey may be due to their increasing availability and 
simultaneous decline of large prey in the aquatic community due to the emergence of adults.
Terrestrial prey is generally larger (i.e., yielding more energy) than most aquatic prey and easily captured 
due to its low mobility in the aquatic environment. In the habitat with low availability of aquatic prey, 
terrestrial prey played an important role in brown trout diet. In addition, brown trout also preferred it in 
the habitat rich in aquatic prey. This study shows that terrestrial prey is significant brown trout feeding 
resource regardless of its general availability in the environment.
PB  - European Ichthyological Society
C3  - Abstract book: 17th European Congress of Ichthyology; 2023 Sep 4-8; Prague, Czech Republic
T1  - Terrestrial prey, an important part in Salmo trutta diet or a stochastic event?
SP  - 104
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6679
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Čanak Atlagić, Jelena and Marić, Ana and Marinković, Nikola and Đuknić, Jelena and Anđus, Stefan and Ilić, Marija and Tubić, Bojana and Stojanović, Katarina and Paunović, Momir and Simonović, Predrag",
year = "2023",
abstract = "The brown trout is a valuable species for recreational fishing and its diet is of great interest. It feeds on 
various aquatic invertebrates, but also consumes terrestrial prey, whose contribution is often unjustly 
underestimated. The importance of terrestrial prey in diets of two trout populations was assessed at two 
sites (April-October) with different quantity of available aquatic prey (Site 1 high, Site 2 low quantity). 
Four indices of importance were used: frequency of occurrence (FO), number of prey items (AN), weight 
(AW), and index of relative importance (IRI). Preference for terrestrial prey was also estimated based on 
the electivity index (EI), where the availability of aquatic and terrestrial prey was expressed as their 
percentage in the drift samples.
Significantly less terrestrial prey was available at Site 1 (0.39% ± 0.57%) in contrast to Site 2 (13.21% ± 
10.38%), terrestrial prey was significantly more abundant in the trout diet than in the drift samples at 
both sites (t test). The EI was positive for terrestrial prey, additionally FO showed that this prey was 
present in 36% ± 16.65% (site 1) and in 87.55% ± 8.94% individuals (site 2), indicating a high preference for 
this type of prey. The importance (IRI) of terrestrial prey was higher than expected at Site 1 (1.39% ± 
1.53%; maximum 4.7% in September) and high at Site 2 (58.6% ± 23.56%; maximum 84.67% in 
September). Terrestrial prey became more present in the drift and more important in the diet toward the 
end of the study period, while the importance of aquatic prey decreased based on all four indices at both 
sites. The correlation between the increasing importance of terrestrial prey (AN, IRI) in the diet and the 
presence of aquatic prey in the drift (%) towards the end of the season was not significant (Pearson). Thus, 
the positive trend in the importance of terrestrial prey may be due to their increasing availability and 
simultaneous decline of large prey in the aquatic community due to the emergence of adults.
Terrestrial prey is generally larger (i.e., yielding more energy) than most aquatic prey and easily captured 
due to its low mobility in the aquatic environment. In the habitat with low availability of aquatic prey, 
terrestrial prey played an important role in brown trout diet. In addition, brown trout also preferred it in 
the habitat rich in aquatic prey. This study shows that terrestrial prey is significant brown trout feeding 
resource regardless of its general availability in the environment.",
publisher = "European Ichthyological Society",
journal = "Abstract book: 17th European Congress of Ichthyology; 2023 Sep 4-8; Prague, Czech Republic",
title = "Terrestrial prey, an important part in Salmo trutta diet or a stochastic event?",
pages = "104",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6679"
}
Čanak Atlagić, J., Marić, A., Marinković, N., Đuknić, J., Anđus, S., Ilić, M., Tubić, B., Stojanović, K., Paunović, M.,& Simonović, P.. (2023). Terrestrial prey, an important part in Salmo trutta diet or a stochastic event?. in Abstract book: 17th European Congress of Ichthyology; 2023 Sep 4-8; Prague, Czech Republic
European Ichthyological Society., 104.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6679
Čanak Atlagić J, Marić A, Marinković N, Đuknić J, Anđus S, Ilić M, Tubić B, Stojanović K, Paunović M, Simonović P. Terrestrial prey, an important part in Salmo trutta diet or a stochastic event?. in Abstract book: 17th European Congress of Ichthyology; 2023 Sep 4-8; Prague, Czech Republic. 2023;:104.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6679 .
Čanak Atlagić, Jelena, Marić, Ana, Marinković, Nikola, Đuknić, Jelena, Anđus, Stefan, Ilić, Marija, Tubić, Bojana, Stojanović, Katarina, Paunović, Momir, Simonović, Predrag, "Terrestrial prey, an important part in Salmo trutta diet or a stochastic event?" in Abstract book: 17th European Congress of Ichthyology; 2023 Sep 4-8; Prague, Czech Republic (2023):104,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6679 .

In situ genotoxicity assessment in the weight-of-evidence approach – The Joint Danube Survey 4 case study

Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta; Jovanović Marić, Jovana; Đorđević, Jelena; Sunjog, Karolina; Nikolić, Ivan; Marić, Ana; Ilić, Marija; Simonović, Predrag; Alygizakis, Nikiforos; Ng, Kelsey; Oswald, Peter; Slobodnik, Jaroslav; Žegura, Bojana; Vuković-Gačić, Branka; Paunović, Momir; Kolarević, Stoimir

(Austrian Committee - International Association for Danube Research, 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta
AU  - Jovanović Marić, Jovana
AU  - Đorđević, Jelena
AU  - Sunjog, Karolina
AU  - Nikolić, Ivan
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Ilić, Marija
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Alygizakis, Nikiforos
AU  - Ng, Kelsey
AU  - Oswald, Peter
AU  - Slobodnik, Jaroslav
AU  - Žegura, Bojana
AU  - Vuković-Gačić, Branka
AU  - Paunović, Momir
AU  - Kolarević, Stoimir
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6592
AB  - Assessment of impact of pollution in the environmental studies requires multi-endpoints approach to properly
link cause and effects of pollution with focus on chemical pollution. In this sense systematic weight-of-evidence
approach (WoE) with multiple lines of evidence (LoEs) is preferable to apply. The WoE approach highlights the
importance to identify strengths and weaknesses of used LoEs. Therefore, in this study we have tested efficacy
of genotoxicological endpoints as one of the LoEs in the in situ assessment of pollution effects in the freshwater
ecosystems using Alburnus alburnus (bleak) as a bioindicator species. Additional LoEs that were used in the
study are: component-based methods for the assessment of SumTU in water based on monitoring data of the
Serbian Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA), effect based methods employing in vitro genotoxicological
analyses of Joint Danube Survey 4 (JDS4) water extracts and field derived species inventories for the
assessment and indication of ecological status/potential based on SEPA and JDS4 data. The study was
conducted within the JDS4 campaign at nine sampling sites at the Tisa, Sava, Velika Morava and Danube rivers
in the Republic of Serbia. In the case of three sampling sites, the results were uniform, meaning that all four
LoEs pointed to pollution pressure. The differences in the LoEs outcomes for other sites indicated the
importance of multiple LoEs approach for proper identification of ecological impact. In the case of current
study we have identified comet and micronucleus assay to be appropriate for the genotoxicological assessment
in the in situ studies due to high sensitivity in discrimination of sites in relation to pollution intensity, while
RAPD analysis to be more suitable for controlled ex situ investigations.
PB  - Austrian Committee - International Association for Danube Research
C3  - Conference Book: 44th IAD conference: Tackling Present & Future Environmental Challenges of a European Riverscape; 2023 Feb 6-9; Krems, Austria
T1  - In situ genotoxicity assessment in the weight-of-evidence approach – The Joint Danube Survey 4 case study
SP  - 18
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6592
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta and Jovanović Marić, Jovana and Đorđević, Jelena and Sunjog, Karolina and Nikolić, Ivan and Marić, Ana and Ilić, Marija and Simonović, Predrag and Alygizakis, Nikiforos and Ng, Kelsey and Oswald, Peter and Slobodnik, Jaroslav and Žegura, Bojana and Vuković-Gačić, Branka and Paunović, Momir and Kolarević, Stoimir",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Assessment of impact of pollution in the environmental studies requires multi-endpoints approach to properly
link cause and effects of pollution with focus on chemical pollution. In this sense systematic weight-of-evidence
approach (WoE) with multiple lines of evidence (LoEs) is preferable to apply. The WoE approach highlights the
importance to identify strengths and weaknesses of used LoEs. Therefore, in this study we have tested efficacy
of genotoxicological endpoints as one of the LoEs in the in situ assessment of pollution effects in the freshwater
ecosystems using Alburnus alburnus (bleak) as a bioindicator species. Additional LoEs that were used in the
study are: component-based methods for the assessment of SumTU in water based on monitoring data of the
Serbian Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA), effect based methods employing in vitro genotoxicological
analyses of Joint Danube Survey 4 (JDS4) water extracts and field derived species inventories for the
assessment and indication of ecological status/potential based on SEPA and JDS4 data. The study was
conducted within the JDS4 campaign at nine sampling sites at the Tisa, Sava, Velika Morava and Danube rivers
in the Republic of Serbia. In the case of three sampling sites, the results were uniform, meaning that all four
LoEs pointed to pollution pressure. The differences in the LoEs outcomes for other sites indicated the
importance of multiple LoEs approach for proper identification of ecological impact. In the case of current
study we have identified comet and micronucleus assay to be appropriate for the genotoxicological assessment
in the in situ studies due to high sensitivity in discrimination of sites in relation to pollution intensity, while
RAPD analysis to be more suitable for controlled ex situ investigations.",
publisher = "Austrian Committee - International Association for Danube Research",
journal = "Conference Book: 44th IAD conference: Tackling Present & Future Environmental Challenges of a European Riverscape; 2023 Feb 6-9; Krems, Austria",
title = "In situ genotoxicity assessment in the weight-of-evidence approach – The Joint Danube Survey 4 case study",
pages = "18",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6592"
}
Kračun-Kolarević, M., Jovanović Marić, J., Đorđević, J., Sunjog, K., Nikolić, I., Marić, A., Ilić, M., Simonović, P., Alygizakis, N., Ng, K., Oswald, P., Slobodnik, J., Žegura, B., Vuković-Gačić, B., Paunović, M.,& Kolarević, S.. (2023). In situ genotoxicity assessment in the weight-of-evidence approach – The Joint Danube Survey 4 case study. in Conference Book: 44th IAD conference: Tackling Present & Future Environmental Challenges of a European Riverscape; 2023 Feb 6-9; Krems, Austria
Austrian Committee - International Association for Danube Research., 18.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6592
Kračun-Kolarević M, Jovanović Marić J, Đorđević J, Sunjog K, Nikolić I, Marić A, Ilić M, Simonović P, Alygizakis N, Ng K, Oswald P, Slobodnik J, Žegura B, Vuković-Gačić B, Paunović M, Kolarević S. In situ genotoxicity assessment in the weight-of-evidence approach – The Joint Danube Survey 4 case study. in Conference Book: 44th IAD conference: Tackling Present & Future Environmental Challenges of a European Riverscape; 2023 Feb 6-9; Krems, Austria. 2023;:18.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6592 .
Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta, Jovanović Marić, Jovana, Đorđević, Jelena, Sunjog, Karolina, Nikolić, Ivan, Marić, Ana, Ilić, Marija, Simonović, Predrag, Alygizakis, Nikiforos, Ng, Kelsey, Oswald, Peter, Slobodnik, Jaroslav, Žegura, Bojana, Vuković-Gačić, Branka, Paunović, Momir, Kolarević, Stoimir, "In situ genotoxicity assessment in the weight-of-evidence approach – The Joint Danube Survey 4 case study" in Conference Book: 44th IAD conference: Tackling Present & Future Environmental Challenges of a European Riverscape; 2023 Feb 6-9; Krems, Austria (2023):18,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6592 .

Status and Perspectives of the Ichthyofauna of the Labudovo okno Ramsar Site: An Analysis of 14 Years of Data

Nikolić, Vera; Nedić, Zlatko; Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka; Đikanović, Vesna; Kanjuh, Tamara; Marić, Ana; Simonović, Predrag

(Basel: MDPI, 2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Nikolić, Vera
AU  - Nedić, Zlatko
AU  - Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka
AU  - Đikanović, Vesna
AU  - Kanjuh, Tamara
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5919
AB  - Over the last 14 years, ichthyological and ecological parameters have been monitored in
the Labudovo okno Ramsar site. This area is important for its biodiversity as it is home to many
rare and endangered plants and animal species. A total of 3861 fish specimens were sampled and
measured at six sampling sites four times during the sampling period. An analysis of biodiversity
indexes, relative biomass (kg/ha), and relative annual production (kg/ha) was carried out to assess
the effectiveness of existing conservation measures. The results obtained show a trend decline in
biodiversity, relative biomass, and relative annual production. This indicates a biodiversity conservation
problem that should be addressed through other mechanisms in addition to the principles of the
Ramsar Convention.
PB  - Basel: MDPI
T2  - Sustainability
T1  - Status and Perspectives of the Ichthyofauna of the Labudovo okno Ramsar Site: An Analysis of 14 Years of Data
IS  - 12
VL  - 15
DO  - 10.3390/su15129303
SP  - 9303
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Nikolić, Vera and Nedić, Zlatko and Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka and Đikanović, Vesna and Kanjuh, Tamara and Marić, Ana and Simonović, Predrag",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Over the last 14 years, ichthyological and ecological parameters have been monitored in
the Labudovo okno Ramsar site. This area is important for its biodiversity as it is home to many
rare and endangered plants and animal species. A total of 3861 fish specimens were sampled and
measured at six sampling sites four times during the sampling period. An analysis of biodiversity
indexes, relative biomass (kg/ha), and relative annual production (kg/ha) was carried out to assess
the effectiveness of existing conservation measures. The results obtained show a trend decline in
biodiversity, relative biomass, and relative annual production. This indicates a biodiversity conservation
problem that should be addressed through other mechanisms in addition to the principles of the
Ramsar Convention.",
publisher = "Basel: MDPI",
journal = "Sustainability",
title = "Status and Perspectives of the Ichthyofauna of the Labudovo okno Ramsar Site: An Analysis of 14 Years of Data",
number = "12",
volume = "15",
doi = "10.3390/su15129303",
pages = "9303"
}
Nikolić, V., Nedić, Z., Škraba Jurlina, D., Đikanović, V., Kanjuh, T., Marić, A.,& Simonović, P.. (2023). Status and Perspectives of the Ichthyofauna of the Labudovo okno Ramsar Site: An Analysis of 14 Years of Data. in Sustainability
Basel: MDPI., 15(12), 9303.
https://doi.org/10.3390/su15129303
Nikolić V, Nedić Z, Škraba Jurlina D, Đikanović V, Kanjuh T, Marić A, Simonović P. Status and Perspectives of the Ichthyofauna of the Labudovo okno Ramsar Site: An Analysis of 14 Years of Data. in Sustainability. 2023;15(12):9303.
doi:10.3390/su15129303 .
Nikolić, Vera, Nedić, Zlatko, Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka, Đikanović, Vesna, Kanjuh, Tamara, Marić, Ana, Simonović, Predrag, "Status and Perspectives of the Ichthyofauna of the Labudovo okno Ramsar Site: An Analysis of 14 Years of Data" in Sustainability, 15, no. 12 (2023):9303,
https://doi.org/10.3390/su15129303 . .
1
2

Which habitat characteristics promote growth of brown trout (Salmo trutta L. 1758)?

Čanak Atlagić, Jelena; Marinković, Nikola; Marić, Ana; Tubić, Bojana; Đuknić, Jelena; Anđus, Stefan; Paunović, Momir; Simonović, Predrag

(Zagreb: Croatian Association of Freshwater Ecologists, 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Čanak Atlagić, Jelena
AU  - Marinković, Nikola
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Tubić, Bojana
AU  - Đuknić, Jelena
AU  - Anđus, Stefan
AU  - Paunović, Momir
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5687
AB  - Fish production is a direct measure of habitat quality. Physical characteristics of the habitat, as well as the quality and quantity of available food, can promote or slow the fish growth. Brown trout populations were monitored from April to October (2015) at three study sites with different habitat characteristics. Brown trout growth parameters (biomass, production, overall growth quality) and environmental parameters (water conductivity, suspended particles, prey biomass, prey diversity, pH, dissolved oxygen, etc.) were correlated to examine their relationship (CCA). One of the sites (Belosavac), the most productive, had high conductivity and was rich in prey, with domination of Gammaridae, but with low prey diversity and evenness. The other two sites (Rasina and Lomnica) had higher prey diversity and evenness but significantly lower prey abundance, with one of the two sites (Lomnica) having very low water conductivity and suspended particles concentration and the lowest prey abundance. High brown trout biomass and production were found to be positively correlated with high water conductivity, amount of suspended particles, prey abundance and diversity. Overall growth quality was negatively correlated with high prey diversity and evenness found at a site with very low prey abundance. According to this study, high water conductivity, as found in calcareous streams, promotes high prey production and consequently high trout production, while high prey diversity does not positively affect trout production when its abundance is low.
PB  - Zagreb: Croatian Association of Freshwater Ecologists
C3  - Book of Abstracts: 4th Symposium on Freshwater Biology with the international participation; 2023 Apr 21; Zagreb, Croatia
T1  - Which habitat characteristics promote growth of brown trout (Salmo trutta L. 1758)?
SP  - 38
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5687
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Čanak Atlagić, Jelena and Marinković, Nikola and Marić, Ana and Tubić, Bojana and Đuknić, Jelena and Anđus, Stefan and Paunović, Momir and Simonović, Predrag",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Fish production is a direct measure of habitat quality. Physical characteristics of the habitat, as well as the quality and quantity of available food, can promote or slow the fish growth. Brown trout populations were monitored from April to October (2015) at three study sites with different habitat characteristics. Brown trout growth parameters (biomass, production, overall growth quality) and environmental parameters (water conductivity, suspended particles, prey biomass, prey diversity, pH, dissolved oxygen, etc.) were correlated to examine their relationship (CCA). One of the sites (Belosavac), the most productive, had high conductivity and was rich in prey, with domination of Gammaridae, but with low prey diversity and evenness. The other two sites (Rasina and Lomnica) had higher prey diversity and evenness but significantly lower prey abundance, with one of the two sites (Lomnica) having very low water conductivity and suspended particles concentration and the lowest prey abundance. High brown trout biomass and production were found to be positively correlated with high water conductivity, amount of suspended particles, prey abundance and diversity. Overall growth quality was negatively correlated with high prey diversity and evenness found at a site with very low prey abundance. According to this study, high water conductivity, as found in calcareous streams, promotes high prey production and consequently high trout production, while high prey diversity does not positively affect trout production when its abundance is low.",
publisher = "Zagreb: Croatian Association of Freshwater Ecologists",
journal = "Book of Abstracts: 4th Symposium on Freshwater Biology with the international participation; 2023 Apr 21; Zagreb, Croatia",
title = "Which habitat characteristics promote growth of brown trout (Salmo trutta L. 1758)?",
pages = "38",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5687"
}
Čanak Atlagić, J., Marinković, N., Marić, A., Tubić, B., Đuknić, J., Anđus, S., Paunović, M.,& Simonović, P.. (2023). Which habitat characteristics promote growth of brown trout (Salmo trutta L. 1758)?. in Book of Abstracts: 4th Symposium on Freshwater Biology with the international participation; 2023 Apr 21; Zagreb, Croatia
Zagreb: Croatian Association of Freshwater Ecologists., 38.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5687
Čanak Atlagić J, Marinković N, Marić A, Tubić B, Đuknić J, Anđus S, Paunović M, Simonović P. Which habitat characteristics promote growth of brown trout (Salmo trutta L. 1758)?. in Book of Abstracts: 4th Symposium on Freshwater Biology with the international participation; 2023 Apr 21; Zagreb, Croatia. 2023;:38.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5687 .
Čanak Atlagić, Jelena, Marinković, Nikola, Marić, Ana, Tubić, Bojana, Đuknić, Jelena, Anđus, Stefan, Paunović, Momir, Simonović, Predrag, "Which habitat characteristics promote growth of brown trout (Salmo trutta L. 1758)?" in Book of Abstracts: 4th Symposium on Freshwater Biology with the international participation; 2023 Apr 21; Zagreb, Croatia (2023):38,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5687 .

In situ detection of the genotoxic potential as one of the lines of evidence in the weight-of-evidence approach—the Joint Danube Survey 4 Case Study

Jovanović Marić, Jovana; Kolarević, Stoimir; Đorđević, Jelena; Sunjog, Karolina; Nikolić, Ivan; Marić, Ana; Ilić, Marija; Simonović, Predrag; Alygizakis, Nikiforos; Ng, Kelsey; Oswald, Peter; Slobodnik, Jaroslav; Žegura, Bojana; Vuković-Gačić, Branka; Paunović, Momir; Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta

(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Jovanović Marić, Jovana
AU  - Kolarević, Stoimir
AU  - Đorđević, Jelena
AU  - Sunjog, Karolina
AU  - Nikolić, Ivan
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Ilić, Marija
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Alygizakis, Nikiforos
AU  - Ng, Kelsey
AU  - Oswald, Peter
AU  - Slobodnik, Jaroslav
AU  - Žegura, Bojana
AU  - Vuković-Gačić, Branka
AU  - Paunović, Momir
AU  - Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta
PY  - 2023
UR  - https://academic.oup.com/mutage/advance-article/doi/10.1093/mutage/geac024/6823671
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5243
AB  - Environmental studies which aim to assess the ecological impact of chemical and other types of pollution should employ a complex weight-of-evidence approach with multiple lines of evidence (LoEs). This study focused on in situ genotoxicological methods such as the comet and micronucleus assays and randomly amplified polymorphic DNA analysis as one of the multiple LoEs (LoE3) on the fish species Alburnus alburnus (bleak) as a bioindicator. The study was carried out within the Joint Danube Survey 4 (JDS4) at nine sites in the Danube River Basin in the Republic of Serbia. Out of nine sampling sites, two were situated at the Tisa, Sava, and Velika Morava rivers, and three sites were at the Danube River. The three additionally employed LoEs were: SumTUwater calculated based on the monitoring data in the database of the Serbian Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA) (LoE1); in vitro analyses of JDS4 water extracts employing genotoxicological methods (LoE2); assessment of the ecological status/potential by SEPA and indication of the ecological status for the sites performed within the JDS4 (LoE4). The analyzed biomarker responses in the bleak were integrated into the unique integrated biomarker response index which was used to rank the sites. The highest pollution pressure was recorded at JDS4 39 and JDS4 36, while the lowest was at JDS4 35. The impact of pollution was confirmed at three sites, JDS4 33, 40, and 41, by all four LoEs. At other sampling sites, a difference was observed regarding the pollution depending on the employed LoEs. This indicates the importance of implementing a comprehensive weight-of-evidence approach to ensure the impact of pollution is not overlooked when using only one LoE as is often the case in environmental studies.
PB  - Oxford: Oxford University Press
T2  - Mutagenesis
T1  - In situ detection of the genotoxic potential as one of the lines of evidence in the weight-of-evidence approach—the Joint Danube Survey 4 Case Study
IS  - 1
VL  - 38
DO  - 10.1093/mutage/geac024
SP  - 21
EP  - 32
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Jovanović Marić, Jovana and Kolarević, Stoimir and Đorđević, Jelena and Sunjog, Karolina and Nikolić, Ivan and Marić, Ana and Ilić, Marija and Simonović, Predrag and Alygizakis, Nikiforos and Ng, Kelsey and Oswald, Peter and Slobodnik, Jaroslav and Žegura, Bojana and Vuković-Gačić, Branka and Paunović, Momir and Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Environmental studies which aim to assess the ecological impact of chemical and other types of pollution should employ a complex weight-of-evidence approach with multiple lines of evidence (LoEs). This study focused on in situ genotoxicological methods such as the comet and micronucleus assays and randomly amplified polymorphic DNA analysis as one of the multiple LoEs (LoE3) on the fish species Alburnus alburnus (bleak) as a bioindicator. The study was carried out within the Joint Danube Survey 4 (JDS4) at nine sites in the Danube River Basin in the Republic of Serbia. Out of nine sampling sites, two were situated at the Tisa, Sava, and Velika Morava rivers, and three sites were at the Danube River. The three additionally employed LoEs were: SumTUwater calculated based on the monitoring data in the database of the Serbian Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA) (LoE1); in vitro analyses of JDS4 water extracts employing genotoxicological methods (LoE2); assessment of the ecological status/potential by SEPA and indication of the ecological status for the sites performed within the JDS4 (LoE4). The analyzed biomarker responses in the bleak were integrated into the unique integrated biomarker response index which was used to rank the sites. The highest pollution pressure was recorded at JDS4 39 and JDS4 36, while the lowest was at JDS4 35. The impact of pollution was confirmed at three sites, JDS4 33, 40, and 41, by all four LoEs. At other sampling sites, a difference was observed regarding the pollution depending on the employed LoEs. This indicates the importance of implementing a comprehensive weight-of-evidence approach to ensure the impact of pollution is not overlooked when using only one LoE as is often the case in environmental studies.",
publisher = "Oxford: Oxford University Press",
journal = "Mutagenesis",
title = "In situ detection of the genotoxic potential as one of the lines of evidence in the weight-of-evidence approach—the Joint Danube Survey 4 Case Study",
number = "1",
volume = "38",
doi = "10.1093/mutage/geac024",
pages = "21-32"
}
Jovanović Marić, J., Kolarević, S., Đorđević, J., Sunjog, K., Nikolić, I., Marić, A., Ilić, M., Simonović, P., Alygizakis, N., Ng, K., Oswald, P., Slobodnik, J., Žegura, B., Vuković-Gačić, B., Paunović, M.,& Kračun-Kolarević, M.. (2023). In situ detection of the genotoxic potential as one of the lines of evidence in the weight-of-evidence approach—the Joint Danube Survey 4 Case Study. in Mutagenesis
Oxford: Oxford University Press., 38(1), 21-32.
https://doi.org/10.1093/mutage/geac024
Jovanović Marić J, Kolarević S, Đorđević J, Sunjog K, Nikolić I, Marić A, Ilić M, Simonović P, Alygizakis N, Ng K, Oswald P, Slobodnik J, Žegura B, Vuković-Gačić B, Paunović M, Kračun-Kolarević M. In situ detection of the genotoxic potential as one of the lines of evidence in the weight-of-evidence approach—the Joint Danube Survey 4 Case Study. in Mutagenesis. 2023;38(1):21-32.
doi:10.1093/mutage/geac024 .
Jovanović Marić, Jovana, Kolarević, Stoimir, Đorđević, Jelena, Sunjog, Karolina, Nikolić, Ivan, Marić, Ana, Ilić, Marija, Simonović, Predrag, Alygizakis, Nikiforos, Ng, Kelsey, Oswald, Peter, Slobodnik, Jaroslav, Žegura, Bojana, Vuković-Gačić, Branka, Paunović, Momir, Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta, "In situ detection of the genotoxic potential as one of the lines of evidence in the weight-of-evidence approach—the Joint Danube Survey 4 Case Study" in Mutagenesis, 38, no. 1 (2023):21-32,
https://doi.org/10.1093/mutage/geac024 . .
3

Changing climate may mitigate the invasiveness risk of non-native salmonids in the Danube and Adriatic basins of the Balkan Peninsula (south-eastern Europe)

Marić, Ana; Špelić, Ivan; Radočaj, Tena; Vidović, Zoran; Kanjuh, Tamara; Vilizzi, Lorenzo; Piria, Marina; Nikolić, Vera; Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka; Mrdak, Danilo; Simonović, Predrag

(Sofia: Pensoft Publishers, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Špelić, Ivan
AU  - Radočaj, Tena
AU  - Vidović, Zoran
AU  - Kanjuh, Tamara
AU  - Vilizzi, Lorenzo
AU  - Piria, Marina
AU  - Nikolić, Vera
AU  - Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka
AU  - Mrdak, Danilo
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://neobiota.pensoft.net/article/82964/
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5184
AB  - Salmonids are an extensively hatchery-reared group of fishes that have been introduced worldwide mainly for their high commercial and recreational value. The Balkan Peninsula (south-eastern Europe) is characterised by an outstanding salmonid diversity that has become threatened by the introduction of non-native salmonids whose potential risk of invasiveness in the region remains unknown and especially so under predicted climate change conditions. In this study, 13 extant and four horizon non-native salmonid species were screened for their risk of invasiveness in the Danube and Adriatic basins of four Balkan countries. Overall, six (35%) of the screened species were ranked as carrying a high risk of invasiveness under current climate conditions, whereas under predicted conditions of global warming, this number decreased to three (17%). Under current climate conditions, the very high risk (‘top invasive’) species were rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss and brown trout Salmo trutta ( sensu stricto ), whereas under predicted climate change, this was true only of O. mykiss . A high risk was also attributed to horizon vendace Coregonus albula and lake charr Salvelinus namaycush , and to extant Atlantic salmon Salmo salar and brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis , whose risk of invasiveness, except for S. fontinalis , decreased to medium. For the other eleven medium-risk species, the risk score decreased under predicted climate change, but still remained medium. The outcomes of this study reveal that global warming will influence salmonids and that only species with wider temperature tolerance, such as O. mykiss will likely prevail. It is anticipated that the present results may contribute to the implementation of appropriate management plans to prevent the introduction and translocation of non-native salmonids across the Balkan Peninsula. Additionally, adequate measures should be developed for aquaculture facilities to prevent escapees of non-native salmonids with a high risk of invasiveness, especially into recipient areas of high conservation value.
PB  - Sofia: Pensoft Publishers
T2  - NeoBiota
T1  - Changing climate may mitigate the invasiveness risk of non-native salmonids in the Danube and Adriatic basins of the Balkan Peninsula (south-eastern Europe)
VL  - 76
DO  - 10.3897/neobiota.76.82964
SP  - 135
EP  - 161
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Marić, Ana and Špelić, Ivan and Radočaj, Tena and Vidović, Zoran and Kanjuh, Tamara and Vilizzi, Lorenzo and Piria, Marina and Nikolić, Vera and Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka and Mrdak, Danilo and Simonović, Predrag",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Salmonids are an extensively hatchery-reared group of fishes that have been introduced worldwide mainly for their high commercial and recreational value. The Balkan Peninsula (south-eastern Europe) is characterised by an outstanding salmonid diversity that has become threatened by the introduction of non-native salmonids whose potential risk of invasiveness in the region remains unknown and especially so under predicted climate change conditions. In this study, 13 extant and four horizon non-native salmonid species were screened for their risk of invasiveness in the Danube and Adriatic basins of four Balkan countries. Overall, six (35%) of the screened species were ranked as carrying a high risk of invasiveness under current climate conditions, whereas under predicted conditions of global warming, this number decreased to three (17%). Under current climate conditions, the very high risk (‘top invasive’) species were rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss and brown trout Salmo trutta ( sensu stricto ), whereas under predicted climate change, this was true only of O. mykiss . A high risk was also attributed to horizon vendace Coregonus albula and lake charr Salvelinus namaycush , and to extant Atlantic salmon Salmo salar and brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis , whose risk of invasiveness, except for S. fontinalis , decreased to medium. For the other eleven medium-risk species, the risk score decreased under predicted climate change, but still remained medium. The outcomes of this study reveal that global warming will influence salmonids and that only species with wider temperature tolerance, such as O. mykiss will likely prevail. It is anticipated that the present results may contribute to the implementation of appropriate management plans to prevent the introduction and translocation of non-native salmonids across the Balkan Peninsula. Additionally, adequate measures should be developed for aquaculture facilities to prevent escapees of non-native salmonids with a high risk of invasiveness, especially into recipient areas of high conservation value.",
publisher = "Sofia: Pensoft Publishers",
journal = "NeoBiota",
title = "Changing climate may mitigate the invasiveness risk of non-native salmonids in the Danube and Adriatic basins of the Balkan Peninsula (south-eastern Europe)",
volume = "76",
doi = "10.3897/neobiota.76.82964",
pages = "135-161"
}
Marić, A., Špelić, I., Radočaj, T., Vidović, Z., Kanjuh, T., Vilizzi, L., Piria, M., Nikolić, V., Škraba Jurlina, D., Mrdak, D.,& Simonović, P.. (2022). Changing climate may mitigate the invasiveness risk of non-native salmonids in the Danube and Adriatic basins of the Balkan Peninsula (south-eastern Europe). in NeoBiota
Sofia: Pensoft Publishers., 76, 135-161.
https://doi.org/10.3897/neobiota.76.82964
Marić A, Špelić I, Radočaj T, Vidović Z, Kanjuh T, Vilizzi L, Piria M, Nikolić V, Škraba Jurlina D, Mrdak D, Simonović P. Changing climate may mitigate the invasiveness risk of non-native salmonids in the Danube and Adriatic basins of the Balkan Peninsula (south-eastern Europe). in NeoBiota. 2022;76:135-161.
doi:10.3897/neobiota.76.82964 .
Marić, Ana, Špelić, Ivan, Radočaj, Tena, Vidović, Zoran, Kanjuh, Tamara, Vilizzi, Lorenzo, Piria, Marina, Nikolić, Vera, Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka, Mrdak, Danilo, Simonović, Predrag, "Changing climate may mitigate the invasiveness risk of non-native salmonids in the Danube and Adriatic basins of the Balkan Peninsula (south-eastern Europe)" in NeoBiota, 76 (2022):135-161,
https://doi.org/10.3897/neobiota.76.82964 . .
7
6
4

Feeding Habits and Diet Overlap between Brown Trout Lineages from the Danube Basin of Croatia

Piria, Marina; Špelić, Ivan; Velagić, Luana; Lisica, Ivana; Kanjuh, Tamara; Marić, Ana; Maguire, Ivana; Radočaj, Tena; Simonović, Predrag

(Basel: MDPI, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Piria, Marina
AU  - Špelić, Ivan
AU  - Velagić, Luana
AU  - Lisica, Ivana
AU  - Kanjuh, Tamara
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Maguire, Ivana
AU  - Radočaj, Tena
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://www.mdpi.com/2410-3888/7/4/179
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5118
AB  - Brown trout of non-native lineages have been stocked into Croatian streams and rivers primarily to meet angler demand. The diet of brown trout in the Black Sea Basin of Croatia is poorly understood, and there are no studies examining feeding competition between the Atlantic (AT) and Danube (DA) lineages of brown trout and their hybrids (HY). The aim of this study was to examine the natural diet of brown trout of both lineages and their hybrids and to compare feeding overlap. Canonical correspondence analysis was used to investigate the relationships between feeding habits of fish from different streams and of different genetic origin. The differences in variation of the consumed prey items were analysed by canonical variate analysis, and diet overlap was assessed by the Schoener index. The results indicate that stocked brown trout (AT) adapt rapidly to new habitat and food, as revealed by the consumption of a wide range of available food items and competition for food and space by taking on the feeding behaviour of wild native conspecifics. Diet overlap was also detected between brown trout of the DA and AT lineages. This study highlights the need to implement control measures to preserve and protect the native diversity of this species.
PB  - Basel: MDPI
T2  - Fishes
T1  - Feeding Habits and Diet Overlap between Brown Trout Lineages from the Danube Basin of Croatia
IS  - 4
VL  - 7
DO  - 10.3390/fishes7040179
SP  - 179
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Piria, Marina and Špelić, Ivan and Velagić, Luana and Lisica, Ivana and Kanjuh, Tamara and Marić, Ana and Maguire, Ivana and Radočaj, Tena and Simonović, Predrag",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Brown trout of non-native lineages have been stocked into Croatian streams and rivers primarily to meet angler demand. The diet of brown trout in the Black Sea Basin of Croatia is poorly understood, and there are no studies examining feeding competition between the Atlantic (AT) and Danube (DA) lineages of brown trout and their hybrids (HY). The aim of this study was to examine the natural diet of brown trout of both lineages and their hybrids and to compare feeding overlap. Canonical correspondence analysis was used to investigate the relationships between feeding habits of fish from different streams and of different genetic origin. The differences in variation of the consumed prey items were analysed by canonical variate analysis, and diet overlap was assessed by the Schoener index. The results indicate that stocked brown trout (AT) adapt rapidly to new habitat and food, as revealed by the consumption of a wide range of available food items and competition for food and space by taking on the feeding behaviour of wild native conspecifics. Diet overlap was also detected between brown trout of the DA and AT lineages. This study highlights the need to implement control measures to preserve and protect the native diversity of this species.",
publisher = "Basel: MDPI",
journal = "Fishes",
title = "Feeding Habits and Diet Overlap between Brown Trout Lineages from the Danube Basin of Croatia",
number = "4",
volume = "7",
doi = "10.3390/fishes7040179",
pages = "179"
}
Piria, M., Špelić, I., Velagić, L., Lisica, I., Kanjuh, T., Marić, A., Maguire, I., Radočaj, T.,& Simonović, P.. (2022). Feeding Habits and Diet Overlap between Brown Trout Lineages from the Danube Basin of Croatia. in Fishes
Basel: MDPI., 7(4), 179.
https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes7040179
Piria M, Špelić I, Velagić L, Lisica I, Kanjuh T, Marić A, Maguire I, Radočaj T, Simonović P. Feeding Habits and Diet Overlap between Brown Trout Lineages from the Danube Basin of Croatia. in Fishes. 2022;7(4):179.
doi:10.3390/fishes7040179 .
Piria, Marina, Špelić, Ivan, Velagić, Luana, Lisica, Ivana, Kanjuh, Tamara, Marić, Ana, Maguire, Ivana, Radočaj, Tena, Simonović, Predrag, "Feeding Habits and Diet Overlap between Brown Trout Lineages from the Danube Basin of Croatia" in Fishes, 7, no. 4 (2022):179,
https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes7040179 . .
1
1
1

New species of fish and crustaceans in Montenegrin waters (South Adriatic Sea)

Tomanić, Jovana; Pešić, Ana; Joksimović, Aleksandar; Ikica, Zdravko; Simonović, Predrag; Ćetković, Ilija

(Split: Institute of Oceanography and Fisheries, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Tomanić, Jovana
AU  - Pešić, Ana
AU  - Joksimović, Aleksandar
AU  - Ikica, Zdravko
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Ćetković, Ilija
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://hrcak.srce.hr/281140
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5107
AB  - The structure and composition of Mediterranean biodiversity has changed significantly. So far, in Montenegrin coastal waters, nine new non-native species have been recorded: Tylosurus acus imperialis, Caranx crysos, Siganus luridus, Fistularia commersonii, Stephanolepis diaspros, Sphoeroides pachygaster, Lagocephalus sceleratus, Callinectes sapidus and Farfantepanaeus aztecus. Allochthonous species are starting to compete for food and space and leading to habitat degradation, socio-economic impacts and can hybridise with the native species. Natural factors and human activities have enabled the arrival of non-native species into the Adriatic Sea. Four of the species are Lessepsian immigrants, which arrived via the Suez Canal, but five others were introduced from the Atlantic Ocean, through the Strait of Gibraltar. Analysis using the Marine Fish Invasiveness Screening Kit (MFISK), Aquatic Invasiveness Screening Kit (AS-ISK) and Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) showed a calibration threshold of 22.5 for MFISK, a BRA (Basic Risk Assessment) score of 34 and a CCA (Climate Change Assessment) score of 46. A measure of the accuracy of the calibration analysis is the area under the ROC curve (AUC). Two species were characterised as non-invasive: Tylosurus acus imperialis and Caranx crysos, but five others were characterised as invasive and covered by the categories from moderate to high-risk.
PB  - Split: Institute of Oceanography and Fisheries
T2  - Acta Adriatica
T1  - New species of fish and crustaceans in Montenegrin waters (South Adriatic Sea)
IS  - 1
VL  - 63
DO  - 10.32582/aa.63.1.11
SP  - 109
EP  - 122
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Tomanić, Jovana and Pešić, Ana and Joksimović, Aleksandar and Ikica, Zdravko and Simonović, Predrag and Ćetković, Ilija",
year = "2022",
abstract = "The structure and composition of Mediterranean biodiversity has changed significantly. So far, in Montenegrin coastal waters, nine new non-native species have been recorded: Tylosurus acus imperialis, Caranx crysos, Siganus luridus, Fistularia commersonii, Stephanolepis diaspros, Sphoeroides pachygaster, Lagocephalus sceleratus, Callinectes sapidus and Farfantepanaeus aztecus. Allochthonous species are starting to compete for food and space and leading to habitat degradation, socio-economic impacts and can hybridise with the native species. Natural factors and human activities have enabled the arrival of non-native species into the Adriatic Sea. Four of the species are Lessepsian immigrants, which arrived via the Suez Canal, but five others were introduced from the Atlantic Ocean, through the Strait of Gibraltar. Analysis using the Marine Fish Invasiveness Screening Kit (MFISK), Aquatic Invasiveness Screening Kit (AS-ISK) and Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) showed a calibration threshold of 22.5 for MFISK, a BRA (Basic Risk Assessment) score of 34 and a CCA (Climate Change Assessment) score of 46. A measure of the accuracy of the calibration analysis is the area under the ROC curve (AUC). Two species were characterised as non-invasive: Tylosurus acus imperialis and Caranx crysos, but five others were characterised as invasive and covered by the categories from moderate to high-risk.",
publisher = "Split: Institute of Oceanography and Fisheries",
journal = "Acta Adriatica",
title = "New species of fish and crustaceans in Montenegrin waters (South Adriatic Sea)",
number = "1",
volume = "63",
doi = "10.32582/aa.63.1.11",
pages = "109-122"
}
Tomanić, J., Pešić, A., Joksimović, A., Ikica, Z., Simonović, P.,& Ćetković, I.. (2022). New species of fish and crustaceans in Montenegrin waters (South Adriatic Sea). in Acta Adriatica
Split: Institute of Oceanography and Fisheries., 63(1), 109-122.
https://doi.org/10.32582/aa.63.1.11
Tomanić J, Pešić A, Joksimović A, Ikica Z, Simonović P, Ćetković I. New species of fish and crustaceans in Montenegrin waters (South Adriatic Sea). in Acta Adriatica. 2022;63(1):109-122.
doi:10.32582/aa.63.1.11 .
Tomanić, Jovana, Pešić, Ana, Joksimović, Aleksandar, Ikica, Zdravko, Simonović, Predrag, Ćetković, Ilija, "New species of fish and crustaceans in Montenegrin waters (South Adriatic Sea)" in Acta Adriatica, 63, no. 1 (2022):109-122,
https://doi.org/10.32582/aa.63.1.11 . .
4
4

Effects of run‐of‐river hydropower plants on fish communities in montane stream ecosystems in Serbia

Simonović, Predrag; Ristić, Ratko; Milčanović, Vukašin; Polovina, Siniša; Malušević, Ivan; Radić, Boris; Kanjuh, Tamara; Marić, Ana; Nikolić, Vera

(John Wiley and Sons Ltd, 2021)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Ristić, Ratko
AU  - Milčanović, Vukašin
AU  - Polovina, Siniša
AU  - Malušević, Ivan
AU  - Radić, Boris
AU  - Kanjuh, Tamara
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Nikolić, Vera
PY  - 2021
UR  - https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/rra.3795
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4212
AB  - Small run-of-river hydropower plants (RRHPs) have revealed strong harmful effects worldwide on stream habitats (e.g., fragmentation and destruction) and decreased fish species, especially anadromous species abundance. Recently, RRHPs have rapidly been installed in Serbia. Most were installed on montane streams because their steep slopes are most convenient for hydropower energy production at minimal costs. Brown trout Salmo trutta are prominent in the fish communities of this rarest type of aquatic ecosystems. Their native molecular diversity reflects a biodiversity hotspot in the Balkans, and they provide attractive fishing opportunities. Records from fishery management plans for highland stream fisheries where RRHPs were installed revealed reduced brown trout biomass compared with streams without RRHPs. Research on six streams with operational RRHPs revealed severe deterioration of habitat, for example, increased water temperature, reduced dissolved oxygen, and increased nutrient contents. Effects on fish communities were evident from a change in their structure. Resident, stream-dwelling brown trout were the most affected species with steep declines in abundance, biomass, and productivity. Fragmentation owing to damming was also reflected by deterioration of their age structure. Unique native brown trout stocks susceptible to adverse effects are difficult to restore by stocking, and fish passages commonly supplied as compensation to overcome the disruption of habitats cannot mitigate the threat posed to the fish.
PB  - John Wiley and Sons Ltd
T2  - River Research and Applications
T1  - Effects of run‐of‐river hydropower plants on fish communities in montane stream ecosystems in Serbia
DO  - 10.1002/rra.3795
SP  - rra.3795
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Simonović, Predrag and Ristić, Ratko and Milčanović, Vukašin and Polovina, Siniša and Malušević, Ivan and Radić, Boris and Kanjuh, Tamara and Marić, Ana and Nikolić, Vera",
year = "2021",
abstract = "Small run-of-river hydropower plants (RRHPs) have revealed strong harmful effects worldwide on stream habitats (e.g., fragmentation and destruction) and decreased fish species, especially anadromous species abundance. Recently, RRHPs have rapidly been installed in Serbia. Most were installed on montane streams because their steep slopes are most convenient for hydropower energy production at minimal costs. Brown trout Salmo trutta are prominent in the fish communities of this rarest type of aquatic ecosystems. Their native molecular diversity reflects a biodiversity hotspot in the Balkans, and they provide attractive fishing opportunities. Records from fishery management plans for highland stream fisheries where RRHPs were installed revealed reduced brown trout biomass compared with streams without RRHPs. Research on six streams with operational RRHPs revealed severe deterioration of habitat, for example, increased water temperature, reduced dissolved oxygen, and increased nutrient contents. Effects on fish communities were evident from a change in their structure. Resident, stream-dwelling brown trout were the most affected species with steep declines in abundance, biomass, and productivity. Fragmentation owing to damming was also reflected by deterioration of their age structure. Unique native brown trout stocks susceptible to adverse effects are difficult to restore by stocking, and fish passages commonly supplied as compensation to overcome the disruption of habitats cannot mitigate the threat posed to the fish.",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Ltd",
journal = "River Research and Applications",
title = "Effects of run‐of‐river hydropower plants on fish communities in montane stream ecosystems in Serbia",
doi = "10.1002/rra.3795",
pages = "rra.3795"
}
Simonović, P., Ristić, R., Milčanović, V., Polovina, S., Malušević, I., Radić, B., Kanjuh, T., Marić, A.,& Nikolić, V.. (2021). Effects of run‐of‐river hydropower plants on fish communities in montane stream ecosystems in Serbia. in River Research and Applications
John Wiley and Sons Ltd., rra.3795.
https://doi.org/10.1002/rra.3795
Simonović P, Ristić R, Milčanović V, Polovina S, Malušević I, Radić B, Kanjuh T, Marić A, Nikolić V. Effects of run‐of‐river hydropower plants on fish communities in montane stream ecosystems in Serbia. in River Research and Applications. 2021;:rra.3795.
doi:10.1002/rra.3795 .
Simonović, Predrag, Ristić, Ratko, Milčanović, Vukašin, Polovina, Siniša, Malušević, Ivan, Radić, Boris, Kanjuh, Tamara, Marić, Ana, Nikolić, Vera, "Effects of run‐of‐river hydropower plants on fish communities in montane stream ecosystems in Serbia" in River Research and Applications (2021):rra.3795,
https://doi.org/10.1002/rra.3795 . .
9
9
2
9

Application of the geometric morphometrics approach in the discrimination of morphological traits between brown trout lineages in the Danube Basin of Croatia

Špelić, Ivan; Rezić, Andrea; Kanjuh, Tamara; Marić, Ana; Maguire, Ivana; Simonović, Predrag; Radočaj, Tena; Piria, Marina

(2021)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Špelić, Ivan
AU  - Rezić, Andrea
AU  - Kanjuh, Tamara
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Maguire, Ivana
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Radočaj, Tena
AU  - Piria, Marina
PY  - 2021
UR  - https://www.kmae-journal.org/10.1051/kmae/2021021
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4405
AB  - Brown trout is a salmonid fish with a natural range extending throughout western Eurasia and North Africa. Due to its commercial value, it has also been introduced worldwide. In continental Croatia, introduced trout of the Atlantic lineage hybridizes with native trout of the Danubian lineage, threatening the native genetic diversity. The geometric morphometrics approach was used in this study to analyse changes in shape between native trout, introduced trout and their hybrids, classified a priori by molecular phylogenetic analyses. A total of 19 landmarks and semi-landmarks were used to capture the shape of 92 trout individuals belonging to two lineages and their hybrids. Canonical variate analysis and discriminant function analysis were used to analyse and describe shape variation. A significant difference was found between the shape of the Atlantic lineage trout and both Danubian lineage trout and hybrids, with the most prominent differences in body depth, head length and eye size. No statistically significant shape differences were observed between Danubian lineage trout and the hybrids. The observed significant differences in shape could be the result of genetic diversity or trout phenotypic plasticity. Further studies are needed to clarify the origin of this variation in shape.
T2  - Knowledge & Management of Aquatic Ecosystems
T1  - Application of the geometric morphometrics approach in the discrimination of morphological traits between brown trout lineages in the Danube Basin of Croatia
IS  - 422
VL  - 2021
DO  - 10.1051/kmae/2021021
SP  - 22
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Špelić, Ivan and Rezić, Andrea and Kanjuh, Tamara and Marić, Ana and Maguire, Ivana and Simonović, Predrag and Radočaj, Tena and Piria, Marina",
year = "2021",
abstract = "Brown trout is a salmonid fish with a natural range extending throughout western Eurasia and North Africa. Due to its commercial value, it has also been introduced worldwide. In continental Croatia, introduced trout of the Atlantic lineage hybridizes with native trout of the Danubian lineage, threatening the native genetic diversity. The geometric morphometrics approach was used in this study to analyse changes in shape between native trout, introduced trout and their hybrids, classified a priori by molecular phylogenetic analyses. A total of 19 landmarks and semi-landmarks were used to capture the shape of 92 trout individuals belonging to two lineages and their hybrids. Canonical variate analysis and discriminant function analysis were used to analyse and describe shape variation. A significant difference was found between the shape of the Atlantic lineage trout and both Danubian lineage trout and hybrids, with the most prominent differences in body depth, head length and eye size. No statistically significant shape differences were observed between Danubian lineage trout and the hybrids. The observed significant differences in shape could be the result of genetic diversity or trout phenotypic plasticity. Further studies are needed to clarify the origin of this variation in shape.",
journal = "Knowledge & Management of Aquatic Ecosystems",
title = "Application of the geometric morphometrics approach in the discrimination of morphological traits between brown trout lineages in the Danube Basin of Croatia",
number = "422",
volume = "2021",
doi = "10.1051/kmae/2021021",
pages = "22"
}
Špelić, I., Rezić, A., Kanjuh, T., Marić, A., Maguire, I., Simonović, P., Radočaj, T.,& Piria, M.. (2021). Application of the geometric morphometrics approach in the discrimination of morphological traits between brown trout lineages in the Danube Basin of Croatia. in Knowledge & Management of Aquatic Ecosystems, 2021(422), 22.
https://doi.org/10.1051/kmae/2021021
Špelić I, Rezić A, Kanjuh T, Marić A, Maguire I, Simonović P, Radočaj T, Piria M. Application of the geometric morphometrics approach in the discrimination of morphological traits between brown trout lineages in the Danube Basin of Croatia. in Knowledge & Management of Aquatic Ecosystems. 2021;2021(422):22.
doi:10.1051/kmae/2021021 .
Špelić, Ivan, Rezić, Andrea, Kanjuh, Tamara, Marić, Ana, Maguire, Ivana, Simonović, Predrag, Radočaj, Tena, Piria, Marina, "Application of the geometric morphometrics approach in the discrimination of morphological traits between brown trout lineages in the Danube Basin of Croatia" in Knowledge & Management of Aquatic Ecosystems, 2021, no. 422 (2021):22,
https://doi.org/10.1051/kmae/2021021 . .
6
4

A global-scale screening of non-native aquatic organisms to identify potentially invasive species under current and future climate conditions.

Vilizzi, Lorenzo; Copp, Gordon H.; Hill, Jeffrey E.; Simonović, Predrag; Clarke, Stacey

(2021)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Vilizzi, Lorenzo
AU  - Copp, Gordon H.
AU  - Hill, Jeffrey E.
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Clarke, Stacey
PY  - 2021
UR  - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0048969721029399
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4406
AB  - The threat posed by invasive non-native species worldwide requires a global approach to identify which introduced species are likely to pose an elevated risk of impact to native species and ecosystems. To inform policy, stakeholders and management decisions on global threats to aquatic ecosystems, 195 assessors representing 120 risk assessment areas across all six inhabited continents screened 819 non-native species from 15 groups of aquatic organisms (freshwater, brackish, marine plants and animals) using the Aquatic Species Invasiveness Screening Kit. This multi-lingual decision-support tool for the risk screening of aquatic organisms provides assessors with risk scores for a species under current and future climate change conditions that, following a statistically based calibration, permits the accurate classification of species into high-, medium- and low-risk categories under current and predicted climate conditions. The 1730 screenings undertaken encompassed wide geographical areas (regions, political entities, parts thereof, water bodies, river basins, lake drainage basins, and marine regions), which permitted thresholds to be identified for almost all aquatic organismal groups screened as well as for tropical, temperate and continental climate classes, and for tropical and temperate marine ecoregions. In total, 33 species were identified as posing a 'very high risk' of being or becoming invasive, and the scores of several of these species under current climate increased under future climate conditions, primarily due to their wide thermal tolerances. The risk thresholds determined for taxonomic groups and climate zones provide a basis against which area-specific or climate-based calibrated thresholds may be interpreted. In turn, the risk rankings help decision-makers identify which species require an immediate 'rapid' management action (e.g. eradication, control) to avoid or mitigate adverse impacts, which require a full risk assessment, and which are to be restricted or banned with regard to importation and/or sale as ornamental or aquarium/fishery enhancement.
T2  - The Science of the Total Environment
T1  - A global-scale screening of non-native aquatic organisms to identify potentially invasive species under current and future climate conditions.
VL  - 788
DO  - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.147868
SP  - 147868
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Vilizzi, Lorenzo and Copp, Gordon H. and Hill, Jeffrey E. and Simonović, Predrag and Clarke, Stacey",
year = "2021",
abstract = "The threat posed by invasive non-native species worldwide requires a global approach to identify which introduced species are likely to pose an elevated risk of impact to native species and ecosystems. To inform policy, stakeholders and management decisions on global threats to aquatic ecosystems, 195 assessors representing 120 risk assessment areas across all six inhabited continents screened 819 non-native species from 15 groups of aquatic organisms (freshwater, brackish, marine plants and animals) using the Aquatic Species Invasiveness Screening Kit. This multi-lingual decision-support tool for the risk screening of aquatic organisms provides assessors with risk scores for a species under current and future climate change conditions that, following a statistically based calibration, permits the accurate classification of species into high-, medium- and low-risk categories under current and predicted climate conditions. The 1730 screenings undertaken encompassed wide geographical areas (regions, political entities, parts thereof, water bodies, river basins, lake drainage basins, and marine regions), which permitted thresholds to be identified for almost all aquatic organismal groups screened as well as for tropical, temperate and continental climate classes, and for tropical and temperate marine ecoregions. In total, 33 species were identified as posing a 'very high risk' of being or becoming invasive, and the scores of several of these species under current climate increased under future climate conditions, primarily due to their wide thermal tolerances. The risk thresholds determined for taxonomic groups and climate zones provide a basis against which area-specific or climate-based calibrated thresholds may be interpreted. In turn, the risk rankings help decision-makers identify which species require an immediate 'rapid' management action (e.g. eradication, control) to avoid or mitigate adverse impacts, which require a full risk assessment, and which are to be restricted or banned with regard to importation and/or sale as ornamental or aquarium/fishery enhancement.",
journal = "The Science of the Total Environment",
title = "A global-scale screening of non-native aquatic organisms to identify potentially invasive species under current and future climate conditions.",
volume = "788",
doi = "10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.147868",
pages = "147868"
}
Vilizzi, L., Copp, G. H., Hill, J. E., Simonović, P.,& Clarke, S.. (2021). A global-scale screening of non-native aquatic organisms to identify potentially invasive species under current and future climate conditions.. in The Science of the Total Environment, 788, 147868.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.147868
Vilizzi L, Copp GH, Hill JE, Simonović P, Clarke S. A global-scale screening of non-native aquatic organisms to identify potentially invasive species under current and future climate conditions.. in The Science of the Total Environment. 2021;788:147868.
doi:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.147868 .
Vilizzi, Lorenzo, Copp, Gordon H., Hill, Jeffrey E., Simonović, Predrag, Clarke, Stacey, "A global-scale screening of non-native aquatic organisms to identify potentially invasive species under current and future climate conditions." in The Science of the Total Environment, 788 (2021):147868,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.147868 . .
34
88
11
86

What’s on the menu for the resident brown trout in a rich limestone stream?

Čanak Atlagić, Jelena; Marić, Ana; Tubić, Bojana; Anđus, Stefan; Đuknić, Jelena; Marković, Vanja; Paunović, Momir; Simonović, Predrag

(Basel: MDPI, 2021)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Čanak Atlagić, Jelena
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Tubić, Bojana
AU  - Anđus, Stefan
AU  - Đuknić, Jelena
AU  - Marković, Vanja
AU  - Paunović, Momir
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
PY  - 2021
UR  - https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/13/18/2492
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4485
AB  - Examination of brown trout seasonal diet variation and investigation of terrestrial prey importance in a food-rich stream using four indices of prey importance (number and weight abundance, frequency of occurrence, index of relative importance) revealed that aquatic prey constituted the major part of the diet (>90%) throughout the examined period. Despite Gammaridae being the most abundant in the environment, other less abundant organisms appeared to be important prey, including terrestrial organisms, with maximum consumption in September. The electivity index showed a positive selection of rare prey types; Tokeshi’s model revealed a specialist strategy for most of the population, except for those of 1+ age, who were inclining to generalist strategy. Diet diversity increased throughout April to October, and ages 1+ and 2+ exhibited a more diverse diet than older ages. Diet overlap between age classes was considerable, with less overlap observed in the later season. This pattern of differentiation in the diet of brown trout age classes and their feeding plasticity over seasonal scales, as observed in this food-rich stream, provides a starting point for further examination of this topic in streams with similar or different food richness and availability.
PB  - Basel: MDPI
T2  - Water (Switzerland)
T1  - What’s on the menu for the resident brown trout in a rich limestone stream?
IS  - 18
VL  - 13
DO  - 10.3390/w13182492
SP  - 2492
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Čanak Atlagić, Jelena and Marić, Ana and Tubić, Bojana and Anđus, Stefan and Đuknić, Jelena and Marković, Vanja and Paunović, Momir and Simonović, Predrag",
year = "2021",
abstract = "Examination of brown trout seasonal diet variation and investigation of terrestrial prey importance in a food-rich stream using four indices of prey importance (number and weight abundance, frequency of occurrence, index of relative importance) revealed that aquatic prey constituted the major part of the diet (>90%) throughout the examined period. Despite Gammaridae being the most abundant in the environment, other less abundant organisms appeared to be important prey, including terrestrial organisms, with maximum consumption in September. The electivity index showed a positive selection of rare prey types; Tokeshi’s model revealed a specialist strategy for most of the population, except for those of 1+ age, who were inclining to generalist strategy. Diet diversity increased throughout April to October, and ages 1+ and 2+ exhibited a more diverse diet than older ages. Diet overlap between age classes was considerable, with less overlap observed in the later season. This pattern of differentiation in the diet of brown trout age classes and their feeding plasticity over seasonal scales, as observed in this food-rich stream, provides a starting point for further examination of this topic in streams with similar or different food richness and availability.",
publisher = "Basel: MDPI",
journal = "Water (Switzerland)",
title = "What’s on the menu for the resident brown trout in a rich limestone stream?",
number = "18",
volume = "13",
doi = "10.3390/w13182492",
pages = "2492"
}
Čanak Atlagić, J., Marić, A., Tubić, B., Anđus, S., Đuknić, J., Marković, V., Paunović, M.,& Simonović, P.. (2021). What’s on the menu for the resident brown trout in a rich limestone stream?. in Water (Switzerland)
Basel: MDPI., 13(18), 2492.
https://doi.org/10.3390/w13182492
Čanak Atlagić J, Marić A, Tubić B, Anđus S, Đuknić J, Marković V, Paunović M, Simonović P. What’s on the menu for the resident brown trout in a rich limestone stream?. in Water (Switzerland). 2021;13(18):2492.
doi:10.3390/w13182492 .
Čanak Atlagić, Jelena, Marić, Ana, Tubić, Bojana, Anđus, Stefan, Đuknić, Jelena, Marković, Vanja, Paunović, Momir, Simonović, Predrag, "What’s on the menu for the resident brown trout in a rich limestone stream?" in Water (Switzerland), 13, no. 18 (2021):2492,
https://doi.org/10.3390/w13182492 . .
3
3

Trout Salmo spp. (Salmoniformes: Salmonidae) Molecular Diversity in Streams on the Southern Slopes of the Stara Planina Mts. in Serbia

Kanjuh, Tamara; Tomić, Sunčica; Marić, Ana; Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka; Nikolić, Vera; Simonović, Predrag

(Sofia: Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research — Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, 2021)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Kanjuh, Tamara
AU  - Tomić, Sunčica
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka
AU  - Nikolić, Vera
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
PY  - 2021
UR  - https://acta-zoologica-bulgarica.eu/
UR  - http://www.acta-zoologica-bulgarica.eu/2021/002487
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4489
AB  - Brown trout Salmo trutta and Macedonian trout Salmo macedonicus molecular diversity in the streams draining on the southern slopes of the Stara Planina Mts. was assessed from mitochondrial DNA control region (CR) extracted from fin clip samples collected during the last ten years. It revealed an occurrence of seven haplotypes from three phylogeographic lineages (Danubian, Adriatic and Atlantic) in total. Only the two haplotypes, Da1a and Da-s6, can be inferred for certain as the native ones, owing to their occurrence in the headwaters of streams hitherto void of introgression of brown trout from downstream sections, due to unsurmountable waterfalls. The conservation status of brown trout that have the very common Da22 haplotype is not certain yet. They are very abundant in streams that were subject to massive stockings in the last ten years, occurring both in the headwaters and in the downstream sections, without the physical barrier between them. The rest of haplotypes belong either to the Atlantic or Adriatic haplogroups and they are most likely non-native in this area.
PB  - Sofia: Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research — Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
T2  - Acta Zoologica Bulgarica
T1  - Trout Salmo spp. (Salmoniformes: Salmonidae) Molecular Diversity in Streams on the Southern Slopes of the Stara Planina Mts. in Serbia
IS  - 3
VL  - 73
SP  - 425
EP  - 429
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4489
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Kanjuh, Tamara and Tomić, Sunčica and Marić, Ana and Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka and Nikolić, Vera and Simonović, Predrag",
year = "2021",
abstract = "Brown trout Salmo trutta and Macedonian trout Salmo macedonicus molecular diversity in the streams draining on the southern slopes of the Stara Planina Mts. was assessed from mitochondrial DNA control region (CR) extracted from fin clip samples collected during the last ten years. It revealed an occurrence of seven haplotypes from three phylogeographic lineages (Danubian, Adriatic and Atlantic) in total. Only the two haplotypes, Da1a and Da-s6, can be inferred for certain as the native ones, owing to their occurrence in the headwaters of streams hitherto void of introgression of brown trout from downstream sections, due to unsurmountable waterfalls. The conservation status of brown trout that have the very common Da22 haplotype is not certain yet. They are very abundant in streams that were subject to massive stockings in the last ten years, occurring both in the headwaters and in the downstream sections, without the physical barrier between them. The rest of haplotypes belong either to the Atlantic or Adriatic haplogroups and they are most likely non-native in this area.",
publisher = "Sofia: Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research — Bulgarian Academy of Sciences",
journal = "Acta Zoologica Bulgarica",
title = "Trout Salmo spp. (Salmoniformes: Salmonidae) Molecular Diversity in Streams on the Southern Slopes of the Stara Planina Mts. in Serbia",
number = "3",
volume = "73",
pages = "425-429",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4489"
}
Kanjuh, T., Tomić, S., Marić, A., Škraba Jurlina, D., Nikolić, V.,& Simonović, P.. (2021). Trout Salmo spp. (Salmoniformes: Salmonidae) Molecular Diversity in Streams on the Southern Slopes of the Stara Planina Mts. in Serbia. in Acta Zoologica Bulgarica
Sofia: Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research — Bulgarian Academy of Sciences., 73(3), 425-429.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4489
Kanjuh T, Tomić S, Marić A, Škraba Jurlina D, Nikolić V, Simonović P. Trout Salmo spp. (Salmoniformes: Salmonidae) Molecular Diversity in Streams on the Southern Slopes of the Stara Planina Mts. in Serbia. in Acta Zoologica Bulgarica. 2021;73(3):425-429.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4489 .
Kanjuh, Tamara, Tomić, Sunčica, Marić, Ana, Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka, Nikolić, Vera, Simonović, Predrag, "Trout Salmo spp. (Salmoniformes: Salmonidae) Molecular Diversity in Streams on the Southern Slopes of the Stara Planina Mts. in Serbia" in Acta Zoologica Bulgarica, 73, no. 3 (2021):425-429,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4489 .
5

Has the racer goby Babka gymnotrachelus (Kessler, 1857) failed to invade the Danube tributaries, the Sava and Drava Rivers?

Piria, Marina; Zanella, Davor; Marčić, Zoran; Ćaleta, Marko; Horvatić, Sven; Jakšić, Goran; Buj, Ivana; Paunović, Momir; Simonović, Predrag; Mustafić, Perica

(E. Schweizerbart'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, 2021)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Piria, Marina
AU  - Zanella, Davor
AU  - Marčić, Zoran
AU  - Ćaleta, Marko
AU  - Horvatić, Sven
AU  - Jakšić, Goran
AU  - Buj, Ivana
AU  - Paunović, Momir
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Mustafić, Perica
PY  - 2021
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/123456789/3910
AB  - During recent intensive research, monitoring and inventory programmes in the large, inland waters of Croatia, 72 specimens of the racer goby Babka gymnotrachelus were collected at eight locations in 2016 and 2018, and of these, 61 were juveniles. This confirms the establishment of a self-sustaining population in the main channel of the Danube in Croatia, and a small tributary, the Baranjska Karašica River. However, no progress of this species in the main tributaries, i.e. the Drava and Sava Rivers, has been observed to date. Future research should be focused on tributaries, channels and backwaters to confirm their localization only to the Danube River and its northwestern tributaries in Croatia.
PB  - E. Schweizerbart'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung
T2  - Fundamental and Applied Limnology / Archiv für Hydrobiologie
T1  - Has the racer goby Babka gymnotrachelus (Kessler, 1857) failed to invade the Danube tributaries, the Sava and Drava Rivers?
IS  - 3
VL  - 194
DO  - 10.1127/fal/2020/1271
SP  - 227
EP  - 235
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Piria, Marina and Zanella, Davor and Marčić, Zoran and Ćaleta, Marko and Horvatić, Sven and Jakšić, Goran and Buj, Ivana and Paunović, Momir and Simonović, Predrag and Mustafić, Perica",
year = "2021",
abstract = "During recent intensive research, monitoring and inventory programmes in the large, inland waters of Croatia, 72 specimens of the racer goby Babka gymnotrachelus were collected at eight locations in 2016 and 2018, and of these, 61 were juveniles. This confirms the establishment of a self-sustaining population in the main channel of the Danube in Croatia, and a small tributary, the Baranjska Karašica River. However, no progress of this species in the main tributaries, i.e. the Drava and Sava Rivers, has been observed to date. Future research should be focused on tributaries, channels and backwaters to confirm their localization only to the Danube River and its northwestern tributaries in Croatia.",
publisher = "E. Schweizerbart'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung",
journal = "Fundamental and Applied Limnology / Archiv für Hydrobiologie",
title = "Has the racer goby Babka gymnotrachelus (Kessler, 1857) failed to invade the Danube tributaries, the Sava and Drava Rivers?",
number = "3",
volume = "194",
doi = "10.1127/fal/2020/1271",
pages = "227-235"
}
Piria, M., Zanella, D., Marčić, Z., Ćaleta, M., Horvatić, S., Jakšić, G., Buj, I., Paunović, M., Simonović, P.,& Mustafić, P.. (2021). Has the racer goby Babka gymnotrachelus (Kessler, 1857) failed to invade the Danube tributaries, the Sava and Drava Rivers?. in Fundamental and Applied Limnology / Archiv für Hydrobiologie
E. Schweizerbart'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung., 194(3), 227-235.
https://doi.org/10.1127/fal/2020/1271
Piria M, Zanella D, Marčić Z, Ćaleta M, Horvatić S, Jakšić G, Buj I, Paunović M, Simonović P, Mustafić P. Has the racer goby Babka gymnotrachelus (Kessler, 1857) failed to invade the Danube tributaries, the Sava and Drava Rivers?. in Fundamental and Applied Limnology / Archiv für Hydrobiologie. 2021;194(3):227-235.
doi:10.1127/fal/2020/1271 .
Piria, Marina, Zanella, Davor, Marčić, Zoran, Ćaleta, Marko, Horvatić, Sven, Jakšić, Goran, Buj, Ivana, Paunović, Momir, Simonović, Predrag, Mustafić, Perica, "Has the racer goby Babka gymnotrachelus (Kessler, 1857) failed to invade the Danube tributaries, the Sava and Drava Rivers?" in Fundamental and Applied Limnology / Archiv für Hydrobiologie, 194, no. 3 (2021):227-235,
https://doi.org/10.1127/fal/2020/1271 . .
2
2

Diversity of brown trout, salmo trutta (Actinopterygii: Salmoniformes: Salmonidae), in the danube river basin of croatia revealed by mitochondrial dna

Kanjuh, Tamara; Marić, Ana; Piria, Marina; Špelić, Ivan; Maguire, Ivana; Simonović, Predrag

(Scientific Society of Szczecin, 2020)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Kanjuh, Tamara
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Piria, Marina
AU  - Špelić, Ivan
AU  - Maguire, Ivana
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
PY  - 2020
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/123456789/3890
AB  - Background. The molecular diversity of brown trout, Salmo trutta Linnaeus, 1758, has been poorly studied in Croatia. The control region of mitochondrial DNA (CR mtDNA) is in addition to other molecular markers a reliable for identifying phylogenetic lineages (haplogroups) and haplotypes of brown trout. Based on analyses of the control region of mitochondrial DNA several major brown trout phylogenetic lineages were identified of which the Danubian (DA) haplotypes, though not all, are considered native to Croatian rivers belonging to the Danube basin. The introduction of allochthonous haplotypes into natural streams seriously threatens the genetic diversity of this species. Therefore, the aim of this study was to map brown trout populations inhabiting Croatian rivers of the Danube River basin and to investigate their molecular diversity and phylogeographic patterns of the established haplotypes. Materials and methods. Anal fin tissue was taken from 141 specimens of brown trout in 14 localities in the protected areas of Croatia, situated in the mountainous regions of Gorski Kotar, Žumberak, as well as Mountain Papuk in the western Slavonia. The total DNA was extracted and then the amplification of the mtDNA control region was carried out using primers Trutta-mt-F and HN20. Amplification of the 440 bp long region of the LDH-C1 gene locus was done using primers Ldhxon3F and Ldhxon4R. Amplified LDH-C* fragments were used for Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP) analysis using BselI restriction enzyme. Results. Analysis of the CR mtDNA revealed the presence of two phylogenetic lineages, the DA and the Atlantic (AT). Haplotypes Da1, Da2, and Da22 were recorded within the DA lineage and At1 was recorded within the AT haplogroup. Two new haplotypes were described for the first time in this study and are named Da1f and Da1g. Restriction analysis of the lactate dehydrogenase gene locus revealed a high degree of hybridization between brown trout of DA and AT haplogroups. Conclusion. The results of this study confirmed the complex molecular diversity of brown trout and the high degree of the introduction of non-native haplogroups into rivers of the Danube basin in Croatia. Conservation of native brown trout populations has become evident, as introduced allochthonous DA and AT haplogroups severely disrupt the indigenous brown trout stock.
PB  - Scientific Society of Szczecin
T2  - Acta Ichthyologica et Piscatoria
T1  - Diversity of brown trout, salmo trutta (Actinopterygii: Salmoniformes: Salmonidae), in the danube river basin of croatia revealed by mitochondrial dna
IS  - 3
VL  - 50
DO  - 10.3750/AIEP/02939
SP  - 291
EP  - 300
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Kanjuh, Tamara and Marić, Ana and Piria, Marina and Špelić, Ivan and Maguire, Ivana and Simonović, Predrag",
year = "2020",
abstract = "Background. The molecular diversity of brown trout, Salmo trutta Linnaeus, 1758, has been poorly studied in Croatia. The control region of mitochondrial DNA (CR mtDNA) is in addition to other molecular markers a reliable for identifying phylogenetic lineages (haplogroups) and haplotypes of brown trout. Based on analyses of the control region of mitochondrial DNA several major brown trout phylogenetic lineages were identified of which the Danubian (DA) haplotypes, though not all, are considered native to Croatian rivers belonging to the Danube basin. The introduction of allochthonous haplotypes into natural streams seriously threatens the genetic diversity of this species. Therefore, the aim of this study was to map brown trout populations inhabiting Croatian rivers of the Danube River basin and to investigate their molecular diversity and phylogeographic patterns of the established haplotypes. Materials and methods. Anal fin tissue was taken from 141 specimens of brown trout in 14 localities in the protected areas of Croatia, situated in the mountainous regions of Gorski Kotar, Žumberak, as well as Mountain Papuk in the western Slavonia. The total DNA was extracted and then the amplification of the mtDNA control region was carried out using primers Trutta-mt-F and HN20. Amplification of the 440 bp long region of the LDH-C1 gene locus was done using primers Ldhxon3F and Ldhxon4R. Amplified LDH-C* fragments were used for Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP) analysis using BselI restriction enzyme. Results. Analysis of the CR mtDNA revealed the presence of two phylogenetic lineages, the DA and the Atlantic (AT). Haplotypes Da1, Da2, and Da22 were recorded within the DA lineage and At1 was recorded within the AT haplogroup. Two new haplotypes were described for the first time in this study and are named Da1f and Da1g. Restriction analysis of the lactate dehydrogenase gene locus revealed a high degree of hybridization between brown trout of DA and AT haplogroups. Conclusion. The results of this study confirmed the complex molecular diversity of brown trout and the high degree of the introduction of non-native haplogroups into rivers of the Danube basin in Croatia. Conservation of native brown trout populations has become evident, as introduced allochthonous DA and AT haplogroups severely disrupt the indigenous brown trout stock.",
publisher = "Scientific Society of Szczecin",
journal = "Acta Ichthyologica et Piscatoria",
title = "Diversity of brown trout, salmo trutta (Actinopterygii: Salmoniformes: Salmonidae), in the danube river basin of croatia revealed by mitochondrial dna",
number = "3",
volume = "50",
doi = "10.3750/AIEP/02939",
pages = "291-300"
}
Kanjuh, T., Marić, A., Piria, M., Špelić, I., Maguire, I.,& Simonović, P.. (2020). Diversity of brown trout, salmo trutta (Actinopterygii: Salmoniformes: Salmonidae), in the danube river basin of croatia revealed by mitochondrial dna. in Acta Ichthyologica et Piscatoria
Scientific Society of Szczecin., 50(3), 291-300.
https://doi.org/10.3750/AIEP/02939
Kanjuh T, Marić A, Piria M, Špelić I, Maguire I, Simonović P. Diversity of brown trout, salmo trutta (Actinopterygii: Salmoniformes: Salmonidae), in the danube river basin of croatia revealed by mitochondrial dna. in Acta Ichthyologica et Piscatoria. 2020;50(3):291-300.
doi:10.3750/AIEP/02939 .
Kanjuh, Tamara, Marić, Ana, Piria, Marina, Špelić, Ivan, Maguire, Ivana, Simonović, Predrag, "Diversity of brown trout, salmo trutta (Actinopterygii: Salmoniformes: Salmonidae), in the danube river basin of croatia revealed by mitochondrial dna" in Acta Ichthyologica et Piscatoria, 50, no. 3 (2020):291-300,
https://doi.org/10.3750/AIEP/02939 . .
10
1
9

Speaking their language – development of a multilingual decision-support tool for communicating invasive species risks to decision makers and stakeholders

Copp, Gordon H.; Vilizzi, Lorenzo; Wei, Hui; Li, Shan; Piria, Marina; Al-Faisal, Abbas J.; Almeida, David; Atique, Usman; Al-Wazzan, Zainab; Bakiu, Rigers; Bašić, Tea; Bui, Thuyet D.; Canning-Clode, João; Castro, Nuno; Chaichana, Ratcha; Çoker, Tülin; Dashinov, Dimitriy; Ekmekçi, F.Güler; Erős, Tibor; Ferincz, Árpád; Ferreira, Teresa; Giannetto, Daniela; Gilles, Allan S.; Głowacki, Łukasz; Goulletquer, Philippe; Interesova, Elena; Iqbal, Sonia; Jakubčinová, Katarína; Kanongdate, Kamalaporn; Kim, Jeong-Eun; Kopecký, Oldřich; Kostov, Vasil; Koutsikos, Nicholas; Kozic, Sebastian; Kristan, Petra; Kurita, Yoshihisa; Lee, Hwang-Goo; Leuven, Rob S.E.W.; Lipinskaya, Tatsiana; Lukas, Juliane; Marchini, Agnese; González Martínez, Ana Isabel; Masson, Laurence; Memedemin, Daniyar; Moghaddas, Seyed Daryoush; Monteiro, João; Mumladze, Levan; Naddafi, Rahmat; Năvodaru, Ion; Olsson, Karin H.; Onikura, Norio; Paganelli, Daniele; Pavia, Richard Thomas; Perdikaris, Costas; Pickholtz, Renanel; Pietraszewski, Dariusz; Povž, Meta; Preda, Cristina; Ristovska, Milica; Rosíková, Karin; Santos, José Maria; Semenchenko, Vitaliy; Senanan, Wansuk; Simonović, Predrag; Smeti, Evangelia; Števove, Barbora; Švolíková, Kristína; Ta, Kieu Anh T.; Tarkan, Ali Serhan; Top, Nildeniz; Tricarico, Elena; Uzunova, Eliza; Vardakas, Leonidas; Verreycken, Hugo; Zięba, Grzegorz; Mendoza, Roberto

(Elsevier BV, 2020)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Copp, Gordon H.
AU  - Vilizzi, Lorenzo
AU  - Wei, Hui
AU  - Li, Shan
AU  - Piria, Marina
AU  - Al-Faisal, Abbas J.
AU  - Almeida, David
AU  - Atique, Usman
AU  - Al-Wazzan, Zainab
AU  - Bakiu, Rigers
AU  - Bašić, Tea
AU  - Bui, Thuyet D.
AU  - Canning-Clode, João
AU  - Castro, Nuno
AU  - Chaichana, Ratcha
AU  - Çoker, Tülin
AU  - Dashinov, Dimitriy
AU  - Ekmekçi, F.Güler
AU  - Erős, Tibor
AU  - Ferincz, Árpád
AU  - Ferreira, Teresa
AU  - Giannetto, Daniela
AU  - Gilles, Allan S.
AU  - Głowacki, Łukasz
AU  - Goulletquer, Philippe
AU  - Interesova, Elena
AU  - Iqbal, Sonia
AU  - Jakubčinová, Katarína
AU  - Kanongdate, Kamalaporn
AU  - Kim, Jeong-Eun
AU  - Kopecký, Oldřich
AU  - Kostov, Vasil
AU  - Koutsikos, Nicholas
AU  - Kozic, Sebastian
AU  - Kristan, Petra
AU  - Kurita, Yoshihisa
AU  - Lee, Hwang-Goo
AU  - Leuven, Rob S.E.W.
AU  - Lipinskaya, Tatsiana
AU  - Lukas, Juliane
AU  - Marchini, Agnese
AU  - González Martínez, Ana Isabel
AU  - Masson, Laurence
AU  - Memedemin, Daniyar
AU  - Moghaddas, Seyed Daryoush
AU  - Monteiro, João
AU  - Mumladze, Levan
AU  - Naddafi, Rahmat
AU  - Năvodaru, Ion
AU  - Olsson, Karin H.
AU  - Onikura, Norio
AU  - Paganelli, Daniele
AU  - Pavia, Richard Thomas
AU  - Perdikaris, Costas
AU  - Pickholtz, Renanel
AU  - Pietraszewski, Dariusz
AU  - Povž, Meta
AU  - Preda, Cristina
AU  - Ristovska, Milica
AU  - Rosíková, Karin
AU  - Santos, José Maria
AU  - Semenchenko, Vitaliy
AU  - Senanan, Wansuk
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Smeti, Evangelia
AU  - Števove, Barbora
AU  - Švolíková, Kristína
AU  - Ta, Kieu Anh T.
AU  - Tarkan, Ali Serhan
AU  - Top, Nildeniz
AU  - Tricarico, Elena
AU  - Uzunova, Eliza
AU  - Vardakas, Leonidas
AU  - Verreycken, Hugo
AU  - Zięba, Grzegorz
AU  - Mendoza, Roberto
PY  - 2020
UR  - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1364815220309579
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3946
AB  - Environmental changes due to non-native species introductions and translocations are a global concern. Whilst understanding the causes of bioinvasions is important, there is need for decision-support tools that facilitate effective communication of the potential risks of invasive non-native species to stakeholders. Decision-support tools have been developed mostly in English language only, which increases linguistic uncertainty associated with risk assessments undertaken by assessors not of English mother tongue and who need to communicate outcomes to local stakeholders. To reduce language-based uncertainty, the ‘ecology-of-language’ paradigm was applied when developing the Aquatic Species Invasiveness Screening Kit (AS-ISK), a decision-support tool that offers 32 languages in which to carry out screenings and communicate outcomes to stakeholders. Topics discussed include uncertainty related to language-specific issues encountered during the AS-ISK translation and the potential benefits of a multilingual decision-support tool for reducing linguistic uncertainty and enhancing communication between scientists, environmental managers, and policy and decision makers.
PB  - Elsevier BV
T2  - Environmental Modelling & Software
T1  - Speaking their language – development of a multilingual decision-support tool for communicating invasive species risks to decision makers and stakeholders
VL  - 135
DO  - 10.1016/j.envsoft.2020.104900
SP  - 104900
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Copp, Gordon H. and Vilizzi, Lorenzo and Wei, Hui and Li, Shan and Piria, Marina and Al-Faisal, Abbas J. and Almeida, David and Atique, Usman and Al-Wazzan, Zainab and Bakiu, Rigers and Bašić, Tea and Bui, Thuyet D. and Canning-Clode, João and Castro, Nuno and Chaichana, Ratcha and Çoker, Tülin and Dashinov, Dimitriy and Ekmekçi, F.Güler and Erős, Tibor and Ferincz, Árpád and Ferreira, Teresa and Giannetto, Daniela and Gilles, Allan S. and Głowacki, Łukasz and Goulletquer, Philippe and Interesova, Elena and Iqbal, Sonia and Jakubčinová, Katarína and Kanongdate, Kamalaporn and Kim, Jeong-Eun and Kopecký, Oldřich and Kostov, Vasil and Koutsikos, Nicholas and Kozic, Sebastian and Kristan, Petra and Kurita, Yoshihisa and Lee, Hwang-Goo and Leuven, Rob S.E.W. and Lipinskaya, Tatsiana and Lukas, Juliane and Marchini, Agnese and González Martínez, Ana Isabel and Masson, Laurence and Memedemin, Daniyar and Moghaddas, Seyed Daryoush and Monteiro, João and Mumladze, Levan and Naddafi, Rahmat and Năvodaru, Ion and Olsson, Karin H. and Onikura, Norio and Paganelli, Daniele and Pavia, Richard Thomas and Perdikaris, Costas and Pickholtz, Renanel and Pietraszewski, Dariusz and Povž, Meta and Preda, Cristina and Ristovska, Milica and Rosíková, Karin and Santos, José Maria and Semenchenko, Vitaliy and Senanan, Wansuk and Simonović, Predrag and Smeti, Evangelia and Števove, Barbora and Švolíková, Kristína and Ta, Kieu Anh T. and Tarkan, Ali Serhan and Top, Nildeniz and Tricarico, Elena and Uzunova, Eliza and Vardakas, Leonidas and Verreycken, Hugo and Zięba, Grzegorz and Mendoza, Roberto",
year = "2020",
abstract = "Environmental changes due to non-native species introductions and translocations are a global concern. Whilst understanding the causes of bioinvasions is important, there is need for decision-support tools that facilitate effective communication of the potential risks of invasive non-native species to stakeholders. Decision-support tools have been developed mostly in English language only, which increases linguistic uncertainty associated with risk assessments undertaken by assessors not of English mother tongue and who need to communicate outcomes to local stakeholders. To reduce language-based uncertainty, the ‘ecology-of-language’ paradigm was applied when developing the Aquatic Species Invasiveness Screening Kit (AS-ISK), a decision-support tool that offers 32 languages in which to carry out screenings and communicate outcomes to stakeholders. Topics discussed include uncertainty related to language-specific issues encountered during the AS-ISK translation and the potential benefits of a multilingual decision-support tool for reducing linguistic uncertainty and enhancing communication between scientists, environmental managers, and policy and decision makers.",
publisher = "Elsevier BV",
journal = "Environmental Modelling & Software",
title = "Speaking their language – development of a multilingual decision-support tool for communicating invasive species risks to decision makers and stakeholders",
volume = "135",
doi = "10.1016/j.envsoft.2020.104900",
pages = "104900"
}
Copp, G. H., Vilizzi, L., Wei, H., Li, S., Piria, M., Al-Faisal, A. J., Almeida, D., Atique, U., Al-Wazzan, Z., Bakiu, R., Bašić, T., Bui, T. D., Canning-Clode, J., Castro, N., Chaichana, R., Çoker, T., Dashinov, D., Ekmekçi, F.Güler, Erős, T., Ferincz, Á., Ferreira, T., Giannetto, D., Gilles, A. S., Głowacki, Ł., Goulletquer, P., Interesova, E., Iqbal, S., Jakubčinová, K., Kanongdate, K., Kim, J., Kopecký, O., Kostov, V., Koutsikos, N., Kozic, S., Kristan, P., Kurita, Y., Lee, H., Leuven, R. S.E.W., Lipinskaya, T., Lukas, J., Marchini, A., González Martínez, A. I., Masson, L., Memedemin, D., Moghaddas, S. D., Monteiro, J., Mumladze, L., Naddafi, R., Năvodaru, I., Olsson, K. H., Onikura, N., Paganelli, D., Pavia, R. T., Perdikaris, C., Pickholtz, R., Pietraszewski, D., Povž, M., Preda, C., Ristovska, M., Rosíková, K., Santos, J. M., Semenchenko, V., Senanan, W., Simonović, P., Smeti, E., Števove, B., Švolíková, K., Ta, K. A. T., Tarkan, A. S., Top, N., Tricarico, E., Uzunova, E., Vardakas, L., Verreycken, H., Zięba, G.,& Mendoza, R.. (2020). Speaking their language – development of a multilingual decision-support tool for communicating invasive species risks to decision makers and stakeholders. in Environmental Modelling & Software
Elsevier BV., 135, 104900.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsoft.2020.104900
Copp GH, Vilizzi L, Wei H, Li S, Piria M, Al-Faisal AJ, Almeida D, Atique U, Al-Wazzan Z, Bakiu R, Bašić T, Bui TD, Canning-Clode J, Castro N, Chaichana R, Çoker T, Dashinov D, Ekmekçi F, Erős T, Ferincz Á, Ferreira T, Giannetto D, Gilles AS, Głowacki Ł, Goulletquer P, Interesova E, Iqbal S, Jakubčinová K, Kanongdate K, Kim J, Kopecký O, Kostov V, Koutsikos N, Kozic S, Kristan P, Kurita Y, Lee H, Leuven RS, Lipinskaya T, Lukas J, Marchini A, González Martínez AI, Masson L, Memedemin D, Moghaddas SD, Monteiro J, Mumladze L, Naddafi R, Năvodaru I, Olsson KH, Onikura N, Paganelli D, Pavia RT, Perdikaris C, Pickholtz R, Pietraszewski D, Povž M, Preda C, Ristovska M, Rosíková K, Santos JM, Semenchenko V, Senanan W, Simonović P, Smeti E, Števove B, Švolíková K, Ta KAT, Tarkan AS, Top N, Tricarico E, Uzunova E, Vardakas L, Verreycken H, Zięba G, Mendoza R. Speaking their language – development of a multilingual decision-support tool for communicating invasive species risks to decision makers and stakeholders. in Environmental Modelling & Software. 2020;135:104900.
doi:10.1016/j.envsoft.2020.104900 .
Copp, Gordon H., Vilizzi, Lorenzo, Wei, Hui, Li, Shan, Piria, Marina, Al-Faisal, Abbas J., Almeida, David, Atique, Usman, Al-Wazzan, Zainab, Bakiu, Rigers, Bašić, Tea, Bui, Thuyet D., Canning-Clode, João, Castro, Nuno, Chaichana, Ratcha, Çoker, Tülin, Dashinov, Dimitriy, Ekmekçi, F.Güler, Erős, Tibor, Ferincz, Árpád, Ferreira, Teresa, Giannetto, Daniela, Gilles, Allan S., Głowacki, Łukasz, Goulletquer, Philippe, Interesova, Elena, Iqbal, Sonia, Jakubčinová, Katarína, Kanongdate, Kamalaporn, Kim, Jeong-Eun, Kopecký, Oldřich, Kostov, Vasil, Koutsikos, Nicholas, Kozic, Sebastian, Kristan, Petra, Kurita, Yoshihisa, Lee, Hwang-Goo, Leuven, Rob S.E.W., Lipinskaya, Tatsiana, Lukas, Juliane, Marchini, Agnese, González Martínez, Ana Isabel, Masson, Laurence, Memedemin, Daniyar, Moghaddas, Seyed Daryoush, Monteiro, João, Mumladze, Levan, Naddafi, Rahmat, Năvodaru, Ion, Olsson, Karin H., Onikura, Norio, Paganelli, Daniele, Pavia, Richard Thomas, Perdikaris, Costas, Pickholtz, Renanel, Pietraszewski, Dariusz, Povž, Meta, Preda, Cristina, Ristovska, Milica, Rosíková, Karin, Santos, José Maria, Semenchenko, Vitaliy, Senanan, Wansuk, Simonović, Predrag, Smeti, Evangelia, Števove, Barbora, Švolíková, Kristína, Ta, Kieu Anh T., Tarkan, Ali Serhan, Top, Nildeniz, Tricarico, Elena, Uzunova, Eliza, Vardakas, Leonidas, Verreycken, Hugo, Zięba, Grzegorz, Mendoza, Roberto, "Speaking their language – development of a multilingual decision-support tool for communicating invasive species risks to decision makers and stakeholders" in Environmental Modelling & Software, 135 (2020):104900,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsoft.2020.104900 . .
22
52
18
52

Quantifying current and future risks of invasiveness of non‐native aquatic species in highly urbanised estuarine ecosystems—A case study of the River Neretva Estuary (Eastern Adriatic Sea: Croatia and Bosnia–Herzegovina)

Glamuzina, Branko; Tutman, Pero; Glamuzina, Luka; Vidović, Zoran; Simonović, Predrag; Vilizzi, Lorenzo

(Wiley, 2020)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Glamuzina, Branko
AU  - Tutman, Pero
AU  - Glamuzina, Luka
AU  - Vidović, Zoran
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Vilizzi, Lorenzo
PY  - 2020
UR  - https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/fme.12463
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4039
AB  - Biological invasions are a major driver of global environmental change as invasive non‐native species can exert severe environmental impacts on invaded ecosystems. Estuaries are especially vulnerable to biological invasions, which in highly urbanised areas are further facilitated by introduction pathways linked to commercial activities. This study provides a risk screening of non‐native invasive species for the highly urbanised River Neretva Estuary (Eastern Adriatic Sea: Croatia and Bosnia–Herzegovina). In total, 12 species of non‐native aquatic organisms were identified and screened for their invasiveness with the Aquatic Species Invasiveness Screening Kit. Of these species, eight were classified as carrying a high risk of invasiveness under current climate conditions and nine under future climate conditions. Amongst the high‐risk species, blue crab Callinectes sapidus has already caused impacts in the risk assessment area, where it also represents an important economic resource. The “horizon” species Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas and Manila clam Ruditapes philippinarum also carried a high risk of invasiveness, which for the latter species applied under predicted global warming. The present findings will contribute towards preventative management and control measures for the conservation of the natural ecosystem of the River Neretva Estuary whilst accounting for aquatic farming demands.
PB  - Wiley
T2  - Fisheries Management and Ecology
T1  - Quantifying current and future risks of invasiveness of non‐native aquatic species in highly urbanised estuarine ecosystems—A case study of the River Neretva Estuary (Eastern Adriatic Sea: Croatia and Bosnia–Herzegovina)
DO  - 10.1111/fme.12463
SP  - fme.12463
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Glamuzina, Branko and Tutman, Pero and Glamuzina, Luka and Vidović, Zoran and Simonović, Predrag and Vilizzi, Lorenzo",
year = "2020",
abstract = "Biological invasions are a major driver of global environmental change as invasive non‐native species can exert severe environmental impacts on invaded ecosystems. Estuaries are especially vulnerable to biological invasions, which in highly urbanised areas are further facilitated by introduction pathways linked to commercial activities. This study provides a risk screening of non‐native invasive species for the highly urbanised River Neretva Estuary (Eastern Adriatic Sea: Croatia and Bosnia–Herzegovina). In total, 12 species of non‐native aquatic organisms were identified and screened for their invasiveness with the Aquatic Species Invasiveness Screening Kit. Of these species, eight were classified as carrying a high risk of invasiveness under current climate conditions and nine under future climate conditions. Amongst the high‐risk species, blue crab Callinectes sapidus has already caused impacts in the risk assessment area, where it also represents an important economic resource. The “horizon” species Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas and Manila clam Ruditapes philippinarum also carried a high risk of invasiveness, which for the latter species applied under predicted global warming. The present findings will contribute towards preventative management and control measures for the conservation of the natural ecosystem of the River Neretva Estuary whilst accounting for aquatic farming demands.",
publisher = "Wiley",
journal = "Fisheries Management and Ecology",
title = "Quantifying current and future risks of invasiveness of non‐native aquatic species in highly urbanised estuarine ecosystems—A case study of the River Neretva Estuary (Eastern Adriatic Sea: Croatia and Bosnia–Herzegovina)",
doi = "10.1111/fme.12463",
pages = "fme.12463"
}
Glamuzina, B., Tutman, P., Glamuzina, L., Vidović, Z., Simonović, P.,& Vilizzi, L.. (2020). Quantifying current and future risks of invasiveness of non‐native aquatic species in highly urbanised estuarine ecosystems—A case study of the River Neretva Estuary (Eastern Adriatic Sea: Croatia and Bosnia–Herzegovina). in Fisheries Management and Ecology
Wiley., fme.12463.
https://doi.org/10.1111/fme.12463
Glamuzina B, Tutman P, Glamuzina L, Vidović Z, Simonović P, Vilizzi L. Quantifying current and future risks of invasiveness of non‐native aquatic species in highly urbanised estuarine ecosystems—A case study of the River Neretva Estuary (Eastern Adriatic Sea: Croatia and Bosnia–Herzegovina). in Fisheries Management and Ecology. 2020;:fme.12463.
doi:10.1111/fme.12463 .
Glamuzina, Branko, Tutman, Pero, Glamuzina, Luka, Vidović, Zoran, Simonović, Predrag, Vilizzi, Lorenzo, "Quantifying current and future risks of invasiveness of non‐native aquatic species in highly urbanised estuarine ecosystems—A case study of the River Neretva Estuary (Eastern Adriatic Sea: Croatia and Bosnia–Herzegovina)" in Fisheries Management and Ecology (2020):fme.12463,
https://doi.org/10.1111/fme.12463 . .
3
11
4
14

Alternative Life-History in Native Trout (Salmo spp.) Suppresses the Invasive Effect of Alien Trout Strains Introduced Into Streams in the Western Part of the Balkans

Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka; Marić, Ana; Mrdak, Danilo; Kanjuh, Tamara; Špelić, Ivan; Nikolić, Vera; Piria, Marina; Simonović, Predrag

(Frontiers Media S.A., 2020)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Mrdak, Danilo
AU  - Kanjuh, Tamara
AU  - Špelić, Ivan
AU  - Nikolić, Vera
AU  - Piria, Marina
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
PY  - 2020
UR  - https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fevo.2020.00188/full
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/123456789/3850
AB  - The diversity of native trout fish Salmo spp. comprises a variety of nominal taxa in Serbia, Montenegro, and Bosnia and Herzegovina. Recent mapping of the resident trout populations detected the presence of brown trout Salmo trutta (sensu stricto) of the Atlantic (AT) mtDNA lineage introduced into populations of both tentative Danubian trout Salmo labrax and of tentative Adriatic trout Salmo farioides belonging to the Danubian (DA) and Adriatic (AD) mtDNA lineages, respectively. Introduction of the tentative Macedonian trout Salmo macedonicus of the AD lineage was also detected in a native population of the tentative S. labrax. In almost all recipient nonmigratory trout populations, a cross-breeding between native and introduced trout was detected by heterozygosity in either only the LDH-C nuclear locus or the LDH-C and specific microsatellite loci. The only exception was a population where both resident and migratory, lake-dwelling individuals of the tentative Adriatic trout spawned in a downstream section of a stream in Montenegro, as no microsatellite alleles of Atlantic brown trout that had been introduced upstream were detected. The occurrence of cross-breeding between Adriatic and brown trout was evident in the isolated, upstream section. It appears that migrating, lake-dwelling Adriatic trout in combination with their resident, stream-dwelling conspecifics suppress the introgression of genes from those situated upstream. In this regard, consideration should be given to the occurrence of the migratory brown trout in the Danube River at the broader Iron Gate Gorge area. They migrate in late summer and early fall from the Iron Gate One reservoir to the lower sections of tributaries devoid of any trout fish. However, some of these streams house very special native trout of the DA lineage in their short-extending upper sections. These native trout populations are, so far, still out of contact with the reservoir-dwelling trout. However, given the resilience of trout and their migratory life history, the outcome of this introduction could be deleterious for those native fish that are very precious in the conservation sense.
PB  - Frontiers Media S.A.
T2  - Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
T1  - Alternative Life-History in Native Trout (Salmo spp.) Suppresses the Invasive Effect of Alien Trout Strains Introduced Into Streams in the Western Part of the Balkans
VL  - 8
DO  - 10.3389/fevo.2020.00188
SP  - 188
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka and Marić, Ana and Mrdak, Danilo and Kanjuh, Tamara and Špelić, Ivan and Nikolić, Vera and Piria, Marina and Simonović, Predrag",
year = "2020",
abstract = "The diversity of native trout fish Salmo spp. comprises a variety of nominal taxa in Serbia, Montenegro, and Bosnia and Herzegovina. Recent mapping of the resident trout populations detected the presence of brown trout Salmo trutta (sensu stricto) of the Atlantic (AT) mtDNA lineage introduced into populations of both tentative Danubian trout Salmo labrax and of tentative Adriatic trout Salmo farioides belonging to the Danubian (DA) and Adriatic (AD) mtDNA lineages, respectively. Introduction of the tentative Macedonian trout Salmo macedonicus of the AD lineage was also detected in a native population of the tentative S. labrax. In almost all recipient nonmigratory trout populations, a cross-breeding between native and introduced trout was detected by heterozygosity in either only the LDH-C nuclear locus or the LDH-C and specific microsatellite loci. The only exception was a population where both resident and migratory, lake-dwelling individuals of the tentative Adriatic trout spawned in a downstream section of a stream in Montenegro, as no microsatellite alleles of Atlantic brown trout that had been introduced upstream were detected. The occurrence of cross-breeding between Adriatic and brown trout was evident in the isolated, upstream section. It appears that migrating, lake-dwelling Adriatic trout in combination with their resident, stream-dwelling conspecifics suppress the introgression of genes from those situated upstream. In this regard, consideration should be given to the occurrence of the migratory brown trout in the Danube River at the broader Iron Gate Gorge area. They migrate in late summer and early fall from the Iron Gate One reservoir to the lower sections of tributaries devoid of any trout fish. However, some of these streams house very special native trout of the DA lineage in their short-extending upper sections. These native trout populations are, so far, still out of contact with the reservoir-dwelling trout. However, given the resilience of trout and their migratory life history, the outcome of this introduction could be deleterious for those native fish that are very precious in the conservation sense.",
publisher = "Frontiers Media S.A.",
journal = "Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution",
title = "Alternative Life-History in Native Trout (Salmo spp.) Suppresses the Invasive Effect of Alien Trout Strains Introduced Into Streams in the Western Part of the Balkans",
volume = "8",
doi = "10.3389/fevo.2020.00188",
pages = "188"
}
Škraba Jurlina, D., Marić, A., Mrdak, D., Kanjuh, T., Špelić, I., Nikolić, V., Piria, M.,& Simonović, P.. (2020). Alternative Life-History in Native Trout (Salmo spp.) Suppresses the Invasive Effect of Alien Trout Strains Introduced Into Streams in the Western Part of the Balkans. in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Frontiers Media S.A.., 8, 188.
https://doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2020.00188
Škraba Jurlina D, Marić A, Mrdak D, Kanjuh T, Špelić I, Nikolić V, Piria M, Simonović P. Alternative Life-History in Native Trout (Salmo spp.) Suppresses the Invasive Effect of Alien Trout Strains Introduced Into Streams in the Western Part of the Balkans. in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. 2020;8:188.
doi:10.3389/fevo.2020.00188 .
Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka, Marić, Ana, Mrdak, Danilo, Kanjuh, Tamara, Špelić, Ivan, Nikolić, Vera, Piria, Marina, Simonović, Predrag, "Alternative Life-History in Native Trout (Salmo spp.) Suppresses the Invasive Effect of Alien Trout Strains Introduced Into Streams in the Western Part of the Balkans" in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 8 (2020):188,
https://doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2020.00188 . .
2
9
2
9

Determination of resident brown trout Salmo trutta features by their habitat characteristics in streams of Serbia

Simonović, Predrag; Marić, Ana; Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka; Kanjuh, Tamara; Nikolić, Vera

(2020)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka
AU  - Kanjuh, Tamara
AU  - Nikolić, Vera
PY  - 2020
UR  - http://link.springer.com/10.2478/s11756-019-00284-1
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3376
AB  - Streams’ order, their width and depth, as well as the water temperature, conductivity, dissolved oxygen contents and pH reaction were recorded for 18 streams of the Danube River basin in Serbia that home brown trout Salmo trutta. For each of them, the number of fish species was recorded, and for brown trout in them the number of cohorts, age-structure, productivity (biomass, annual production and average weight) and growth (von Betalanffy’s growth parameters L∞, t0, K and ø’) were calculated. They were examined in relation to stream’s habitat features. Stepwise multiple regression revealed strong interdependence between habitat variables. Size, i.e., width and depth of streams increased and their oxygen content dropped with increase in their order and rise of the water temperature, and water conductivity was strongly interrelated with order and depth of streams. Increase in streams’ order and their water’s temperature were accompanied with the increase of species number in them, number of brown trout cohorts raised with the water conductivity and dropped with the increase of the alkaline pH value of streams, whereas growth of brown trout was determined by width of streams and their water’s conductivity. However, when analyzed one at a time, very few of habitat and population traits, e.g., stream depth and L∞, varied clearly in streams of either various orders, or conductivity classes, respectively. The notable, but not yet significant variability of almost all other characters implicates their strong and complex acting in concert to determining number of fish species in syntopy, brown trout population, productivity and growth features.
T2  - Biologia
T1  - Determination of resident brown trout Salmo trutta features by their habitat characteristics in streams of Serbia
VL  - 75
DO  - 10.2478/s11756-019-00284-1
SP  - 103
EP  - 114
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Simonović, Predrag and Marić, Ana and Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka and Kanjuh, Tamara and Nikolić, Vera",
year = "2020",
abstract = "Streams’ order, their width and depth, as well as the water temperature, conductivity, dissolved oxygen contents and pH reaction were recorded for 18 streams of the Danube River basin in Serbia that home brown trout Salmo trutta. For each of them, the number of fish species was recorded, and for brown trout in them the number of cohorts, age-structure, productivity (biomass, annual production and average weight) and growth (von Betalanffy’s growth parameters L∞, t0, K and ø’) were calculated. They were examined in relation to stream’s habitat features. Stepwise multiple regression revealed strong interdependence between habitat variables. Size, i.e., width and depth of streams increased and their oxygen content dropped with increase in their order and rise of the water temperature, and water conductivity was strongly interrelated with order and depth of streams. Increase in streams’ order and their water’s temperature were accompanied with the increase of species number in them, number of brown trout cohorts raised with the water conductivity and dropped with the increase of the alkaline pH value of streams, whereas growth of brown trout was determined by width of streams and their water’s conductivity. However, when analyzed one at a time, very few of habitat and population traits, e.g., stream depth and L∞, varied clearly in streams of either various orders, or conductivity classes, respectively. The notable, but not yet significant variability of almost all other characters implicates their strong and complex acting in concert to determining number of fish species in syntopy, brown trout population, productivity and growth features.",
journal = "Biologia",
title = "Determination of resident brown trout Salmo trutta features by their habitat characteristics in streams of Serbia",
volume = "75",
doi = "10.2478/s11756-019-00284-1",
pages = "103-114"
}
Simonović, P., Marić, A., Škraba Jurlina, D., Kanjuh, T.,& Nikolić, V.. (2020). Determination of resident brown trout Salmo trutta features by their habitat characteristics in streams of Serbia. in Biologia, 75, 103-114.
https://doi.org/10.2478/s11756-019-00284-1
Simonović P, Marić A, Škraba Jurlina D, Kanjuh T, Nikolić V. Determination of resident brown trout Salmo trutta features by their habitat characteristics in streams of Serbia. in Biologia. 2020;75:103-114.
doi:10.2478/s11756-019-00284-1 .
Simonović, Predrag, Marić, Ana, Škraba Jurlina, Dubravka, Kanjuh, Tamara, Nikolić, Vera, "Determination of resident brown trout Salmo trutta features by their habitat characteristics in streams of Serbia" in Biologia, 75 (2020):103-114,
https://doi.org/10.2478/s11756-019-00284-1 . .
5
2
5

The Efficiency of Syringe Stomach Flushing in Diet Sampling of Salmonids

Čanak Atlagić, Jelena; Marić, Ana; Đuknić, Jelena; Anđus, Stefan; Marinković, Nikola; Paunović, Momir; Simonović, Predrag

(Societas Scientiarum Stetinensis (Scientific Society of Szczecin), 2019)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Čanak Atlagić, Jelena
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Đuknić, Jelena
AU  - Anđus, Stefan
AU  - Marinković, Nikola
AU  - Paunović, Momir
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
PY  - 2019
UR  - http://www.aiep.pl/volumes/2020/0_4/pdf/01_02591_F1.pdf
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3555
AB  - Background. A sampling of stomach and intestine content is usually performed by dissection of the gastrointestinal tract of fish. To avoid fish sacrificing, various non-lethal techniques have been developed and tested. Such sampling methods are very useful, especially for small populations and protected species. In this study, a modified syringe stomach flushing was applied on Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum, 1792), and Salmo trutta Linnaeus, 1758,to test its efficiency in retrieving stomach content.Materials  and  methods.  Water was injected repeatedly by a syringe through a silicone tube directly into the stomach of live fish to flush the content out. Afterwards, fish were dissected to collect residual stomach content. The efficiency of the method was assessed as the percentage of flushed content by weight and as the percentage of the number of flushed prey items, both in respect to the whole stomach content (100%). The relation between the fish body size (length and weight) and efficiency of flushing (expressed as the weight and number of flushed prey) was tested by linear regression. The sensitivity of the method was tested with respect to 25 designated prey types. The share of each prey type was compared in the pooled sample of flushed and residual content.Results. Collected stomach content was well preserved for identification of ingested organisms. From 25 designated prey types, 17 were 100% flushed, 4 over 90%, one over 80%, 2 were 44% effectively flushed (gastropods and caddisflies in stone cases), and 1 prey type was present only in the residual sample (Gordius sp.). The efficiency of the method assessed as the mean percentage of flushed content by weight was found to be 78.78%, while 91.99% of prey items were effectively flushed.Conclusion. The applied modification of syringe stomach flushing was found to be effective for investigation of stomach content of salmonid fish since (1) collected prey items were well preserved and easily identified; (2) the percentage of flushed prey items was high (91.99%); and (3) the method is easily applicable and inexpensive
PB  - Societas Scientiarum Stetinensis (Scientific Society of Szczecin)
T2  - Acta Ichthyologica et Piscatoria
T1  - The Efficiency of Syringe Stomach Flushing in Diet Sampling of Salmonids
IS  - 4
VL  - 49
DO  - 10.3750/AIEP/02591
SP  - 319
EP  - 327
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Čanak Atlagić, Jelena and Marić, Ana and Đuknić, Jelena and Anđus, Stefan and Marinković, Nikola and Paunović, Momir and Simonović, Predrag",
year = "2019",
abstract = "Background. A sampling of stomach and intestine content is usually performed by dissection of the gastrointestinal tract of fish. To avoid fish sacrificing, various non-lethal techniques have been developed and tested. Such sampling methods are very useful, especially for small populations and protected species. In this study, a modified syringe stomach flushing was applied on Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum, 1792), and Salmo trutta Linnaeus, 1758,to test its efficiency in retrieving stomach content.Materials  and  methods.  Water was injected repeatedly by a syringe through a silicone tube directly into the stomach of live fish to flush the content out. Afterwards, fish were dissected to collect residual stomach content. The efficiency of the method was assessed as the percentage of flushed content by weight and as the percentage of the number of flushed prey items, both in respect to the whole stomach content (100%). The relation between the fish body size (length and weight) and efficiency of flushing (expressed as the weight and number of flushed prey) was tested by linear regression. The sensitivity of the method was tested with respect to 25 designated prey types. The share of each prey type was compared in the pooled sample of flushed and residual content.Results. Collected stomach content was well preserved for identification of ingested organisms. From 25 designated prey types, 17 were 100% flushed, 4 over 90%, one over 80%, 2 were 44% effectively flushed (gastropods and caddisflies in stone cases), and 1 prey type was present only in the residual sample (Gordius sp.). The efficiency of the method assessed as the mean percentage of flushed content by weight was found to be 78.78%, while 91.99% of prey items were effectively flushed.Conclusion. The applied modification of syringe stomach flushing was found to be effective for investigation of stomach content of salmonid fish since (1) collected prey items were well preserved and easily identified; (2) the percentage of flushed prey items was high (91.99%); and (3) the method is easily applicable and inexpensive",
publisher = "Societas Scientiarum Stetinensis (Scientific Society of Szczecin)",
journal = "Acta Ichthyologica et Piscatoria",
title = "The Efficiency of Syringe Stomach Flushing in Diet Sampling of Salmonids",
number = "4",
volume = "49",
doi = "10.3750/AIEP/02591",
pages = "319-327"
}
Čanak Atlagić, J., Marić, A., Đuknić, J., Anđus, S., Marinković, N., Paunović, M.,& Simonović, P.. (2019). The Efficiency of Syringe Stomach Flushing in Diet Sampling of Salmonids. in Acta Ichthyologica et Piscatoria
Societas Scientiarum Stetinensis (Scientific Society of Szczecin)., 49(4), 319-327.
https://doi.org/10.3750/AIEP/02591
Čanak Atlagić J, Marić A, Đuknić J, Anđus S, Marinković N, Paunović M, Simonović P. The Efficiency of Syringe Stomach Flushing in Diet Sampling of Salmonids. in Acta Ichthyologica et Piscatoria. 2019;49(4):319-327.
doi:10.3750/AIEP/02591 .
Čanak Atlagić, Jelena, Marić, Ana, Đuknić, Jelena, Anđus, Stefan, Marinković, Nikola, Paunović, Momir, Simonović, Predrag, "The Efficiency of Syringe Stomach Flushing in Diet Sampling of Salmonids" in Acta Ichthyologica et Piscatoria, 49, no. 4 (2019):319-327,
https://doi.org/10.3750/AIEP/02591 . .
2
1
2

Potentially toxic elements in muscle tissue of different fish species from the Sava River and risk assessment for consumers

Zuliani, Tea; Vidmar, Janja; Drinčić, Ana; Ščančar, Janez; Horvat, Milena; Nečemer, Marijan; Piria, Marina; Simonović, Predrag; Paunović, Momir; Milačič, Radmila

(2019)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Zuliani, Tea
AU  - Vidmar, Janja
AU  - Drinčić, Ana
AU  - Ščančar, Janez
AU  - Horvat, Milena
AU  - Nečemer, Marijan
AU  - Piria, Marina
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Paunović, Momir
AU  - Milačič, Radmila
PY  - 2019
UR  - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969718335204?via%3Dihub
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3135
AB  - Fish from the Sava River are consumed daily by the local people: therefore, concern has been raised about the health implications of eating contaminated fish. In the present study, potentially toxic elements (PTE), such as Zn, Cu, Cr, Ni, Cd, Pb, As, Hg, and methylmercury (MeHg), were determined in ichthyofauna that are commonly consumed. PTE were determined in the fish muscle tissue. Fish were sampled at 12 locations from the source of the Sava River to its confluence with the Danube River during two sampling campaigns, namely; in 2014 under high water conditions and in 2015 under normal water conditions. Due to the different water regimes, different fish species were collected for chemical analysis. We observed that the concentrations of elements analysed in the fish muscle tissue were generally very low, except for those of Hg. Moreover, more than 90% of Hg present in the fish was in its most toxic form, namely MeHg. Especially in fish from the 2015 sampling campaign, Hg and MeHg concentrations increased with fish size, trophic level, and in the downstream direction. In addition, for Pb and As, and to some extent for Cd and Cr, spatial differences were detected in both years. The highest concentrations of PTE were detected in fish from sites with intensive industrial and agricultural activities. The consumption of fish in general does not pose a health risk for the PTE studied, except for Hg/MeHg at selected contaminated sites.
T2  - Science of The Total Environment
T1  - Potentially toxic elements in muscle tissue of different fish species from the Sava River and risk assessment for consumers
VL  - 650
DO  - 10.1016/J.SCITOTENV.2018.09.083
SP  - 958
EP  - 969
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Zuliani, Tea and Vidmar, Janja and Drinčić, Ana and Ščančar, Janez and Horvat, Milena and Nečemer, Marijan and Piria, Marina and Simonović, Predrag and Paunović, Momir and Milačič, Radmila",
year = "2019",
abstract = "Fish from the Sava River are consumed daily by the local people: therefore, concern has been raised about the health implications of eating contaminated fish. In the present study, potentially toxic elements (PTE), such as Zn, Cu, Cr, Ni, Cd, Pb, As, Hg, and methylmercury (MeHg), were determined in ichthyofauna that are commonly consumed. PTE were determined in the fish muscle tissue. Fish were sampled at 12 locations from the source of the Sava River to its confluence with the Danube River during two sampling campaigns, namely; in 2014 under high water conditions and in 2015 under normal water conditions. Due to the different water regimes, different fish species were collected for chemical analysis. We observed that the concentrations of elements analysed in the fish muscle tissue were generally very low, except for those of Hg. Moreover, more than 90% of Hg present in the fish was in its most toxic form, namely MeHg. Especially in fish from the 2015 sampling campaign, Hg and MeHg concentrations increased with fish size, trophic level, and in the downstream direction. In addition, for Pb and As, and to some extent for Cd and Cr, spatial differences were detected in both years. The highest concentrations of PTE were detected in fish from sites with intensive industrial and agricultural activities. The consumption of fish in general does not pose a health risk for the PTE studied, except for Hg/MeHg at selected contaminated sites.",
journal = "Science of The Total Environment",
title = "Potentially toxic elements in muscle tissue of different fish species from the Sava River and risk assessment for consumers",
volume = "650",
doi = "10.1016/J.SCITOTENV.2018.09.083",
pages = "958-969"
}
Zuliani, T., Vidmar, J., Drinčić, A., Ščančar, J., Horvat, M., Nečemer, M., Piria, M., Simonović, P., Paunović, M.,& Milačič, R.. (2019). Potentially toxic elements in muscle tissue of different fish species from the Sava River and risk assessment for consumers. in Science of The Total Environment, 650, 958-969.
https://doi.org/10.1016/J.SCITOTENV.2018.09.083
Zuliani T, Vidmar J, Drinčić A, Ščančar J, Horvat M, Nečemer M, Piria M, Simonović P, Paunović M, Milačič R. Potentially toxic elements in muscle tissue of different fish species from the Sava River and risk assessment for consumers. in Science of The Total Environment. 2019;650:958-969.
doi:10.1016/J.SCITOTENV.2018.09.083 .
Zuliani, Tea, Vidmar, Janja, Drinčić, Ana, Ščančar, Janez, Horvat, Milena, Nečemer, Marijan, Piria, Marina, Simonović, Predrag, Paunović, Momir, Milačič, Radmila, "Potentially toxic elements in muscle tissue of different fish species from the Sava River and risk assessment for consumers" in Science of The Total Environment, 650 (2019):958-969,
https://doi.org/10.1016/J.SCITOTENV.2018.09.083 . .
1
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21

A global review and meta-analysis of applications of the freshwater Fish Invasiveness Screening Kit

Vilizzi, Lorenzo; Copp, Gordon H.; Adamovich, Boris; Almeida, David; Chan, Joleen; Davison, Phil I.; Dembski, Samuel; Ekmekçi, F. Güler; Ferincz, Árpád; Forneck, Sandra C.; Hill, Jeffrey E.; Kim, Jeong-Eun; Koutsikos, Nicholas; Leuven, Rob S. E. W.; Luna, Sergio A.; Magalhães, Filomena; Marr, Sean M.; Mendoza, Roberto; Mourão, Carlos F.; Neal, J. Wesley; Onikura, Norio; Perdikaris, Costas; Piria, Marina; Poulet, Nicolas; Puntila, Riikka; Range, Inês L.; Simonović, Predrag; Ribeiro, Filipe; Tarkan, Ali Serhan; Troca, Débora F. A.; Vardakas, Leonidas; Verreycken, Hugo; Vintsek, Lizaveta; Weyl, Olaf L. F.; Yeo, Darren C. J.; Zeng, Yiwen

(2019)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Vilizzi, Lorenzo
AU  - Copp, Gordon H.
AU  - Adamovich, Boris
AU  - Almeida, David
AU  - Chan, Joleen
AU  - Davison, Phil I.
AU  - Dembski, Samuel
AU  - Ekmekçi, F. Güler
AU  - Ferincz, Árpád
AU  - Forneck, Sandra C.
AU  - Hill, Jeffrey E.
AU  - Kim, Jeong-Eun
AU  - Koutsikos, Nicholas
AU  - Leuven, Rob S. E. W.
AU  - Luna, Sergio A.
AU  - Magalhães, Filomena
AU  - Marr, Sean M.
AU  - Mendoza, Roberto
AU  - Mourão, Carlos F.
AU  - Neal, J. Wesley
AU  - Onikura, Norio
AU  - Perdikaris, Costas
AU  - Piria, Marina
AU  - Poulet, Nicolas
AU  - Puntila, Riikka
AU  - Range, Inês L.
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Ribeiro, Filipe
AU  - Tarkan, Ali Serhan
AU  - Troca, Débora F. A.
AU  - Vardakas, Leonidas
AU  - Verreycken, Hugo
AU  - Vintsek, Lizaveta
AU  - Weyl, Olaf L. F.
AU  - Yeo, Darren C. J.
AU  - Zeng, Yiwen
PY  - 2019
UR  - http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11160-019-09562-2
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3408
AB  - The freshwater Fish Invasiveness Screening Kit (FISK) has been applied in 35 risk assessment areas in 45 countries across the six inhabited continents (11 applications using FISK v1; 25 using FISK v2). The present study aimed: to assess the breadth of FISK applications and the confidence (certainty) levels associated with the decision-support tool’s 49 questions and its ability to distinguish between taxa of low-to-medium and high risk of becoming invasive, and thus provide climate-specific, generalised, calibrated thresholds for risk level categorisation; and to identify the most potentially invasive freshwater fish species on a global level. The 1973 risk assessments were carried out by 70 + experts on 372 taxa (47 of the 51 species listed as invasive in the Global Invasive Species Database www.iucngisd.org/gisd/), which in decreasing order of importance belonged to the taxonomic Orders Cypriniformes, Perciformes, Siluriformes, Characiformes, Salmoniformes, Cyprinodontiformes, with the remaining ≈ 8% of taxa distributed across an additional 13 orders. The most widely-screened species (in decreasing importance) were: grass carp Ctenopharyngodon idella, common carp Cyprinus carpio, rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss, silver carp Hypophthalmichthys molitrix and topmouth gudgeon Pseudorasbora parva. Nine ‘globally’ high risk species were identified: common carp, black bullhead Ameiurus melas, round goby Neogobius melanostomus, Chinese (Amur) sleeper Perccottus glenii, brown bullhead Ameiurus nebulosus, eastern mosquitofish Gambusia holbrooki, largemouth (black) bass Micropterus salmoides, pumpkinseed Lepomis gibbosus and pikeperch Sander lucioperca. The relevance of this global review to policy, legislation, and risk assessment and management procedures is discussed.
T2  - Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries
T1  - A global review and meta-analysis of applications of the freshwater Fish Invasiveness Screening Kit
DO  - 10.1007/s11160-019-09562-2
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Vilizzi, Lorenzo and Copp, Gordon H. and Adamovich, Boris and Almeida, David and Chan, Joleen and Davison, Phil I. and Dembski, Samuel and Ekmekçi, F. Güler and Ferincz, Árpád and Forneck, Sandra C. and Hill, Jeffrey E. and Kim, Jeong-Eun and Koutsikos, Nicholas and Leuven, Rob S. E. W. and Luna, Sergio A. and Magalhães, Filomena and Marr, Sean M. and Mendoza, Roberto and Mourão, Carlos F. and Neal, J. Wesley and Onikura, Norio and Perdikaris, Costas and Piria, Marina and Poulet, Nicolas and Puntila, Riikka and Range, Inês L. and Simonović, Predrag and Ribeiro, Filipe and Tarkan, Ali Serhan and Troca, Débora F. A. and Vardakas, Leonidas and Verreycken, Hugo and Vintsek, Lizaveta and Weyl, Olaf L. F. and Yeo, Darren C. J. and Zeng, Yiwen",
year = "2019",
abstract = "The freshwater Fish Invasiveness Screening Kit (FISK) has been applied in 35 risk assessment areas in 45 countries across the six inhabited continents (11 applications using FISK v1; 25 using FISK v2). The present study aimed: to assess the breadth of FISK applications and the confidence (certainty) levels associated with the decision-support tool’s 49 questions and its ability to distinguish between taxa of low-to-medium and high risk of becoming invasive, and thus provide climate-specific, generalised, calibrated thresholds for risk level categorisation; and to identify the most potentially invasive freshwater fish species on a global level. The 1973 risk assessments were carried out by 70 + experts on 372 taxa (47 of the 51 species listed as invasive in the Global Invasive Species Database www.iucngisd.org/gisd/), which in decreasing order of importance belonged to the taxonomic Orders Cypriniformes, Perciformes, Siluriformes, Characiformes, Salmoniformes, Cyprinodontiformes, with the remaining ≈ 8% of taxa distributed across an additional 13 orders. The most widely-screened species (in decreasing importance) were: grass carp Ctenopharyngodon idella, common carp Cyprinus carpio, rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss, silver carp Hypophthalmichthys molitrix and topmouth gudgeon Pseudorasbora parva. Nine ‘globally’ high risk species were identified: common carp, black bullhead Ameiurus melas, round goby Neogobius melanostomus, Chinese (Amur) sleeper Perccottus glenii, brown bullhead Ameiurus nebulosus, eastern mosquitofish Gambusia holbrooki, largemouth (black) bass Micropterus salmoides, pumpkinseed Lepomis gibbosus and pikeperch Sander lucioperca. The relevance of this global review to policy, legislation, and risk assessment and management procedures is discussed.",
journal = "Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries",
title = "A global review and meta-analysis of applications of the freshwater Fish Invasiveness Screening Kit",
doi = "10.1007/s11160-019-09562-2"
}
Vilizzi, L., Copp, G. H., Adamovich, B., Almeida, D., Chan, J., Davison, P. I., Dembski, S., Ekmekçi, F. G., Ferincz, Á., Forneck, S. C., Hill, J. E., Kim, J., Koutsikos, N., Leuven, R. S. E. W., Luna, S. A., Magalhães, F., Marr, S. M., Mendoza, R., Mourão, C. F., Neal, J. W., Onikura, N., Perdikaris, C., Piria, M., Poulet, N., Puntila, R., Range, I. L., Simonović, P., Ribeiro, F., Tarkan, A. S., Troca, D. F. A., Vardakas, L., Verreycken, H., Vintsek, L., Weyl, O. L. F., Yeo, D. C. J.,& Zeng, Y.. (2019). A global review and meta-analysis of applications of the freshwater Fish Invasiveness Screening Kit. in Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11160-019-09562-2
Vilizzi L, Copp GH, Adamovich B, Almeida D, Chan J, Davison PI, Dembski S, Ekmekçi FG, Ferincz Á, Forneck SC, Hill JE, Kim J, Koutsikos N, Leuven RSEW, Luna SA, Magalhães F, Marr SM, Mendoza R, Mourão CF, Neal JW, Onikura N, Perdikaris C, Piria M, Poulet N, Puntila R, Range IL, Simonović P, Ribeiro F, Tarkan AS, Troca DFA, Vardakas L, Verreycken H, Vintsek L, Weyl OLF, Yeo DCJ, Zeng Y. A global review and meta-analysis of applications of the freshwater Fish Invasiveness Screening Kit. in Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries. 2019;.
doi:10.1007/s11160-019-09562-2 .
Vilizzi, Lorenzo, Copp, Gordon H., Adamovich, Boris, Almeida, David, Chan, Joleen, Davison, Phil I., Dembski, Samuel, Ekmekçi, F. Güler, Ferincz, Árpád, Forneck, Sandra C., Hill, Jeffrey E., Kim, Jeong-Eun, Koutsikos, Nicholas, Leuven, Rob S. E. W., Luna, Sergio A., Magalhães, Filomena, Marr, Sean M., Mendoza, Roberto, Mourão, Carlos F., Neal, J. Wesley, Onikura, Norio, Perdikaris, Costas, Piria, Marina, Poulet, Nicolas, Puntila, Riikka, Range, Inês L., Simonović, Predrag, Ribeiro, Filipe, Tarkan, Ali Serhan, Troca, Débora F. A., Vardakas, Leonidas, Verreycken, Hugo, Vintsek, Lizaveta, Weyl, Olaf L. F., Yeo, Darren C. J., Zeng, Yiwen, "A global review and meta-analysis of applications of the freshwater Fish Invasiveness Screening Kit" in Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries (2019),
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11160-019-09562-2 . .
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71

Consistency of impact assessment protocols for non-native species

González-Moreno, Pablo; Lazzaro, Lorenzo; Vilà, Montserrat; Preda, Cristina; Adriaens, Tim; Bacher, Sven; Brundu, Giuseppe; Copp, Gordon H.; Essl, Franz; García-Berthou, Emili; Katsanevakis, Stelios; Moen, Toril Loennechen; Lucy, Frances E.; Nentwig, Wolfgang; Roy, Helen E.; Srėbalienė, Greta; Talgø, Venche; Vanderhoeven, Sonia; Andjelković, Ana; Arbačiauskas, Kęstutis; Auger-Rozenberg, Marie-Anne; Bae, Mi-Jung; Bariche, Michel; Boets, Pieter; Boieiro, Mário; Borges, Paulo Alexandre; Canning-Clode, João; Cardigos, Federico; Chartosia, Niki; Cottier-Cook, Elizabeth Joanne; Crocetta, Fabio; D'hondt, Bram; Foggi, Bruno; Follak, Swen; Gallardo, Belinda; Gammelmo, Øivind; Giakoumi, Sylvaine; Giuliani, Claudia; Guillaume, Fried; Jelaska, Lucija Šerić; Jeschke, Jonathan M.; Jover, Miquel; Juárez-Escario, Alejandro; Kalogirou, Stefanos; Kočić, Aleksandra; Kytinou, Eleni; Laverty, Ciaran; Lozano, Vanessa; Maceda-Veiga, Alberto; Marchante, Elizabete; Marchante, Hélia; Martinou, Angeliki F.; Meyer, Sandro; Minchin, Dan; Montero-Castaño, Ana; Morais, Maria Cristina; Morales-Rodriguez, Carmen; Muhthassim, Naida; Nagy, Zoltán Á.; Ogris, Nikica; Onen, Huseyin; Pergl, Jan; Puntila, Riikka; Rabitsch, Wolfgang; Ramburn, Triya Tessa; Rego, Carla; Reichenbach, Fabian; Romeralo, Carmen; Saul, Wolf-Christian; Schrader, Gritta; Sheehan, Rory; Simonović, Predrag; Skolka, Marius; Soares, António Onofre; Sundheim, Leif; Tarkan, Ali Serhan; Tomov, Rumen; Tricarico, Elena; Tsiamis, Konstantinos; Uludağ, Ahmet; van Valkenburg, Johan; Verreycken, Hugo; Vettraino, Anna Maria; Vilar, Lluís; Wiig, Øystein; Witzell, Johanna; Zanetta, Andrea; Kenis, Marc

(2019)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - González-Moreno, Pablo
AU  - Lazzaro, Lorenzo
AU  - Vilà, Montserrat
AU  - Preda, Cristina
AU  - Adriaens, Tim
AU  - Bacher, Sven
AU  - Brundu, Giuseppe
AU  - Copp, Gordon H.
AU  - Essl, Franz
AU  - García-Berthou, Emili
AU  - Katsanevakis, Stelios
AU  - Moen, Toril Loennechen
AU  - Lucy, Frances E.
AU  - Nentwig, Wolfgang
AU  - Roy, Helen E.
AU  - Srėbalienė, Greta
AU  - Talgø, Venche
AU  - Vanderhoeven, Sonia
AU  - Andjelković, Ana
AU  - Arbačiauskas, Kęstutis
AU  - Auger-Rozenberg, Marie-Anne
AU  - Bae, Mi-Jung
AU  - Bariche, Michel
AU  - Boets, Pieter
AU  - Boieiro, Mário
AU  - Borges, Paulo Alexandre
AU  - Canning-Clode, João
AU  - Cardigos, Federico
AU  - Chartosia, Niki
AU  - Cottier-Cook, Elizabeth Joanne
AU  - Crocetta, Fabio
AU  - D'hondt, Bram
AU  - Foggi, Bruno
AU  - Follak, Swen
AU  - Gallardo, Belinda
AU  - Gammelmo, Øivind
AU  - Giakoumi, Sylvaine
AU  - Giuliani, Claudia
AU  - Guillaume, Fried
AU  - Jelaska, Lucija Šerić
AU  - Jeschke, Jonathan M.
AU  - Jover, Miquel
AU  - Juárez-Escario, Alejandro
AU  - Kalogirou, Stefanos
AU  - Kočić, Aleksandra
AU  - Kytinou, Eleni
AU  - Laverty, Ciaran
AU  - Lozano, Vanessa
AU  - Maceda-Veiga, Alberto
AU  - Marchante, Elizabete
AU  - Marchante, Hélia
AU  - Martinou, Angeliki F.
AU  - Meyer, Sandro
AU  - Minchin, Dan
AU  - Montero-Castaño, Ana
AU  - Morais, Maria Cristina
AU  - Morales-Rodriguez, Carmen
AU  - Muhthassim, Naida
AU  - Nagy, Zoltán Á.
AU  - Ogris, Nikica
AU  - Onen, Huseyin
AU  - Pergl, Jan
AU  - Puntila, Riikka
AU  - Rabitsch, Wolfgang
AU  - Ramburn, Triya Tessa
AU  - Rego, Carla
AU  - Reichenbach, Fabian
AU  - Romeralo, Carmen
AU  - Saul, Wolf-Christian
AU  - Schrader, Gritta
AU  - Sheehan, Rory
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Skolka, Marius
AU  - Soares, António Onofre
AU  - Sundheim, Leif
AU  - Tarkan, Ali Serhan
AU  - Tomov, Rumen
AU  - Tricarico, Elena
AU  - Tsiamis, Konstantinos
AU  - Uludağ, Ahmet
AU  - van Valkenburg, Johan
AU  - Verreycken, Hugo
AU  - Vettraino, Anna Maria
AU  - Vilar, Lluís
AU  - Wiig, Øystein
AU  - Witzell, Johanna
AU  - Zanetta, Andrea
AU  - Kenis, Marc
PY  - 2019
UR  - https://neobiota.pensoft.net/article/31650/
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3328
AB  - Standardized tools are needed to identify and prioritize the most harmful non-native species (NNS). A plethora of assessment protocols have been developed to evaluate the current and potential impacts of non-native species, but consistency among them has received limited attention. To estimate the consistency across impact assessment protocols, 89 specialists in biological invasions used 11 protocols to screen 57 NNS (2614 assessments). We tested if the consistency in the impact scoring across assessors, quantified as the coefficient of variation (CV), was dependent on the characteristics of the protocol, the taxonomic group and the expertise of the assessor. Mean CV across assessors was 40%, with a maximum of 223%. CV was lower for protocols with a low number of score levels, which demanded high levels of expertise, and when the assessors had greater expertise on the assessed species. The similarity among protocols with respect to the final scores was higher when the protocols considered the same impact types. We conclude that all protocols led to considerable inconsistency among assessors. In order to improve consistency, we highlight the importance of selecting assessors with high expertise, providing clear guidelines and adequate training but also deriving final decisions collaboratively by consensus.
T2  - NeoBiota
T1  - Consistency of impact assessment protocols for non-native species
VL  - 44
DO  - 10.3897/neobiota.44.31650
SP  - 1
EP  - 25
ER  - 
@article{
author = "González-Moreno, Pablo and Lazzaro, Lorenzo and Vilà, Montserrat and Preda, Cristina and Adriaens, Tim and Bacher, Sven and Brundu, Giuseppe and Copp, Gordon H. and Essl, Franz and García-Berthou, Emili and Katsanevakis, Stelios and Moen, Toril Loennechen and Lucy, Frances E. and Nentwig, Wolfgang and Roy, Helen E. and Srėbalienė, Greta and Talgø, Venche and Vanderhoeven, Sonia and Andjelković, Ana and Arbačiauskas, Kęstutis and Auger-Rozenberg, Marie-Anne and Bae, Mi-Jung and Bariche, Michel and Boets, Pieter and Boieiro, Mário and Borges, Paulo Alexandre and Canning-Clode, João and Cardigos, Federico and Chartosia, Niki and Cottier-Cook, Elizabeth Joanne and Crocetta, Fabio and D'hondt, Bram and Foggi, Bruno and Follak, Swen and Gallardo, Belinda and Gammelmo, Øivind and Giakoumi, Sylvaine and Giuliani, Claudia and Guillaume, Fried and Jelaska, Lucija Šerić and Jeschke, Jonathan M. and Jover, Miquel and Juárez-Escario, Alejandro and Kalogirou, Stefanos and Kočić, Aleksandra and Kytinou, Eleni and Laverty, Ciaran and Lozano, Vanessa and Maceda-Veiga, Alberto and Marchante, Elizabete and Marchante, Hélia and Martinou, Angeliki F. and Meyer, Sandro and Minchin, Dan and Montero-Castaño, Ana and Morais, Maria Cristina and Morales-Rodriguez, Carmen and Muhthassim, Naida and Nagy, Zoltán Á. and Ogris, Nikica and Onen, Huseyin and Pergl, Jan and Puntila, Riikka and Rabitsch, Wolfgang and Ramburn, Triya Tessa and Rego, Carla and Reichenbach, Fabian and Romeralo, Carmen and Saul, Wolf-Christian and Schrader, Gritta and Sheehan, Rory and Simonović, Predrag and Skolka, Marius and Soares, António Onofre and Sundheim, Leif and Tarkan, Ali Serhan and Tomov, Rumen and Tricarico, Elena and Tsiamis, Konstantinos and Uludağ, Ahmet and van Valkenburg, Johan and Verreycken, Hugo and Vettraino, Anna Maria and Vilar, Lluís and Wiig, Øystein and Witzell, Johanna and Zanetta, Andrea and Kenis, Marc",
year = "2019",
abstract = "Standardized tools are needed to identify and prioritize the most harmful non-native species (NNS). A plethora of assessment protocols have been developed to evaluate the current and potential impacts of non-native species, but consistency among them has received limited attention. To estimate the consistency across impact assessment protocols, 89 specialists in biological invasions used 11 protocols to screen 57 NNS (2614 assessments). We tested if the consistency in the impact scoring across assessors, quantified as the coefficient of variation (CV), was dependent on the characteristics of the protocol, the taxonomic group and the expertise of the assessor. Mean CV across assessors was 40%, with a maximum of 223%. CV was lower for protocols with a low number of score levels, which demanded high levels of expertise, and when the assessors had greater expertise on the assessed species. The similarity among protocols with respect to the final scores was higher when the protocols considered the same impact types. We conclude that all protocols led to considerable inconsistency among assessors. In order to improve consistency, we highlight the importance of selecting assessors with high expertise, providing clear guidelines and adequate training but also deriving final decisions collaboratively by consensus.",
journal = "NeoBiota",
title = "Consistency of impact assessment protocols for non-native species",
volume = "44",
doi = "10.3897/neobiota.44.31650",
pages = "1-25"
}
González-Moreno, P., Lazzaro, L., Vilà, M., Preda, C., Adriaens, T., Bacher, S., Brundu, G., Copp, G. H., Essl, F., García-Berthou, E., Katsanevakis, S., Moen, T. L., Lucy, F. E., Nentwig, W., Roy, H. E., Srėbalienė, G., Talgø, V., Vanderhoeven, S., Andjelković, A., Arbačiauskas, K., Auger-Rozenberg, M., Bae, M., Bariche, M., Boets, P., Boieiro, M., Borges, P. A., Canning-Clode, J., Cardigos, F., Chartosia, N., Cottier-Cook, E. J., Crocetta, F., D'hondt, B., Foggi, B., Follak, S., Gallardo, B., Gammelmo, Ø., Giakoumi, S., Giuliani, C., Guillaume, F., Jelaska, L. Š., Jeschke, J. M., Jover, M., Juárez-Escario, A., Kalogirou, S., Kočić, A., Kytinou, E., Laverty, C., Lozano, V., Maceda-Veiga, A., Marchante, E., Marchante, H., Martinou, A. F., Meyer, S., Minchin, D., Montero-Castaño, A., Morais, M. C., Morales-Rodriguez, C., Muhthassim, N., Nagy, Z. Á., Ogris, N., Onen, H., Pergl, J., Puntila, R., Rabitsch, W., Ramburn, T. T., Rego, C., Reichenbach, F., Romeralo, C., Saul, W., Schrader, G., Sheehan, R., Simonović, P., Skolka, M., Soares, A. O., Sundheim, L., Tarkan, A. S., Tomov, R., Tricarico, E., Tsiamis, K., Uludağ, A., van Valkenburg, J., Verreycken, H., Vettraino, A. M., Vilar, L., Wiig, Ø., Witzell, J., Zanetta, A.,& Kenis, M.. (2019). Consistency of impact assessment protocols for non-native species. in NeoBiota, 44, 1-25.
https://doi.org/10.3897/neobiota.44.31650
González-Moreno P, Lazzaro L, Vilà M, Preda C, Adriaens T, Bacher S, Brundu G, Copp GH, Essl F, García-Berthou E, Katsanevakis S, Moen TL, Lucy FE, Nentwig W, Roy HE, Srėbalienė G, Talgø V, Vanderhoeven S, Andjelković A, Arbačiauskas K, Auger-Rozenberg M, Bae M, Bariche M, Boets P, Boieiro M, Borges PA, Canning-Clode J, Cardigos F, Chartosia N, Cottier-Cook EJ, Crocetta F, D'hondt B, Foggi B, Follak S, Gallardo B, Gammelmo Ø, Giakoumi S, Giuliani C, Guillaume F, Jelaska LŠ, Jeschke JM, Jover M, Juárez-Escario A, Kalogirou S, Kočić A, Kytinou E, Laverty C, Lozano V, Maceda-Veiga A, Marchante E, Marchante H, Martinou AF, Meyer S, Minchin D, Montero-Castaño A, Morais MC, Morales-Rodriguez C, Muhthassim N, Nagy ZÁ, Ogris N, Onen H, Pergl J, Puntila R, Rabitsch W, Ramburn TT, Rego C, Reichenbach F, Romeralo C, Saul W, Schrader G, Sheehan R, Simonović P, Skolka M, Soares AO, Sundheim L, Tarkan AS, Tomov R, Tricarico E, Tsiamis K, Uludağ A, van Valkenburg J, Verreycken H, Vettraino AM, Vilar L, Wiig Ø, Witzell J, Zanetta A, Kenis M. Consistency of impact assessment protocols for non-native species. in NeoBiota. 2019;44:1-25.
doi:10.3897/neobiota.44.31650 .
González-Moreno, Pablo, Lazzaro, Lorenzo, Vilà, Montserrat, Preda, Cristina, Adriaens, Tim, Bacher, Sven, Brundu, Giuseppe, Copp, Gordon H., Essl, Franz, García-Berthou, Emili, Katsanevakis, Stelios, Moen, Toril Loennechen, Lucy, Frances E., Nentwig, Wolfgang, Roy, Helen E., Srėbalienė, Greta, Talgø, Venche, Vanderhoeven, Sonia, Andjelković, Ana, Arbačiauskas, Kęstutis, Auger-Rozenberg, Marie-Anne, Bae, Mi-Jung, Bariche, Michel, Boets, Pieter, Boieiro, Mário, Borges, Paulo Alexandre, Canning-Clode, João, Cardigos, Federico, Chartosia, Niki, Cottier-Cook, Elizabeth Joanne, Crocetta, Fabio, D'hondt, Bram, Foggi, Bruno, Follak, Swen, Gallardo, Belinda, Gammelmo, Øivind, Giakoumi, Sylvaine, Giuliani, Claudia, Guillaume, Fried, Jelaska, Lucija Šerić, Jeschke, Jonathan M., Jover, Miquel, Juárez-Escario, Alejandro, Kalogirou, Stefanos, Kočić, Aleksandra, Kytinou, Eleni, Laverty, Ciaran, Lozano, Vanessa, Maceda-Veiga, Alberto, Marchante, Elizabete, Marchante, Hélia, Martinou, Angeliki F., Meyer, Sandro, Minchin, Dan, Montero-Castaño, Ana, Morais, Maria Cristina, Morales-Rodriguez, Carmen, Muhthassim, Naida, Nagy, Zoltán Á., Ogris, Nikica, Onen, Huseyin, Pergl, Jan, Puntila, Riikka, Rabitsch, Wolfgang, Ramburn, Triya Tessa, Rego, Carla, Reichenbach, Fabian, Romeralo, Carmen, Saul, Wolf-Christian, Schrader, Gritta, Sheehan, Rory, Simonović, Predrag, Skolka, Marius, Soares, António Onofre, Sundheim, Leif, Tarkan, Ali Serhan, Tomov, Rumen, Tricarico, Elena, Tsiamis, Konstantinos, Uludağ, Ahmet, van Valkenburg, Johan, Verreycken, Hugo, Vettraino, Anna Maria, Vilar, Lluís, Wiig, Øystein, Witzell, Johanna, Zanetta, Andrea, Kenis, Marc, "Consistency of impact assessment protocols for non-native species" in NeoBiota, 44 (2019):1-25,
https://doi.org/10.3897/neobiota.44.31650 . .
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Expression of catalase and glutathione-S- transferase in the liver of trout species as indication of stress in the Sava and Adige Rivers

Blagojević, Duško; Majone, Bruno; Alberto, Bellin; Zulijani, Tea; Piria, Marina; Dinić, Svetlana; Grdović, Nevena; Uskoković, Aleksandra; Arambašić Jovanović, Jelena; Mihailović, Mirjana; Vidaković, Melita; Simonović, Predrag; Paunović, Momir

(GLOBAQUA, 2018)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Blagojević, Duško
AU  - Majone, Bruno
AU  - Alberto, Bellin
AU  - Zulijani, Tea
AU  - Piria, Marina
AU  - Dinić, Svetlana
AU  - Grdović, Nevena
AU  - Uskoković, Aleksandra
AU  - Arambašić Jovanović, Jelena
AU  - Mihailović, Mirjana
AU  - Vidaković, Melita
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Paunović, Momir
PY  - 2018
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6145
AB  - Introduction 
The aim of this study was to determinate the activitiy of antioxidant enzyme catalse (CAT) and phase II metabolic enzyme glutathione-S-transferase (GST) in the liver of trout species from two sites at the upper stretch of the Sava River (Sava Bohinjka, downstream Bohinjska Bistrica and Radovljica) and three sites in the Adige River Basin (Vermigliana stream at Vermiglio, Noce at Mezzana and Noce at Mezzolombardo). Two basins are a part of the GLOBAQUA investigation approach (Navarro-Ortega et al., 2015) – Figure 1. Rising activity of CAT and GST is indicative for presence of stress factors - lack of oxygen and influence of an array of xenobiotics (Pavlović et al., 2004). 
Material and Methods 
The following trout taxa were used as sentinels organisms: Salmo trutta Linnaeus, 1758 (the Sava Basin), S. marmoratus and S. cenerinus Nardo, 1847 (the Adige Basin). Having in mind that collected taxa are closely related and have same ecological preferences, the data on activity of antioxidant and phase II metabolic enzymes is comparable. Due to the geographic distribution of trout species, it was not possible to collect the same taxa in two distinct river basins. Material for the analyses was collected and processed according to the standard procedure (Pavlović et al., 2004). 
Results 
Analyses of the activity of CAT and GST from the individuals from the Sava River did not show significant mutual difference, which is also the case with the activities of selected enzymes in individuals collected from the streams in the Adige River Basin. From the other side, statistical analysis showed that samples from the locality Sava Bohinjka had significantly higher hepatic GST activity in compare with all samples from the Adige Basin (p˂0.001, Anova, Tukey's post hoc test). Hepatic CAT also showed higher activity in individuals collected from the Sava than in those collected from the Adige River, but difference was not significant (p˂0.05).  
Discussion 
The results indicate that individuals of the trout species from the Sava River are under the higher influence of stress factors in compare to those collected from the Adige Basin. Having in mind that oxygen deficit was not recorded at investigated sites, the difference in enzymatic activity presented herein could indicate that the upper stretch of the Sava River is under higher influence of xenobiotics, in compare to streams investigated in the Adige Basin. Variation in activity of selected enzymes have been demonstrated in many studies and proposed as an effective marker of pollutant-mediated oxidative stress (Pavlović et al., 2004). The presence of pollutants and general degradation of certain sections of the Sava River have been discussed in previous studies (Milačić et al., 2015, Vrzel et al., 2016).
PB  - GLOBAQUA
C3  - Book of abstracts: GLOBAQUA final conference: Water river management under water scarcity and multiple stressors; 2018 Dec 17-19; Barcelona, Spain
T1  - Expression of catalase and glutathione-S- transferase in the liver of trout species as indication of stress in the Sava and Adige Rivers
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6145
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Blagojević, Duško and Majone, Bruno and Alberto, Bellin and Zulijani, Tea and Piria, Marina and Dinić, Svetlana and Grdović, Nevena and Uskoković, Aleksandra and Arambašić Jovanović, Jelena and Mihailović, Mirjana and Vidaković, Melita and Simonović, Predrag and Paunović, Momir",
year = "2018",
abstract = "Introduction 
The aim of this study was to determinate the activitiy of antioxidant enzyme catalse (CAT) and phase II metabolic enzyme glutathione-S-transferase (GST) in the liver of trout species from two sites at the upper stretch of the Sava River (Sava Bohinjka, downstream Bohinjska Bistrica and Radovljica) and three sites in the Adige River Basin (Vermigliana stream at Vermiglio, Noce at Mezzana and Noce at Mezzolombardo). Two basins are a part of the GLOBAQUA investigation approach (Navarro-Ortega et al., 2015) – Figure 1. Rising activity of CAT and GST is indicative for presence of stress factors - lack of oxygen and influence of an array of xenobiotics (Pavlović et al., 2004). 
Material and Methods 
The following trout taxa were used as sentinels organisms: Salmo trutta Linnaeus, 1758 (the Sava Basin), S. marmoratus and S. cenerinus Nardo, 1847 (the Adige Basin). Having in mind that collected taxa are closely related and have same ecological preferences, the data on activity of antioxidant and phase II metabolic enzymes is comparable. Due to the geographic distribution of trout species, it was not possible to collect the same taxa in two distinct river basins. Material for the analyses was collected and processed according to the standard procedure (Pavlović et al., 2004). 
Results 
Analyses of the activity of CAT and GST from the individuals from the Sava River did not show significant mutual difference, which is also the case with the activities of selected enzymes in individuals collected from the streams in the Adige River Basin. From the other side, statistical analysis showed that samples from the locality Sava Bohinjka had significantly higher hepatic GST activity in compare with all samples from the Adige Basin (p˂0.001, Anova, Tukey's post hoc test). Hepatic CAT also showed higher activity in individuals collected from the Sava than in those collected from the Adige River, but difference was not significant (p˂0.05).  
Discussion 
The results indicate that individuals of the trout species from the Sava River are under the higher influence of stress factors in compare to those collected from the Adige Basin. Having in mind that oxygen deficit was not recorded at investigated sites, the difference in enzymatic activity presented herein could indicate that the upper stretch of the Sava River is under higher influence of xenobiotics, in compare to streams investigated in the Adige Basin. Variation in activity of selected enzymes have been demonstrated in many studies and proposed as an effective marker of pollutant-mediated oxidative stress (Pavlović et al., 2004). The presence of pollutants and general degradation of certain sections of the Sava River have been discussed in previous studies (Milačić et al., 2015, Vrzel et al., 2016).",
publisher = "GLOBAQUA",
journal = "Book of abstracts: GLOBAQUA final conference: Water river management under water scarcity and multiple stressors; 2018 Dec 17-19; Barcelona, Spain",
title = "Expression of catalase and glutathione-S- transferase in the liver of trout species as indication of stress in the Sava and Adige Rivers",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6145"
}
Blagojević, D., Majone, B., Alberto, B., Zulijani, T., Piria, M., Dinić, S., Grdović, N., Uskoković, A., Arambašić Jovanović, J., Mihailović, M., Vidaković, M., Simonović, P.,& Paunović, M.. (2018). Expression of catalase and glutathione-S- transferase in the liver of trout species as indication of stress in the Sava and Adige Rivers. in Book of abstracts: GLOBAQUA final conference: Water river management under water scarcity and multiple stressors; 2018 Dec 17-19; Barcelona, Spain
GLOBAQUA..
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6145
Blagojević D, Majone B, Alberto B, Zulijani T, Piria M, Dinić S, Grdović N, Uskoković A, Arambašić Jovanović J, Mihailović M, Vidaković M, Simonović P, Paunović M. Expression of catalase and glutathione-S- transferase in the liver of trout species as indication of stress in the Sava and Adige Rivers. in Book of abstracts: GLOBAQUA final conference: Water river management under water scarcity and multiple stressors; 2018 Dec 17-19; Barcelona, Spain. 2018;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6145 .
Blagojević, Duško, Majone, Bruno, Alberto, Bellin, Zulijani, Tea, Piria, Marina, Dinić, Svetlana, Grdović, Nevena, Uskoković, Aleksandra, Arambašić Jovanović, Jelena, Mihailović, Mirjana, Vidaković, Melita, Simonović, Predrag, Paunović, Momir, "Expression of catalase and glutathione-S- transferase in the liver of trout species as indication of stress in the Sava and Adige Rivers" in Book of abstracts: GLOBAQUA final conference: Water river management under water scarcity and multiple stressors; 2018 Dec 17-19; Barcelona, Spain (2018),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6145 .

Assessment of invasibility of the Danube section in Serbia

Zorić, Katarina; Marković, Vanja; Tomović, Jelena; Vasiljević, Božica; Atanacković, Ana; Simonović, Predrag; Paunović, Momir

(Belgrade : Faculty of Agriculture, 2018)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Zorić, Katarina
AU  - Marković, Vanja
AU  - Tomović, Jelena
AU  - Vasiljević, Božica
AU  - Atanacković, Ana
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Paunović, Momir
PY  - 2018
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4852
AB  - Popis alohtonih vrsta određene teritorije i procena stepena njihove invazivnosti predstavljaju polazni korak na osnovu koga se može pratiti efikasnost sprovedenih mera borbe protiv invazivnih vrsta. Važan aspekt metodologije predstavlja i definisanje potencijalno osetljivih teritorija sa aspekta bioloških invazija, odnosno procenu stepena invazibilnosti područja. U ovom radu data je procena invazibilnosti dela toka Dunava kroz Srbiju na osnovu parametra za koje pretpostavljamo da imaju najveći uticaj na osetljivost vodenih ekosistema prema bioinvazijama. To su: nadmorska visina, razuđenost reljefa, broj stanovnika, nivo hidroloških promena i intenzitet rečnog saobraćaja. Na osnovu ukupne ocene koja je dobijena kao srednja vrednost pojedinačne ocene za svaki od navedenih parametara, možemo zaključiti da je sektor od Beograda do brane „Đerdap I“ najosetljiviji na biološko zagađenje, kao i deo toka nizvodno od Novog Sada. Na sektor od Beograda do brane „Đerdap I“ najveći uticaj na visoku klasu invazibilnosti ima prvenstveno intezivan rečni saobraćaj, kao i nivo hidromorfoloških promena.
PB  - Belgrade : Faculty of Agriculture
C3  - Proceedings of the 8th International Conference; 2018 June 13-15, Belgrade-Zemun, Serbia
T1  - Assessment of invasibility of the Danube section in Serbia
T1  - Ocena invazibilnosti područja na delu toka Dunava kroz Srbiju
SP  - 423
EP  - 426
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4852
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Zorić, Katarina and Marković, Vanja and Tomović, Jelena and Vasiljević, Božica and Atanacković, Ana and Simonović, Predrag and Paunović, Momir",
year = "2018",
abstract = "Popis alohtonih vrsta određene teritorije i procena stepena njihove invazivnosti predstavljaju polazni korak na osnovu koga se može pratiti efikasnost sprovedenih mera borbe protiv invazivnih vrsta. Važan aspekt metodologije predstavlja i definisanje potencijalno osetljivih teritorija sa aspekta bioloških invazija, odnosno procenu stepena invazibilnosti područja. U ovom radu data je procena invazibilnosti dela toka Dunava kroz Srbiju na osnovu parametra za koje pretpostavljamo da imaju najveći uticaj na osetljivost vodenih ekosistema prema bioinvazijama. To su: nadmorska visina, razuđenost reljefa, broj stanovnika, nivo hidroloških promena i intenzitet rečnog saobraćaja. Na osnovu ukupne ocene koja je dobijena kao srednja vrednost pojedinačne ocene za svaki od navedenih parametara, možemo zaključiti da je sektor od Beograda do brane „Đerdap I“ najosetljiviji na biološko zagađenje, kao i deo toka nizvodno od Novog Sada. Na sektor od Beograda do brane „Đerdap I“ najveći uticaj na visoku klasu invazibilnosti ima prvenstveno intezivan rečni saobraćaj, kao i nivo hidromorfoloških promena.",
publisher = "Belgrade : Faculty of Agriculture",
journal = "Proceedings of the 8th International Conference; 2018 June 13-15, Belgrade-Zemun, Serbia",
title = "Assessment of invasibility of the Danube section in Serbia, Ocena invazibilnosti područja na delu toka Dunava kroz Srbiju",
pages = "423-426",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4852"
}
Zorić, K., Marković, V., Tomović, J., Vasiljević, B., Atanacković, A., Simonović, P.,& Paunović, M.. (2018). Assessment of invasibility of the Danube section in Serbia. in Proceedings of the 8th International Conference; 2018 June 13-15, Belgrade-Zemun, Serbia
Belgrade : Faculty of Agriculture., 423-426.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4852
Zorić K, Marković V, Tomović J, Vasiljević B, Atanacković A, Simonović P, Paunović M. Assessment of invasibility of the Danube section in Serbia. in Proceedings of the 8th International Conference; 2018 June 13-15, Belgrade-Zemun, Serbia. 2018;:423-426.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4852 .
Zorić, Katarina, Marković, Vanja, Tomović, Jelena, Vasiljević, Božica, Atanacković, Ana, Simonović, Predrag, Paunović, Momir, "Assessment of invasibility of the Danube section in Serbia" in Proceedings of the 8th International Conference; 2018 June 13-15, Belgrade-Zemun, Serbia (2018):423-426,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4852 .