Caribbean Creep meets Chesapeake Creep: marine bioinvasions and community shifts along the Mid-Atlantic Coast, USA
Author(s)
Fowler, Amy E.; Blakeslee, April M. H.; Davinack, Andrew; Aguilar, Robert; Andersen, Miranda; Benadon, Clara; Choong, Henry H. C.; Green-Gavrielidis, Lindsay; Greenberg, Sarah R.; Hartshorn, El; Hobbs, Niels-Viggo; Labbe, Sara; Larson, Kristen; ... Show more Show less
Download10530_2025_Article_3646.pdf (1.152Mb)
Publisher with Creative Commons License
Publisher with Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution
Terms of use
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The Mid-Atlantic waters of North America are warming faster than > 90% of other global oceans, leading to significant increases in bottom water temperatures and influencing shifts in marine community structure. Given this modern-day scenario of significant community shifts over space and time, baseline surveys of species diversity are increasingly valuable. Therefore, we performed the first-ever marine bioinvasions Rapid Assessment Survey (RAS) along the Mid-Atlantic waters of the United States in June 2023, focused on marina floating pontoons in Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, and New Jersey. We recorded 29 non-indigenous, 16 cryptogenic, and 10 species that have expanded their ranges in the mid-Atlantic. Seven of these 10 species have expanded northwards from southern locations in the Caribbean (“Caribbean Creep”) or the western Atlantic (“Chesapeake Creep”), and three have expanded southwards. Five non-indigenous species (NIS) were found at more than 60% of the 10 sampled sites: the bryozoans Bugula neritina, Schizoporella pungens, Tricellaria inopinata, macroalgae Codium fragile subsp. fragile, and the sea anemone Aiptasiogeton eruptaurantia. We did not document any new nonindigenous species not already recorded on the Western Atlantic coast. All 10 communities were distinctly different, and species dominance varied by latitude and by site. This first-ever RAS of the Mid-Atlantic waters of the United States provides critical insight into how marine communities have been and are changing as a result of colonization by NIS, including those that have expanded their ranges as a result of human-induced climate change.
Date issued
2025-08-18Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Sea Grant College ProgramJournal
Biological Invasions
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Citation
Fowler, A.E., Blakeslee, A.M.H., Davinack, A. et al. Caribbean Creep meets Chesapeake Creep: marine bioinvasions and community shifts along the Mid-Atlantic Coast, USA. Biol Invasions 27, 192 (2025).
Version: Final published version