67 results on '"Simonetta Bagella"'
Search Results
2. Which perspectives for Mediterranean temporary ponds in the European Union in the third millennium?
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Simonetta Bagella
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Ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Published
- 2023
3. Ecology meets archaeology: Past, present and future vegetation‐derived ecosystems services from the Nuragic Sardinia (1700–580 <scp>BCE</scp> )
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Marco Malavasi, Manuele Bazzichetto, Stefania Bagella, Vojtěch Barták, Anna Depalmas, Antonello Gregorini, Marta Gaia Sperandii, Alicia T. R. Acosta, Simonetta Bagella, Malavasi, M, Bazzichetto, M, Bagella, S, Bartak, V, Depalmas, A, Gregorini, A, Sperandii, Mg, and Acosta, Atr
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vegetation and people ,vegetation maps ,Nuragic age ,transdisciplinary approach ,archaeology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,ecosystem service - Abstract
Incorporating archaeology within the ecosystem services (ES) framework can offer decision-makers lessons from the past and a broader sustainability perspective. Given the claimed archaeology-ES link, the island of Sardinia (Italy) offers an unparalleled opportunity where a unique archaeological heritage occurs in an area of high biodiversity value. More than 5000 nuraghi, megalithic edifices distinctive of the Nuragic civilization (1700-580 BCE), are still present on the island. By crossing the map of Vegetation Series (VS) with nuraghi occurrences, we aimed at acquiring a long-term perspective on the interactions between Nuragic people and the vegetation as ES provider, so as to enrich our understanding of the past and the present, and potentially inform future practice for the region of Sardinia. A VS is here intended as a hypothesis of a succession of plant communities that can potentially succeed each other over time in a particular land unit. The vegetation-derived ES represented a driving force in the land occupation strategies of the Nuragic people, who preferred, for their settlements, the mesophiluos cork oak VS and secondary the deciduous broad-leaved ones, which, with fresh climatic conditions on fertile substrates and gentle slopes on effusive magmatic rocks, can provide land for grazing and agriculture. Conversely, the Nuragic land occupation strategies shaped the VS, transforming the landscape into agro-silvo-pastoral systems. Our results suggest that the origin of the present agro-silvo-pastoral landscapes (i.e. Pascolo arborato/Dehesa) in Sardinia could be traced back to the Nuragic civilization. The interaction between humans and vegetation in Sardinia is ancient, reciprocal and dynamic. This interaction is crucial for the survival of the present agro-silvo-pastoral landscapes that represent important suppliers of provisioning, regulating and cultural ES. Among others, these landscapes are a good example of intimate and sustainable relationships between people and nature and provide a marked sense of place and identity for Sardinia inhabitants. This transdisciplinary approach linking plant ecology with archaeology offered archaeology a better understanding of the environmental settings and subsistence of the Nuragic civilization and provided plant ecology with a long-term perspective on human-vegetation interactions. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
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- 2023
4. Invasion trends of aquatic Ludwigia hexapetala and L. peploides subsp montevidensis (Onagraceae) in Italy based on herbarium records and global datasets
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Benedetta Gori, Giovanna Pezzi, Giuseppe Brundu, Simona Ceschin, Emanuele Palella, Alessandro Alessandrini, Lucia Amadei, Sebastiano Andreatta, Nicola Maria Giuseppe Ardenghi, Stefano Armiraglio, Simonetta Bagella, Rossano Bolpagni, Ilaria Bonini, Daniela Bouvet, Lisa Brancaleoni, Massimo Buccheri, Gabriella Buffa, Alessandro Chiarucci, Annalena Cogoni, Gianniantonio Domina, Riccardo Guarino, Luigi Forte, Leonardo Gubellini, Laura Guglielmone, Nicole Hofmann, Mauro Iberite, Lorenzo Lastrucci, Fernando Lucchese, Rossella Marcucci, Giacomo Mei, Umberto Mossetti, Juri Nascimbene, Nicodemo Giuseppe Passalacqua, Simonetta Peccenini, Filippo Prosser, Giovanni Repetto, Gabriele Rinaldi, Enrico Romani, Leonardo Rosati, Annalisa Santangelo, Anna Scoppola, Giovanni Spampinato, Adriano Stinca, Maria Tavano, Fulvio Tomsich Caruso, Roberta Vangelisti, Roberto Venanzoni, Marisa Vidali, Thomas Vilhalm, Francesco Zonca, Fabrizio Buldrini, and Carla Lambertini
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Identifying areas susceptible to invasion by an alien species is a strategy of prevention. We used national herbaria and global databases to assess the invasion trends of the two aquatic invasive species Ludwigia hexapetala and Ludwigia peploidessubsp. montevidensis in Italy. We defined the invasion status with invasions curves and predicted potentially suitable areas with Species Distribution Models based on WorldClim variables and the human footprint index. Low seasonal variation in temperature and precipitation, temperature ≥ 20 °C in the warmest, driest and wettest periods of the year and precipitation in the coldest period are the bioclimatic factors that most account for the potential distribution of the two species. The human footprint has lower relative importance than bioclimatic variables. All Italian peninsula appears as a suitable bioclimatic environment for the invasion of the two Ludwigia species, except the Alps and the highest peaks in the Apennine. Based on the current distribution of the species in Italy and the mostly densely invaded areas globally, the agricultural land surrounding the current invaded areas and along the Italian coasts is the most vulnerable to the invasion. Considering the trend of the invasion curves, which have been sharply rising for the latest decades, there are reasons to expect that the alien Ludwigia species will continue their expansion, if no timely and effective actions are taken. Informative campaigns, accurate monitoring and prompt management are fundamental preventive tools in areas predicted as vulnerable to invasion by this study.
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- 2023
5. Towards the Computational Assessment of the Conservation Status of a Habitat
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X. Huy Manh, Daniela Gigante, Claudia Angiolini, Simonetta Bagella, Marco Caccianiga, Franco Angelini, Manolo Garabini, and Paolo Remagnino
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- 2023
6. Proposals for improvement of Annex I of Directive 92/43/EEC: Sardinia
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Mauro Fois, Gianluigi Bacchetta, Maria Carmela Caria, Donatella Cogoni, Emmanuele Farris, Giuseppe Fenu, Manuela Manca, Maria Silvia Pinna, Stefania Pisanu, Giovanni Rivieccio, and Simonetta Bagella
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Ecology ,habitat types ,endemic species ,Natura 2000 network ,Plant culture ,habitat subtypes ,Forestry ,Plant Science ,SB1-1110 ,European ‘Habitats’ Directive ,Annex I habitats ,Mediterranean Basin ,QK900-989 ,Plant ecology ,European 'Habitats' Directive ,neglected habitats ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The ‘Habitats’ Directive (HD 92/43/EEC) is one of the primary legal tools aiming at conserving nature in Europe. Due to the complex iter to revise it, the habitats listed in the Annex I have been seldom updated after the HD adoption. Basing on already available information and expert knowledge, this paper presents a preliminary list of relevant habitats occurring in Sardinia, not yet considered and worth to be placed in the Annex I. Two new habitat proposals, one habitat new for Italy, and nine new subtypes of already existing HD habitats are here described. Most of the proposed new habitats and subtypes have a limited distribution range, due to the high number of narrow, often endangered, endemic species that characterize them. Being neglected, they are consequently poorly investigated, inconstantly monitored and unprotected. Thus, the main aim of this paper is to promote their conservation through implementation of HD and its interpretation manuals.
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- 2021
7. New national and regional Annex I Habitat records: from #21 to #25
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Giuseppe Bazan, Gianluigi Bacchetta, Simonetta Bagella, Gianmaria Bonari, Federica Bonini, Giacomo Calvia, Maria Carmela Caria, Giovanni Rivieccio, Lorenzo Gianguzzi, and BAZAN G., BACCHETTA G., BAGELLA S., BONARI G.,BONINI F., CALVIA G., CARIA M.C., RIVIECCIO G., GIANGUZZI L.
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0106 biological sciences ,Ecology ,conservation ,Plant culture ,Forestry ,Plant Science ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,3170*, 6110*, 91E0*, 9320, 9330, 92/43/EEC Directive, conservation, EEA, vegetation ,SB1-1110 ,vegetation ,92/43/EEC Directive ,Settore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E Applicata ,91E0 ,3170 ,6110 ,QK900-989 ,Plant ecology ,EEA ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
New Italian data on the distribution of the Annex I Habitats 3170*, 6110*, 91E0*, 9320, 9330 are reported in this contribution. Specifically, one new occurrence in Natura 2000 sites is presented and six new cells are added in the European Environment Agency 10 km × 10 km reference grid. The new data refer to the Italian administrative regions of Sardinia, Sicily and Umbria.
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- 2021
8. Exploring the biodiversity of key groups in coppice forests (Central Italy): the relationship among vascular plants, epiphytic lichens, and wood-decaying fungi
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Luisa Frati, Sara Landi, Giorgio Brunialti, Simonetta Bagella, and Rossella Speranza Filigheddu
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biology ,Agroforestry ,Sustainable forest management ,Biodiversity ,Quercus cerris ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Coppicing ,Geography ,Fagus sylvatica ,Key (lock) ,Epiphyte ,Lichen ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Sustainable Forest Management (SFM) indicators consider the main ecological and socioeconomic functions of forests but do not currently include some key groups widely adopted to assess the effects ...
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- 2021
9. Notulae to the Italian alien vascular flora: 11
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Giovanna Sotgiu Cocco, Emmanuele Farris, Francesco Festi, Nicola Pilon, Fabrizio Furlani, Filippo Scafidi, Andrea Coppi, Giulio Barone, Vanessa Lozano, Daniele Viciani, Lorenzo Pinzani, D. Marchetti, Emmanuelle Argenti, Simonetta Bagella, Filip Verloove, Leonardo Rosati, Milena Villa, Duilio Iamonico, Sergio Buono, Giulio Ferretti, Alessio Bertolli, Valentina Laface, Paolo Marenzi, Gianluigi Bacchetta, Daniele Bonsanto, Mauro Fois, Gabriele Galasso, Alexander N. Sennikov, Sebastiano Andreatta, Flavio Menini, Gianniantonio Domina, Marco Merli, Simona Sarmati, L. Gubellini, Robert P. Wagensommer, Federico Selvi, Stefano Orlandini, Serlapo Bardi, Fabio Luchino, Nicola Olivieri, Valeria Tomaselli, Michela Marignani, Giacomo Calvia, Lorenzo Lazzaro, Nello Biscotti, Nicole Hofmann, Emanuele Del Guacchio, Adriano Stinca, Marco Martignoni, Salvatore Cambria, Claudio Raffaelli, Lina Podda, Alfonso La Rosa, Giulia Tomasi, Giuseppe Brundu, Lorenzo Lastrucci, Pedro Jiménez-Mejías, Fabio Conti, Fabrizio Bartolucci, Claudia Turcato, Simonetta Peccenini, Gianluca Nicolella, Michele Mugnai, Sara Magrini, Giovanni Rivieccio, Giacomo Mei, Daniela Gigante, Jacopo Lupoletti, Gianmarco Tavilla, Marco Pittarello, Giovanni Spampinato, Simone Ravetto Enri, Massimiliano Probo, Enrico Banfi, Filippo Prosser, Antonio Pica, Riccardo Guarino, Andrea Lallai, Davide Dagnino, Davide Tomasi, Carmelo Maria Musarella, Fabrizio Bonali, Michele Lonati, Andrea Mainetti, Amara Noor Hussain, Giuliano Campus, Lorenzo Peruzzi, Orazio Caldarella, Davide Barberis, Maurizio Trenchi, Emilio Di Gristina, Federica Bonini, Maria Carmela Caria, UAM. Departamento de Biología, Galasso, G., Domina, G., Andreatta, S., Argenti, E., Bacchetta, G., Bagella, S., Banfi, E., Barberis, D., Bardi, S., Barone, G., Bartolucci, F., Bertolli, A., Biscotti, N., Bonali, F., Bonini, F., Bonsanto, D., Brundu, G., Buono, S., Caldarella, O., Calvia, G., Cambria, S., Campus, G., Caria, M. C., Conti, F., Coppi, A., Dagnino, D., Del Guacchio, E., Di Gristina, E., Farris, E., Ferretti, G., Festi, F., Fois, M., Furlani, F., Gigante, D., Guarino, R., Gubellini, L., Hofmann, N., Iamonico, D., Jimenez-Mejias, P., La Rosa, A., Laface, V. L. A., Lallai, A., Lazzaro, L., Lonati, M., Lozano, V., Luchino, F., Lupoletti, J., Magrini, S., Mainetti, A., Marchetti, D., Marenzi, P., Marignani, M., Martignoni, M., Mei, G., Menini, F., Merli, M., Mugnai, M., Musarella, C. M., Nicolella, G., Hussain, A. N., Olivieri, N., Orlandini, S., Peccenini, S., Peruzzi, L., Pica, A., Pilon, N., Pinzani, L., Pittarello, M., Podda, L., Probo, M., Prosser, F., Raffaelli, C., Enri, S. R., Rivieccio, G., Rosati, L., Sarmati, S., Scafidi, F., Selvi, F., Sennikov, A. N., Cocco, G. S., Spampinato, G., Stinca, A., Tavilla, G., Tomaselli, V., Tomasi, D., Tomasi, G., Trenchi, M., Turcato, C., Verloove, F., Viciani, D., Villa, M., Wagensommer, R. P., Lastrucci, L., Botany, Galasso, Gabriele, Domina, Gianniantonio, Andreatta, Sebastiano, Argenti, Emmanuelle, Bacchetta, Gianluigi, Bagella, Simonetta, Banfi, Enrico, Barberis, Davide, Bardi, Serlapo, Barone, Giulio, Bartolucci, Fabrizio, Bertolli, Alessio, Biscotti, Nello, Bonali, Fabrizio, Bonini, Federica, Bonsanto, Daniele, Brundu, Giuseppe, Buono, Sergio, Caldarella, Orazio, Calvia, Giacomo, Cambria, Salvatore, Campus, Giuliano, Caria, Maria C., Conti, Fabio, Coppi, Andrea, Dagnino, Davide, Del Guacchio, Emanuele, Di Gristina, Emilio, Farris, Emmanuele, Ferretti, Giulio, Festi, Francesco, Fois, Mauro, Furlani, Fabrizio, Gigante, Daniela, Guarino, Riccardo, Gubellini, Leonardo, Hofmann, Nicole, Iamonico, Duilio, Jiménez-Mejias, Pedro, La Rosa, Alfonso, Laface, Valentina L. A., Lallai, Andrea, Lazzaro, Lorenzo, Lonati, Michele, Lozano, Vanessa, Luchino, Fabio, Lupoletti, Jacopo, Magrini, Sara, Mainetti, Andrea, Marchetti, Dino, Marenzi, Paolo, Marignani, Michela, Martignoni, Marco, Mei, Giacomo, Menini, Flavio, Merli, Marco, Mugnai, Michele, Musarella, Carmelo M., Nicolella, Gianluca, Noor Hussain, Amara, Olivieri, Nicola, Orlandini, Stefano, Peccenini, Simonetta, Peruzzi, Lorenzo, Pica, Antonio, Pilon, Nicola, Pinzani, Lorenzo, Pittarello, Marco, Podda, Lina, Probo, Massimiliano, Prosser, Filippo, Raffaelli, Claudio, Ravetto Enri, Simone, Rivieccio, Giovanni, Rosati, Leonardo, Sarmati, Simona, Scafidi, Filippo, Selvi, Federico, Sennikov, Alexander N., Sotgiu Cocco, Giovanna, Spampinato, Giovanni, Stinca, Adriano, Tavilla, Gianmarco, Tomaselli, Valeria, Tomasi, Davide, Tomasi, Giulia, Trenchi, Maurizio, Turcato, Claudia, Verloove, Filip, Viciani, Daniele, Villa, Milena, Wagensommer, Robert P., and Lastrucci, Lorenzo
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0106 biological sciences ,Flora ,Alien species ,Plant Science ,Alien ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,floristic data ,Floristic Data ,Nomenclature ,Alien specie ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Ecology ,Botany ,11831 Plant biology ,Biología y Biomedicina / Biología ,Alien Species ,Geography ,Italy ,QK1-989 ,Alien species, floristic data, Italy, nomenclature ,nomenclature ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Publisher Copyright: © This dataset is made available under the Open Database License (http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/1.0/). The Open Database License (ODbL) is a license agreement intended to allow users to freely share, modify, and use this Dataset while maintaining this same freedom for others, provided that the original source and author(s) are credited In this contribution, new data concerning the distribution of vascular flora alien to Italy are presented. It includes new records, confirmations, exclusions, and status changes for Italy or for Italian administrative regions. Nomenclatural and distribution updates published elsewhere are provided as Suppl. material 1.
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- 2021
10. Spatial Distribution and Habitat Selection of Sarda Cattle in a Silvopastoral Mediterranean Area
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Marco Acciaro, Andrea Bragaglio, Marco Pittarello, Gian Marco Marrosu, Maria Sitzia, Gabriele Sanna, Mauro Decandia, Simonetta Bagella, and Giampiero Lombardi
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General Veterinary ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Low-cost GPS collar ,livestock residence index ,preference index - Abstract
The beef livestock system in Sardinia is based on suckler cows, often belonging to autochthonous breeds, such as the Sarda breed, and they often graze silvopastoral areas. Besides beef meat, silvopastoral systems (SPSs) provide several Ecosystem Services (ESs), such as timber provision, harvested as wood, and watershed protection. Livestock distribution is a critical factor for the sustainable use of SPSs (e.g., to avoid uneven grazing patterns) and information on patterns of spatial use are required. A study was conducted to determine: (i) the spatial distribution and (ii) the habitat selection of Sarda cattle grazing in a Mediterranean silvopastoral area. Over different seasons, 12 free-roaming adult Sarda cows were fitted with Global Positioning System (GPS) Knight tracking collars to calculate an index mapping of the incidence of livestock in the landscape (LRI) and a preference index (PI) for different areas. Since the PI data were not normally distributed, the Aligned Rank Transform (ART) procedure was used for the analysis. LRI was able to represent the spatial variability in resource utilization by livestock as a LRI map. Overall, the areas where the animals drank and received supplementation were strongly preferred by the cows, reaching PI values in the summer of 19.3 ± 4.9 (median ± interquartile range), whereas areas with predominantly rocks were strongly avoided (the worst PI value in the spring was 0.2 ± 0.6). Grasslands were, in general, used in proportion to their presence in the area, with slightly increased use in the spring (PI 1.1 ± 0.5). Forest area was avoided by cows, except in the spring when it was used in proportion to their presence in the area.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Notulae to the Italian native vascular flora: 10
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Federico Selvi, Fabrizio Bartolucci, Claudia Turcato, Luigi Forte, Simonetta Peccenini, Gaetano Pazienza, Carlo Cibei, Simone Orsenigo, Günter Gottschlich, Fabio Conti, Assunta Esposito, Filippo Scafidi, Stefania Pisanu, G. Barberis, E. Lattanzi, Giovanni Rivieccio, Ian Briozzo, Simonetta Bagella, Adriano Stinca, Gian Battista Pau, Giuseppina Chianese, Davide Dagnino, Daniela Longo, Maria Carmela Caria, V. Giacanelli, Mario Calbi, Giacomo Mei, Marco Merli, Francesco Roma-Marzio, Viviana Cavallaro, Gabriele Galasso, Chiara Nepi, Gianniantonio Domina, Bartolucci, F, Domina, G, Bagella, S, Barberis, G, Briozzo, I, Calbi, M, Caria, Mc, Cavallaro, V, Chianese, G, Cibei, C, Conti, F, Dagnino, D, Esposito, A, Galasso, G, Giacanelli, V, Forte, L, Gottschlich, G, Lattanzi, E, Longo, D, Mei, G, Merli, M, Orsenigo, S, Pau, Gb, Pazienza, G, Peccenini, S, Pisanu, S, Rivieccio, G, Roma-Marzio, F, Scafidi, F, Selvi, F, Stinca, A, Turcato, C, and Nepi, C
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0106 biological sciences ,Utricularia ,Flora ,Iberis ,Hieracium ,biology ,Thalictrum ,Melica ,Floristic data ,Plant Science ,Genista ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Endemic Floristic data Italy ,lcsh:QK1-989 ,Endemic ,Cirsium ,Italy ,lcsh:Botany ,Botany ,Endemic, Floristic data, Italy ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
In this contribution, new data concerning the distribution of native vascular flora in Italy are presented. It includes new records, confirmations, exclusions, and status changes to the Italian administrative regions for taxa in the genera Artemisia, Chaetonychia, Cirsium, Cynanchum, Genista, Hieracium, Iberis, Melica, Misopates, Myosotis, Thalictrum, Trifolium, Utricularia, Veronica, and Vicia. Nomenclatural and distribution updates, published elsewhere, and corrigenda are provided as supplementary material.
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- 2020
12. New national and regional Annex I Habitat records: from #13 to #15
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Lorenzo Gianguzzi, Simonetta Bagella, Giuseppe Bazan, Maria Carmela Caria, Bruno Enrico Leone Cerabolini, Alice Dalla Vecchia, Giovanni Rivieccio, Rossano Bolpagni, Gianguzzi L., Bagella S., Bazan G., Caria M.C., Cerabolini B.E.L., Dalla Vecchia A., Rivieccio G., and Bolpagni R.
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0106 biological sciences ,Vegetation ,Ecology ,3160, 7210*, 92/43/EEC Directive, 9320, Biodiversity, Conservation, Italy, Vegetation ,Plant culture ,Forestry ,Plant Science ,Biodiversity ,Conservation ,010501 environmental sciences ,7210 ,92/43/EEC Directive ,9320 ,Italy ,01 natural sciences ,SB1-1110 ,3160 7210* 9320 biodiversity conservation 92/43/EEC Directive Italy vegetation ,QK900-989 ,Plant ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,010606 plant biology & botany ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
New data on the distribution of the Annex I Habitats 3160, 7210* and 9320 are reported in this contribution. In detail, 24 new occurrences in Natura 2000 Sites are presented and 42 new cells in the EEA 10 km x 10 km Reference grid are added. The new data refer to Italy and in particular to the Administrative Regions Lombardy, Sardinia, and Sicily.
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- 2020
13. Why so different? A case study about Floras from a Mediterranean island
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Malvina Urbani, Maria Franca Usai, Stefania Pisanu, Simonetta Bagella, Rossella Speranza Filigheddu, Gianni Bedini, Giovanna Becca, and Maria Carmela Caria
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Circumscription ,Taxonomy (general) ,Interpretation (philosophy) ,Regional science ,Plant Science ,Species richness ,Biology ,Value (mathematics) ,Nomenclature ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Checklist ,Boundary (real estate) - Abstract
In light of the hypothesis that different authors, who have access to the same information and tools, can give different interpretations of the same reality, namely the vascular plants, existing within a determinate geographic boundary, this research aims to verify how and to what extent these differences can affect a checklist, and what critical issues and positive effects may arise in them. To this purpose, we compared two different checklists which were developed approximately in the same period for the same geographic area, the island of Sardinia (Italy). The results show that checklists of the same area can differ in quantitative terms, establishing a different value of floristic richness. Moreover, they can differ in qualitative terms due to the different approach adopted by the authors concerning nomenclature, taxonomy, and interpretation, delimitation, and circumscription of taxa. These discrepancies may have positive side effects as they offer insights for critical reviews and further investigation.
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- 2020
14. Notulae to the Italian alien vascular flora: 14
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Gabriele Galasso, Gianniantonio Domina, Sebastiano Andreatta, Carlo Argenti, Giovanni Astuti, Giovanni Bacaro, Gianluigi Bacchetta, Simonetta Bagella, Enrico Banfi, Davide Barberis, Fabrizio Bartolucci, Liliana Bernardo, Gianmaria Bonari, Giuseppe Brundu, Giovanni Buccomino, Giacomo Calvia, Laura Cancellieri, Alberto Capuano, Laura Celesti-Grapow, Fabio Conti, Alba Cuena-Lombraña, Francesco S. D’Amico, Giuseppe De Fine, Leopoldo de Simone, Emanuele Del Guacchio, Francesca Emili, Emanuele Fanfarillo, Simonetta Fascetti, Tiberio Fiaschi, Mauro Fois, Paola Fortini, Rodolfo Gentili, Marco Giardini, Amara N. Hussain, Duilio Iamonico, Valentina L. A. Laface, Andrea Lallai, Lorenzo Lazzaro, Angela P. Lecis, Eleonora Ligato, Gianfranco Loi, Michele Lonati, Vanessa Lozano, Simona Maccherini, Andrea Mainetti, Francesco Mascia, Giacomo Mei, Flavio Menini, Marco Merli, Antonio Montesano, Michele Mugnai, Carmelo M. Musarella, Ginevra Nota, Nicola Olivieri, Nicodemo G. Passalacqua, Lorenzo Pinzani, Alice Pisano, Marco Pittarello, Lina Podda, Giandomenico Posillipo, Giovanna Potenza, Massimiliano Probo, Filippo Prosser, Lara A. Quaglini, Simone Ravetto Enri, Giovanni Rivieccio, Francesco Roma-Marzio, Leonardo Rosati, Alberto Selvaggi, Adriano Soldano, Adriano Stinca, Stefano Tasinazzo, Salvatore Tassone, Massimo Terzi, Roberta Vallariello, Roberta Vangelisti, Filip Verloove, Lorenzo Lastrucci, Galasso, Gabriele, Domina, Gianniantonio, Andreatta, Sebastiano, Argenti, Carlo, Astuti, Giovanni, Bacaro, Giovanni, Bacchetta, Gianluigi, Bagella, Simonetta, Banfi, Enrico, Barberis, Davide, Bartolucci, Fabrizio, Bernardo, Liliana, Bonari, Gianmaria, Brundu, Giuseppe, Buccomino, Giovanni, Calvia, Giacomo, Cancellieri, Laura, Capuano, Alberto, Celesti-Grapow, Laura, Conti, Fabio, Cuena-Lombraña, Alba, D’Amico, Francesco S., De Fine, Giuseppe, de Simone, Leopoldo, Del Guacchio, Emanuele, Emili, Francesca, Fanfarillo, Emanuele, Fascetti, Simonetta, Fiaschi, Tiberio, Fois, Mauro, Fortini, Paola, Gentili, Rodolfo, Giardini, Marco, Hussain, Amara N., Iamonico, Duilio, Laface, Valentina L. A., Lallai, Andrea, Lazzaro, Lorenzo, Lecis, Angela P., Ligato, Eleonora, Loi, Gianfranco, Lonati, Michele, Lozano, Vanessa, Maccherini, Simona, Mainetti, Andrea, Mascia, Francesco, Mei, Giacomo, Menini, Flavio, Merli, Marco, Montesano, Antonio, Mugnai, Michele, Musarella, Carmelo M., Nota, Ginevra, Olivieri, Nicola, Passalacqua, Nicodemo G., Pinzani, Lorenzo, Pisano, Alice, Pittarello, Marco, Podda, Lina, Posillipo, Giandomenico, Potenza, Giovanna, Probo, Massimiliano, Prosser, Filippo, Quaglini, Lara A., Ravetto Enri, Simone, Rivieccio, Giovanni, Roma-Marzio, Francesco, Rosati, Leonardo, Selvaggi, Alberto, Soldano, Adriano, Stinca, Adriano, Tasinazzo, Stefano, Tassone, Salvatore, Terzi, Massimo, Vallariello, Roberta, Vangelisti, Roberta, Verloove, Filip, Lastrucci, Lorenzo, Galasso G., Domina G., Andreatta S., Argenti C., Astuti G., Bacaro G., Bacchetta G., Bagella S., Banfi E., Barberis D., Bartolucci F., Bernardo L., Bonari G., Brundu G., Buccomino G., Calvia G., Cancellieri L., Capuano A., Celesti-Grapow L., Conti F., Cuena-Lombraña A., D’Amico F.S., De Fine G., de Simone L., Guacchio E.D., Emili F., Fanfarillo E., Fascetti S., Fiaschi T., Fois M., Fortini P., Gentili R., Giardini M., Hussain A.N., Iamonico D., Laface V.L.A., Lallai A., Lazzaro L., Lecis A.P., Ligato E., Loi G., Lonati M., Lozano V., Maccherini S., Mainetti A., Mascia F., Mei G., Menini F., Merli M., Montesano A., Mugnai M., Musarella C.M., Nota G., Olivieri N., Passalacqua N.G., Pinzani L., Pisano A., Pittarello M., Podda L., Posillipo G., Potenza G., Probo M., Prosser F., Quaglini L.A., Enri S.R., Rivieccio G., Roma-Marzio F., Rosati L., Selvaggi A., Soldano A., Stinca A., Tasinazzo S., Tassone S., Terzi M., Vallariello R., Vangelisti R., Verloove F., Lastrucci L., Galasso, G, Domina, G, Andreatta, S, Argenti, C, Astuti, G, Bacaro, G, Bacchetta, G, Bagella, S, Banfi, E, Barberis, D, Bartolucci, F, Bernardo, L, Bonari, G, Brundu, G, Buccomino, G, Calvia, G, Cancellieri, L, Capuano, A, Celesti-Grapow, L, Conti, F, Cuena-Lombraña, A, D’Amico, F, De Fine, G, de Simone, L, Guacchio, E, Emili, F, Fanfarillo, E, Fascetti, S, Fiaschi, T, Fois, M, Fortini, P, Gentili, R, Giardini, M, Hussain, A, Iamonico, D, Laface, V, Lallai, A, Lazzaro, L, Lecis, A, Ligato, E, Loi, G, Lonati, M, Lozano, V, Maccherini, S, Mainetti, A, Mascia, F, Mei, G, Menini, F, Merli, M, Montesano, A, Mugnai, M, Musarella, C, Nota, G, Olivieri, N, Passalacqua, N, Pinzani, L, Pisano, A, Pittarello, M, Podda, L, Posillipo, G, Potenza, G, Probo, M, Prosser, F, Quaglini, L, Enri, S, Rivieccio, G, Roma-Marzio, F, Rosati, L, Selvaggi, A, Soldano, A, Stinca, A, Tasinazzo, S, Tassone, S, Terzi, M, Vallariello, R, Vangelisti, R, Verloove, F, and Lastrucci, L
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floristic data ,Italy ,Alien species, floristic data, Italy, nomenclature ,Alien species ,nomenclature ,Plant Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Alien specie - Abstract
In this contribution, new data concerning the distribution of vascular flora alien to Italy are presented. It includes new records, confirmations, and status changes for Italy or for Italian administrative regions. Nomenclatural and distribution updates, published elsewhere, and corrections are provided as Suppl. material 1. © Gabriele Galasso et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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- 2022
15. New national and regional Annex I Habitat records: from #37 to #44
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Gianmarco Tavilla, Claudia Angiolini, Simonetta Bagella, Federica Bonini, Salvatore Cambria, Maria Carmela Caria, Assunta Esposito, Emanuele Fanfarillo, Valentina Ferri, Tiberio Fiaschi, Lorenzo Gianguzzi, Gianpietro Giusso del Galdo, Vincenzo Ilardi, Giacomo Mei, Pietro Minissale, Giovanni Rivieccio, Saverio Sciandrello, Adriano Stinca, Giuseppe Bazan, Tavilla, G., Angiolini, C., Bagella, S., Bonini, F., Cambria, S., Caria, M. C., Esposito, A., Fanfarillo, E., Ferri, V., Fiaschi, T., Gianguzzi, L., del Galdo, G. G., Ilardi, V., Mei, G., Minissale, P., Rivieccio, G., Sciandrello, S., Stinca, A., Bazan, G., Tavilla G., Angiolini C., Bagella S., Bonini F., Cambria S., Caria M.C., Esposito A., Fanfarillo E., Ferri V., Fiaschi T., Gianguzzi L., del Galdo G.G., Ilardi V., Mei G., Minissale P., Rivieccio G., Sciandrello S., Stinca A., and Bazan G.
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Ecology ,conservation ,91M0 ,91L0 ,Forestry ,Plant Science ,vegetation ,92/43/EEC Directive ,3170 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
In this contribution, Italian new data concerning the distribution of the Annex I Habitats 3150, 3170*, 3260, 4090, 91L0, 91M0, 9340 are reported. In detail, 20 new occurrences in Natura 2000 sites are presented and 30 new cells are added in the EEA 10 km × 10 km reference grid. The new data refer to the Italian administrative regions of Campania, Lazio, Sardinia, Sicily, Tuscany, and Umbria.
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- 2022
16. New national and regional Annex I Habitat records: from #45 to #59
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Giovanni Rivieccio, Claudia Angiolini, Mattia Martin Azzella, Simonetta Bagella, Gianmaria Bonari, Federica Bonini, Silvia Cannucci, Maria Carmela Caria, Alessandro Crisafulli, Romeo Di Pietro, Assunta Esposito, Emanuele Fanfarillo, Emmanuele Farris, Valentina Ferri, Tiberio Fiaschi, Luigi Forte, Paola Fortini, Lorenzo Gianguzzi, Daniela Gigante, Valentina Lucia Astrid Laface, Giovanni Maiorca, Francesca Mantino, Giacomo Mei, Francesco Minutillo, Antonio Morabito, Carmelo Maria Musarella, Glauco Patera, Enrico Vito Perrino, Giovanni Spampinato, Adriano Stinca, Gianmarco Tavilla, Valeria Tomaselli, Giancarlo Tondi, Robert Philipp Wagensommer, Giuseppe Bazan, Rivieccio G., Angiolini C., Azzella M.M., Bagella S., Bonari G., Bonini F., Cannucci S., Caria M.C., Crisafulli A., Pietro R.D., Esposito A., Fanfarillo E., Farris E., Ferri V., Fiaschi T., Forte L., Fortini P., Gianguzzi L., Gigante D., Laface V.L.A., Maiorca G., Mantino F., Mei G., Minutillo F., Morabito A., Musarella C.M., Patera G., Perrino E.V., Spampinato G., Stinca A., Tavilla G., Tomaselli V., Tondi G., Wagensommer R.P., Bazan G., Rivieccio, Giovanni, Angiolini, Claudia, Azzella, Mattia Martin, Bagella, Simonetta, Bonari, Gianmaria, Bonini, Federica, Cannucci, Silvia, Caria, Maria Carmela, Crisafulli, Alessandro, Di Pietro, Romeo, Esposito, Assunta, Fanfarillo, Emanuele, Farris, Emmanuele, Ferri, Valentina, Fiaschi, Tiberio, Forte, Luigi, Fortini, Paola, Gianguzzi, Lorenzo, Gigante, Daniela, Laface, Valentina Lucia Astrid, Maiorca, Giovanni, Mantino, Francesca, Mei, Giacomo, Minutillo, Francesco, Morabito, Antonio, Musarella, Carmelo Maria, Patera, Glauco, Perrino, Enrico Vito, Spampinato, Giovanni, Stinca, Adriano, Tavilla, Gianmarco, Tomaselli, Valeria, Tondi, Giancarlo, Wagensommer, Robert Philipp, and Bazan, Giuseppe
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91AA ,Ecology ,91F0 ,Forestry ,Plant Science ,Conservation ,2270 ,vegetation ,92/43/EEC Directive ,91E0 ,Conservation, vegetation, 1210, 2270*, 3120, 3130, 3150, 3170*, 6420, 6510, 91AA*, 91E0*, 91F0, 92/43/EEC Directive, 9540 ,3170 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
New Italian data on the distribution of Annex I Habitats are reported in this contribution. Specifically, 8 new occurrences in Natura 2000 sites are presented and 27 new cells are added in the EEA 10 km × 10 km reference grid. The new data refer to the Italian administrative regions of Apulia, Campania, Calabria, Lazio, Tuscany, Umbria, Sardinia, and Sicily.
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- 2022
17. Congruent responses of vascular plant and ant communities to pastoral land-use abandonment in mountain areas throughout different biogeographic regions
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Marcello Verdinelli, Marco Pittarello, Maria Carmela Caria, Giovanna Piga, Pier Paolo Roggero, Gian Marco Marrosu, Stefano Arrizza, Maria Leonarda Fadda, Giampiero Lombardi, Michele Lonati, Ginevra Nota, Maria Sitzia, and Simonetta Bagella
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Land abandonment ,Ecology ,Monitoring ,Ecological Modeling ,Biodiversity conservation ,Bioindicators ,Cross-taxon congruence ,Functional groups ,Mountain pastures - Abstract
Background There is a long-term trend towards the abandonment of agro-pastoral activities in the mountain areas of Europe: the following encroachment process of semi-natural grasslands by shrubs is one of the main severe threats to the conservation of biodiversity in mountain environments. To better understand the impact of land abandonment, we analysed the reliability of plant functional groups, ant traits, and ant functional groups as indicators of land use changes. We carried out the research in Italy at four sites along a latitudinal/altitudinal gradient in three biogeographic regions (Mediterranean, Continental, Alpine). We identified three stages of a chronosequence at each site as representative of the plant succession in response to pastoral land-use abandonment. Results As expected, both the plant and ant assemblages considerably differed across sites at the species level and, within each site, among the three stages. This trend was found also using ant traits, functional groups of ants, and plant functional groups. Ant and plant communities were related in terms of composition and functionality. Harvester ants and ants with collective foraging strategy were associated with annual legumes and grasses (Therophytes); ants with a strictly individual foraging strategy with Phanerophytes. Ant traits and plant functional groups indicated significant differences among the three stages of the chronosequence. However, ant functional groups could not discriminate between the stages represented by secondary grasslands currently grazed and shrub-encroached grasslands ungrazed. Conclusion Despite some limitations of ant functional groups in explaining the succession stages of land abandonment, our results suggest that ants are a good surrogate taxon and might be used as bioindicators of land-use changes and ecosystem functioning. Furthermore, our findings indicate that the functional group approach should be applied to other European ecosystems. Finally, reducing the taxonomic complexity could contribute to developing predictive models to detect early environmental changes and biodiversity loss in mountain habitats.
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- 2022
18. Handbook of field sampling for multi-taxon biodiversity studies in European forests
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Thibault Lachat, Mariana Ujházyová, Kadri Runnel, Péter Ódor, Nathalie Korboulewsky, Inken Doerfler, Thomas Campagnaro, Miroslav Svoboda, Ettore D'Andrea, Francesco Chianucci, Fotios Xystrakis, Peter Schall, Itziar García-Mijangos, Pallieter De Smedt, Kris Vandekerkhove, Radim Matula, Rosana López, Alessandro Campanaro, Silvana Munzi, Johannes Penner, Anders Mårell, Flóra Tinya, Philippe Janssen, Réka Aszalós, Sabina Burrascano, Dinka Matošević, Jeňýk Hofmeister, Tommaso Sitzia, Martin Mikoláš, Giovanni Trentanovi, Yoan Paillet, Andrea Cutini, Simonetta Bagella, Meelis Pärtel, Asko Lõhmus, Björn Nordén, Gediminas Brazaitis, Jacob Heilmann-Clausen, Jan Hošek, Paolo Giordani, Kris Verheyen, Andrés Bravo-Oviedo, Sebastian Kepfer Rojas, Daniel Kozák, and European Commission
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0106 biological sciences ,PROTOCOLS ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,MICROHABITATS ,Evolution ,Zoology and botany: 480 [VDP] ,Forest management ,Sustainable forest management ,biodiversity ,field methods ,multi-taxon ,indicators ,sampling protocol ,forest stand structure ,Biodiversity ,DIVERSITY ,General Decision Sciences ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,biodiversity, field methods, multi-taxon Indicators, sampling protocol, forest stand structure ,Behavior and Systematics ,ECOSYSTEMS ,Indicators ,Taxonomic rank ,Zoologiske og botaniske fag: 480 [VDP] ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,METAANALYSIS ,QH540-549.5 ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Tree canopy ,Sampling protocol ,Forest stand structure ,Ecology ,Agroforestry ,SPECIES RICHNESS ,TEMPERATE ,Sampling (statistics) ,15. Life on land ,Field methods ,Multi-taxon ,STANDARDIZED MEASUREMENT ,Geography ,Habitat ,13. Climate action ,Sustainable management ,Earth and Environmental Sciences ,TRAITS ,BRYOPHYTES - Abstract
Forests host most terrestrial biodiversity and their sustainable management is crucial to halt biodiversity loss. Although scientific evidence indicates that sustainable forest management (SFM) should be assessed by monitoring multi-taxon biodiversity, most current SFM criteria and indicators account only for trees or consider indirect biodiversity proxies. Several projects performed multi-taxon sampling to investigate the effects of forest management on biodiversity, but the large variability of their sampling approaches hampers the identification of general trends, and limits broad-scale inference for designing SFM. Here we address the need of common sampling protocols for forest structure and multi-taxon biodiversity to be used at broad spatial scales. We established a network of researchers involved in 41 projects on forest multi-taxon biodiversity across 13 European countries. The network data structure comprised the assessment of at least three taxa, and the measurement of forest stand structure in the same plots or stands. We mapped the sampling approaches to multi-taxon biodiversity, standing trees and deadwood, and used this overview to provide operational answers to two simple, yet crucial, questions: what to sample? How to sample? The most commonly sampled taxonomic groups are vascular plants (83% of datasets), beetles (80%), lichens (66%), birds (66%), fungi (61%), bryophytes (49%). They cover different forest structures and habitats, with a limited focus on soil, litter and forest canopy. Notwithstanding the common goal of assessing forest management effects on biodiversity, sampling approaches differed widely within and among taxonomic groups. Differences derive from sampling units (plots size, use of stand vs. plot scale), and from the focus on different substrates or functional groups of organisms. Sampling methods for standing trees and lying deadwood were relatively homogeneous and focused on volume calculations, but with a great variability in sampling units and diameter thresholds. We developed a handbook of sampling methods (SI 3) aimed at the greatest possible comparability across taxonomic groups and studies as a basis for European-wide biodiversity monitoring programs, robust understanding of biodiversity response to forest structure and management, and the identification of direct indicators of SFM., This review was funded by the EU Framework Programme Horizon 2020 through the COST Association: COST Action CA18207: BOTTOMSUP- Biodiversity Of Temperate forest Taxa Orienting Management Sustainability by Unifying Perspectives.
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- 2021
19. Disentangling native and alien plant diversity in coastal sand dune ecosystems worldwide
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Enrico Tordoni, Patrick Weigelt, Saverio Sciandrello, Michela Cameletti, R.A. Lubke, Rossella Speranza Filigheddu, Hannah L. Buckley, Daniela Ciccarelli, Manuel Peinado, Erwin Bergmeier, Simonetta Bagella, Parastoo Mahdavi, Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta, Giovanni Bacaro, Holger Kreft, Robert K. Peet, Stephan M. Hennekens, Estelle Forey, John Janssen, Tordoni, Enrico, Bacaro, Giovanni, Weigelt, Patrick, Cameletti, Michela, Janssen, John A. M., Acosta, Alicia T. R., Bagella, Simonetta, Filigheddu, Rossella, Bergmeier, Erwin, Buckley, Hannah L., Ciccarelli, Daniela, Forey, Estelle, Hennekens, Stephan M., Lubke, Roy A., Mahdavi, Parastoo, Peet, Robert K., Peinado, Manuel, Sciandrello, Saverio, Kreft, Holger, Tordoni, E., Bacaro, G., Weigelt, P., Cameletti, M., Janssen, J. A. M., Acosta, A. T. R., Bagella, S., Filigheddu, R., Bergmeier, E., Buckley, H. L., Ciccarelli, D., Forey, E., Hennekens, S. M., Lubke, R. A., Mahdavi, P., Peet, R. K., Peinado, M., Sciandrello, S., and Kreft, H.
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0106 biological sciences ,diversity patterns ,Bos- en Landschapsecologie ,Endangered species ,Biodiversity ,Alien species ,Introduced species ,Plant Science ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Biogeography ,Coastal dune habitats ,Diversity patterns ,Invasion paradox ,Macroecology ,Species richness ,coastal dune habitats ,Sand dune stabilization ,Diversity pattern ,Forest and Landscape Ecology ,14. Life underwater ,species richness ,invasion paradox ,Alien specie ,Vegetatie ,biogeography ,biodiversity ,Vegetation ,Ecology ,macroecology ,Coastal dune habitat ,15. Life on land ,PE&RC ,Geography ,Habitat ,Vegetatie, Bos- en Landschapsecologie ,Vegetation, Forest and Landscape Ecology ,Settore SECS-S/01 - Statistica ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Aims: i) To disentangle the global patterns of native and alien plant diversity on coastal sand dune ecosystems across habitats and floristic kingdoms, ii) to determine the main drivers of variation in species richness in native and alien species in these endangered ecosystems, and iii) to test for an interaction between spatial scale and native‐alien richness patterns, as predicted by the invasion paradox. Location: Global. Methods: We collated a dataset of 14,841 vegetation plots in coastal sand dune ecosystems from around the world. Generalized Linear Models (GLMs) and Generalized Linear Mixed Models (GLMMs) were used to assess the patterns and main ecological determinants underlying native and alien species richness. Variation partitioning revealed the relative importance of environmental and anthropogenic variables. Results: GLMs revealed strong differences among both habitats and floristic kingdoms in the number of native and alien species. Specifically, native species richness increased along the sea‐inland gradient and was higher in the Cape and Paleotropical kingdoms. In contrast, alien species richness was relatively similar across habitats and kingdoms, though some differences were detected. There were strong differences between the drivers of native and alien richness; anthropogenic factors such as Gross Domestic Product were positively associated with alien richness whereas native richness was more strongly related to environmental factors. Furthermore, we found a weak support for an invasion paradox effect. Conclusions: Our results revealed the complexity of causal processes underpinning coastal sand dune plant biodiversity and highlight the importance of considering native and alien species separately. Recognition of these differences while researching variation in biodiversity patterns and processes at multiple spatial scales will lead to a better mechanistic understanding of the causes of invasion worldwide, and in coastal ecosystems in particular, allowing the development of more focused control and management measures.
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- 2021
20. New national and regional Annex I Habitat records: From #26 to #36
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Giovanni Rivieccio, Michele Aleffi, Claudia Angiolini, Simonetta Bagella, Giuseppe Bazan, Federica Bonini, Maria Carmela Caria, Simona Casavecchia, Miris Castello, Davide Dagnino, Maria Carla de Francesco, Emanuele Farris, Emanuele Fanfarillo, Tiberio Fiaschi, Luigi Forte, Lorenzo Gianguzzi, Flavia Landucci, Fabio Maneli, Francesca Mantino, Mauro Mariotti, Gianfranco Pirone, Livio Poldini, Silvia Poponessi, Safiya Praleskouskaya, Angela Stanisci, Valeria Tomaselli, Francesco Pio Tozzi, Claudia Turcato, Roberto Venanzoni, Daniela Gigante, Rivieccio, Giovanni, Aleffi, Michele, Angiolini, Claudia, Bagella, Simonetta, Bazan, Giuseppe, Bonini, Federica, Caria, Maria Carmela, Casavecchia, Simona, Castello, Miri, Dagnino, Davide, de Francesco, Maria Carla, Farris, Emanuele, Fanfarillo, Emanuele, Fiaschi, Tiberio, Forte, Luigi, Gianguzzi, Lorenzo, Landucci, Flavia, Maneli, Fabio, Mantino, Francesca, Mariotti, Mauro, Pirone, Gianfranco, Poldini, Livio, Poponessi, Silvia, Praleskouskaya, Safiya, Stanisci, Angela, Tomaselli, Valeria, Tozzi, Francesco Pio, Turcato, Claudia, Venanzoni, Roberto, Gigante, Daniela, and Rivieccio G, Aleffi M, Angiolini C, Bagella S, Bazan G, Bonini F, Caria MC, Casavecchia S, Castello M, Dagnino D, de Francesco MC, Farris E, Fanfarillo E, Fiaschi T, Forte L, Gianguzzi L, Landucci F, Maneli F, Mantino F, Mariotti M, Pirone G, Poldini L, Poponessi S, Praleskouskaya S, Stanisci A, Tomaselli V, Tozzi FP, Turcato C, Venanzoni R, Gigante D
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2250 ,7220 ,Plant Science ,Conservation ,SB1-1110 ,vegetation ,QK900-989 ,Plant ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,1510*, 2130*, 2250*, 3180*, 3260, 5230*, 6410, 7140, 7220*, 9320, conservation, vegetation, 92/43/EEC Directive ,2130 ,Vegetation ,Ecology ,conservation ,1510 ,Plant culture ,Forestry ,92/43/EEC Directive ,3180 ,3260 ,5230 ,6410 ,7140 ,9320 - Abstract
New Italian data on the distribution of the Annex I Habitats 1510*, 2130*, 2250*, 3180*, 3260, 5230*, 6410, 7140, 7220*, 9320 are reported in this contribution. Specifically, 14 new occurrences in Natura 2000 sites are presented and 20 new cells are added in the EEA 10 km × 10 km reference grid. The new data refer to the Italian administrative regions of Abruzzo, Apulia, Friuli Venezia Giulia, Liguria, Marche, Molise, Sardinia, Sicily, Tuscany and Umbria.
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- 2021
21. Testing an expanded set of sustainable forest management indicators in Mediterranean coppice area
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Giovanna Seddaiu, B. Ciucchi, Elena Gottardini, Marco Ferretti, Gianfranco Fabbio, Luisa Frati, Francesco Riccioli, Sara Landi, Giorgio Brunialti, Pier Paolo Roggero, S. Corradini, Andrea Cutini, Giada Bertini, C. Caddeo, Simonetta Bagella, Alessandro Cristofori, Roberto Fratini, G. Patteri, M. Piovosi, U. Di Salvatore, F. Cristofolini, Francesco Chianucci, Carlotta Ferrara, Luca Marchino, and Marco Calderisi
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Biomass (ecology) ,Ecology ,Thinning ,Agroforestry ,Sustainable forest management ,Coppice natural evolution ,General Decision Sciences ,Context (language use) ,Environmental monitoring ,Understory ,Coppicing ,High forest ,Settore BIO/07 - ECOLOGIA ,Sustainability ,Environmental science ,Coppice conversion ,Coppice system ,SFM criteria ,Silviculture ,QH540-549.5 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Although coppice forests represent a significant part of the European forest area, especially across southern Countries, they received little attention within the Sustainable Forest Management (SFM) processes and scenarios, whose guidelines have been mainly designed to high forests and national scale. In order to obtain “tailored” information on the degree of sustainability of coppices on the scale of the stand, we evaluated (i) whether the main coppice management options result in different responses of the SFM indicators, and (ii) the degree to which the considered SFM indicators were appropriate in their application at stand level. The study considered three different management options (Traditional Coppice TC, coppice under Natural Evolution NE, and coppice under Conversion to high forest by means of periodical thinning CO). In each of the 43 plots considered in the study, which covered three different European Forest Types, we applied a set of eighteen “consolidated” SFM indicators, covering all the six SFM Criteria (FOREST EUROPE, 2020) and, additionally, tested other sixteen novel indicators shaped for agamic forests and/or applicable at stand level. Results confirmed that several consolidated indicators related to resources status (Growing stock and Carbon stock), health (Defoliation and Forest damage), and socio-economic functions (Net revenue, Energy and Accessibility) were highly appropriate for evaluating the sustainability of coppice at stand level. In addition, some novel indicators related to resources status (Total above ground tree biomass), health (Stand growth) and protective functions (Overstorey cover and Understorey cover) proved to be highly appropriate and able to support the information obtained by the consolidated ones. As a consequence, a subset of consolidated SFM indicators, complemented with the most appropriate novel ones, may represent a valid option to support the evaluation of coppice sustainability at stand level. An integrated analysis of the SFM indicators showed that NE and CO display significant higher environmental performances as compared with TC. In addition, CO has positive effects also on socio-economic issues, while TC -which is an important cultural heritage and a silvicultural option that may help to keep local communities engaged in forestry – combines high wood harvesting rates with dense understory cover. Overall, each of the three management options showed specific sustainability values; as a consequence, their coexistence at a local scale and in accordance with the specific environmental conditions and the social-economic context, is greatly recommended since it may fulfill a wider array of sustainability issues.
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- 2021
22. Shedding light on typical species: Implications for habitat monitoring
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Gianmaria Bonari, Edy Fantinato, Lorenzo Lazzaro, Marta Gaia Sperandii, Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta, Marina Allegrezza, Silvia Assini, Marco Caccianiga, Valter Di Cecco, Annarita Frattaroli, Daniela Gigante, Giovanni Rivieccio, Giulio Tesei, Barbara Valle, Daniele Viciani, Giulia Albani Rocchetti, Claudia Angiolini, Emilio Badalamenti, Davide Barberis, Matteo Barcella, Giuseppe Bazan, Andrea Bertacchi, Rossano Bolpagni, Federica Bonini, Alessandro Bricca, Gabriella Buffa, Mariasole Calbi, Silvia Cannucci, Luigi Cao Pinna, Maria Carmela Caria, Emanuela Carli, Silvia Cascone, Mauro Casti, Bruno Enrico Leone Cerabolini, Riccardo Copiz, Maurizio Cutini, Leopoldo De Simone, Andrea De Toma, Michele Dalle Fratte, Luciano Di Martino, Romeo Di Pietro, Leonardo Filesi, Bruno Foggi, Paola Fortini, Roberto Gennaio, Gabriele Gheza, Michele Lonati, Andrea Mainetti, Marco Malavasi, Corrado Marcenò, Carla Micheli, Chiara Minuzzo, Michele Mugnai, Carmelo Maria Musarella, Francesca Napoleone, Ginevra Nota, Giovanna Piga, Marco Pittarello, Ilaria Pozzi, Safiya Praleskouskaya, Francesco Rota, Giacomo Santini, Simona Sarmati, Alberto Selvaggi, Giovanni Spampinato, Adriano Stinca, Francesco Pio Tozzi, Roberto Venanzoni, Mariacristina Villani, Katia Zanatta, Magda Zanzottera, Simonetta Bagella, Bonari G., Fantinato E., Lazzaro L., Sperandii M.G., Acosta A.T.R., Allegrezza M., Assini S., Caccianiga M., Di Cecco V., Frattaroli A., Gigante D., Rivieccio G., Tesei G., Valle B., Viciani D., Rocchetti G.A., Angiolini C., Badalamenti E., Barberis D., Barcella M., Bazan G., Bertacchi A., Bolpagni R., Bonini F., Bricca A., Buffa G., Calbi M., Cannucci S., Pinna L.C., Caria M.C., Carli E., Cascone S., Casti M., Cerabolini B.E.L., Copiz R., Cutini M., de Simone L., de Toma A., Fratte M.D., Di Martino L., Di Pietro R., Filesi L., Foggi B., Fortini P., Gennaio R., Gheza G., Lonati M., Mainetti A., Malavasi M., Marceno C., Micheli C., Minuzzo C., Mugnai M., Musarella C.M., Napoleone F., Nota G., Piga G., Pittarello M., Pozzi I., Praleskouskaya S., Rota F., Santini G., Sarmati S., Selvaggi A., Spampinato G., Stinca A., Tozzi F.P., Venanzoni R., Villani M., Zanatta K., Zanzottera M., Bagella S., Bonari, G., Fantinato, E., Lazzaro, L., Sperandii, M. G., Acosta, A. T. R., Allegrezza, M., Assini, S., Caccianiga, M., Di Cecco, V., Frattaroli, A., Gigante, D., Rivieccio, G., Tesei, G., Valle, B., Viciani, D., Rocchetti, G. A., Angiolini, C., Badalamenti, E., Barberis, D., Barcella, M., Bazan, G., Bertacchi, A., Bolpagni, R., Bonini, F., Bricca, A., Buffa, G., Calbi, M., Cannucci, S., Pinna, L. C., Caria, M. C., Carli, E., Cascone, S., Casti, M., Cerabolini, B. E. L., Copiz, R., Cutini, M., de Simone, L., de Toma, A., Fratte, M. D., Di Martino, L., Di Pietro, R., Filesi, L., Foggi, B., Fortini, P., Gennaio, R., Gheza, G., Lonati, M., Mainetti, A., Malavasi, M., Marceno, C., Micheli, C., Minuzzo, C., Mugnai, M., Musarella, C. M., Napoleone, F., Nota, G., Piga, G., Pittarello, M., Pozzi, I., Praleskouskaya, S., Rota, F., Santini, G., Sarmati, S., Selvaggi, A., Spampinato, G., Stinca, A., Tozzi, F. P., Venanzoni, R., Villani, M., Zanatta, K., Zanzottera, M., and Bagella, S.
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Structure and function ,diagnostic and characteristic species, habitat monitoring, keystone species, Natura 2000, plant community, structure and functions, typical species, 92/43/EEC Directive ,Keystone specie ,Settore BIO/02 - Botanica Sistematica ,Typical species ,Plant culture ,Diagnostic and characteristic species ,Plant community ,SB1-1110 ,Diagnostic and characteristic specie ,92/43/EEC Directive ,Habitat monitoring ,Keystone species ,Natura 2000 ,Structure and functions ,QK900-989 ,Plant ecology ,Settore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale e Applicata - Abstract
Habitat monitoring in Europe is regulated by Article 17 of the Habitats Directive, which suggests the use of typical species to assess habitat conservation status. Yet, the Directive uses the term “typical” species but does not provide a definition, either for its use in reporting or for its use in impact assessments. To address the issue , a n online workshop was organized by the Italian Society for Vegetation Science (SISV) to shed light on the diversity of perspectives regarding the different concepts of typical species, and to discuss the possible implications for habitat monitoring. To this aim, we inquired 73 people with a very different degree of expertise in the field of vegetation science by means of a tailored survey composed of six questions. We analysed the data using Pearson's Chi-squared test to verify that the answers diverged from a random distribution and checked the effect of the degree of experience of the surveyees on the results. We found that most of the surveyees agreed on the use of the phytosociological method for habitat monitoring and of the diagnostic and characteristic species to evaluate the structural and functional conservation status of habitats. With this contribution, we shed light on the meaning of “typical” species in the context of habitat monitoring.
- Published
- 2021
23. Unmanned aerial systems-based monitoring of the eco-geomorphology of coastal dunes through spectral Rao's Q
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Manuele Bazzichetto, Jan Komárek, Simonetta Bagella, Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta, Vítězslav Moudrý, Duccio Rocchini, Maria Laura Carranza, Marco Malavasi, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague (CZU), Ecosystèmes, biodiversité, évolution [Rennes] (ECOBIO), Université de Rennes (UR)-Institut Ecologie et Environnement (INEE), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Observatoire des Sciences de l'Univers de Rennes (OSUR), Université de Rennes (UR)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Université de Rennes 2 (UR2)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Université de Rennes 2 (UR2)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Alma Mater Studiorum Università di Bologna [Bologna] (UNIBO), Università degli Studi di Sassari = University of Sassari [Sassari] (UNISS), Università degli Studi Roma Tre = Roma Tre University (ROMA TRE), Università degli Studi del Molise = University of Molise (UNIMOL), CA17134Horizon 2020 Framework Programme, H2020: 862480Interreg, Malavasi, Marco, Bazzichetto, Manuele, Komárek, Jan, Moudrý, Vítězslav, Rocchini, Duccio, Bagella, Simonetta, Acosta, Alicia T. R., Carranza, Maria L., Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Observatoire des Sciences de l'Univers de Rennes (OSUR)-Institut Ecologie et Environnement (INEE), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université de Rennes 1 (UR1), Université de Rennes (UNIV-RENNES)-Université de Rennes (UNIV-RENNES), University of Sassari, Università degli Studi Roma Tre, Università degli Studi del Molise (Unimol), Malavasi, M., Bazzichetto, M., Komarek, J., Moudry, V., Rocchini, D., Bagella, S., Acosta, A. T. R., and Carranza, M. L.
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0106 biological sciences ,Dune slope ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,NDVI ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Normalized Difference Vegetation Index ,Coastal dunes ,remote sensing ,Rao's Q index ,Eco-geomorphology ,Habitat monitoring ,14. Life underwater ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,biodiversity ,Ecology ,15. Life on land ,Human pressure ,13. Climate action ,Dune elevation ,coastal dunes, dune elevation, dune slope, eco-geomorphology, habitat monitoring, human pressure, NDVI, Rao's Q index, spectral diversity UAS ,Environmental science ,Physical geography ,[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology ,Spectral diversity UAS ,Coastal dune - Abstract
International audience; Question: Does spectral diversity captured by unmanned aerial systems (UAS) provide reliable information for monitoring the eco-geomorphological integrity of Mediterranean coastal dune ecosystems? Can this information discriminate between two coastal areas with low (LP) and high (HP) human pressure? Location: Tyrrhenian coast, Central Italy. Methods: By processing UAS images, we derived the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) and topographic variables at high spatial resolution (0.5 m) for 150 m wide strips starting from the coastline inland on two representative coastal tracts under low and high human pressure. We mapped the sea–inland heterogeneity applying Rao's Q index to the plant biomass (NDVI) and geomorphology variables (elevation and slope). Since Rao's Q index can be calculated in a multidimensional space, we summarized the variability of these three variables into a single eco-geomorphological layer. We then inspected and compared how the Rao's Q index values for plant biomass, geomorphology and eco-geomorphology change as a func-tion of the distance from the sea between the two coastal sites. Results: Rao's Q heterogeneity values vary along the sea–inland gradient of well-preserved sites (LP). The maximum eco-geomorphological heterogeneity was found at intermediate distances from the sea and decreased toward the inner sector where the dune geomorphology was more stable and vegetation more homogeneously dis-tributed. Instead, Rao's Q heterogeneity values featured constant low values along the gradient on the HP site, highlighting a simplified eco-geomorphological gradient related to the high human pressure. Conclusions: Using UAS, the eco-geomorphological gradient of coastal dunes can be quantified at a very fine spatial resolution over management-relevant extents. Rao's Q index applied to sensing imagery successfully captured the differences in the eco-geomorphological heterogeneity along the sea–inland dune gradient and among sites with different levels of anthropic pressure. This approach supports frequent surveys and is particularly suitable for spatial monitoring of key coastal functions and services. © 2021 International Association for Vegetation Science.
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- 2021
24. Innovative beef cattle grazing systems for the restoration of abandoned lands in the Alpine and Mediterranean mountains (iGRAL)
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Lombardi, Giampiero, Maria, Sitzia, Marcello, Verdinelli, Giovanna, Seddaiu, Simonetta, Bagella, Lonati, Michele, Marco, Acciaro, Margherita, Addis, Luciano, Gutierrez, Lorenzo, Salis, Stefano, Arrizza, Maria Leonarda Fadda, Stefania, Bagella, Pittarello, Marco, Nota, Ginevra, Maria Carmela Caria, Giovanna, Piga, Giovanni, Rivieccio, Marco, Cuboni, Alberto, Tanda, and Pier Paolo Roggero
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hardy cattle breeds ,vegetation ,grass-fed meat ,ants ,ants, biodiversity, ecosystem services, grass-fed meat, hardy cattle breeds, vegetation ,ecosystem services ,biodiversity - Published
- 2021
25. New national and regional Annex I Habitat records: from #16 to #20
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Giovanni Rivieccio, Simonetta Bagella, Mauro Mariotti, Claudia Turcato, Giuseppe Bazan, Federica Bonini, Maria Carmela Caria, Lorenzo Antonino Gianguzzi, Davide Dagnino, Rivieccio G., Bagella S., Bazan G., Bonini F., Caria M.C., Dagnino D., Mariotti M., Turcato C., and Gianguzzi L.
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0106 biological sciences ,Biodiversity ,Distribution (economics) ,Plant Science ,Reference grid ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,SB1-1110 ,3120, 3260, 6310, 9180 ,vegetation ,9180 ,QK900-989 ,92A0, 92/43/EEC Directive ,Conservation ,Italy ,Vegetation ,Plant ecology ,92A0 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,biodiversity ,Ecology ,business.industry ,conservation ,Plant culture ,Forestry ,Geography ,Habitat ,92/43/EEC Directive ,Settore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E Applicata ,Physical geography ,Natura 2000 ,business ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
New data on the distribution of the Annex I Habitats 3120, 3260, 6310, 9180* and 92A0 are reported in this contribution. In detail, 3 new occurrences in Natura 2000 Sites are presented and 5 new cells in the EEA 10 km x 10 km Reference grid are added. The new data refer to Italy and in particular to the Administrative Regions of Liguria, Sardinia, Sicily and Umbria. This issue of the section “Habitat records” includes an Errata corrige referring to the last released issue.
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- 2020
26. Plant–environment interactions through a functional traits perspective: a review of Italian studies
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Maurizio Cutini, Silvia Del Vecchio, Enrico Simonetti, Adriano Stinca, Carlo Ricotta, Sabina Burrascano, Giovanni Bacaro, Simone Orsenigo, Thomas Abeli, Consolata Siniscalco, Chiara Montagnani, Anna Rita Frattaroli, Daniela Ciccarelli, Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta, Sandra Citterio, Giandiego Campetella, Gabriella Buffa, Marcello Tomaselli, Renato Benesperi, Michele Carbognani, Michele Dalle Fratte, Elena Barni, Marco Caccianiga, Alessandro Bricca, Michele Di Musciano, Juri Nascimbene, Graziano Rossi, Bruno Paura, Francesco Petruzzellis, Antonio Montagnoli, Giovanna Aronne, Andrea Catorci, Guido Incerti, Stefano Chelli, Antonio Slaviero, Federico Maria Tardella, Rossano Bolpagni, Simon Pierce, Veronica De Micco, Camilla Wellstein, Paolo Giordani, Bruno Enrico Leone Cerabolini, Luisa Conti, Simonetta Bagella, Valentina Calabrese, Marta Carboni, Andrea Mondoni, Elisabetta Sgarbi, Michele Lussu, Loretta Gratani, Rodolfo Gentili, Alessandro Chiarucci, Eleonora Giarrizzo, Stefano Mazzoleni, Giacomo Puglielli, Roberto Canullo, Giulietta Bernareggi, Giuliano Bonanomi, Alessandro Petraglia, Edy Fantinato, Renato Gerdol, Luciano Di Martino, Rossella Speranza Filigheddu, Maria Laura Carranza, Luca Bragazza, Michela Marignani, Angela Stanisci, Stefania Pisanu, Guido Brusa, Chelli S., Marignani M., Barni E., Petraglia A., Puglielli G., Wellstein C., Acosta A.T.R., Bolpagni R., Bragazza L., Campetella G., Chiarucci A., Conti L., Nascimbene J., Orsenigo S., Pierce S., Ricotta C., Tardella F.M., Abeli T., Aronne G., Bacaro G., Bagella S., Benesperi R., Bernareggi G., Bonanomi G., Bricca A., Brusa G., Buffa G., Burrascano S., Caccianiga M., Calabrese V., Canullo R., Carbognani M., Carboni M., Carranza M.L., Catorci A., Ciccarelli D., Citterio S., Cutini M., Dalle Fratte M., De Micco V., Del Vecchio S., Di Martino L., Di Musciano M., Fantinato E., Filigheddu R., Frattaroli A.R., Gentili R., Gerdol R., Giarrizzo E., Giordani P., Gratani L., Incerti G., Lussu M., Mazzoleni S., Mondoni A., Montagnani C., Montagnoli A., Paura B., Petruzzellis F., Pisanu S., Rossi G., Sgarbi E., Simonetti E., Siniscalco C., Slaviero A., Stanisci A., Stinca A., Tomaselli M., Cerabolini B.E.L., Chelli, S., Marignani, M., Barni, E., Petraglia, A., Puglielli, G., Wellstein, C., Acosta, Atr., Bolpagni, R., Bragazza, L., Campetella, G., Chiarucci, A., Conti, L., Nascimbene, J., Orsenigo, S., Pierce, S., Ricotta, C., Tardella, Fm., Abeli, T., Aronne, G., Bacaro, G., Bagella, S., Benesperi, R., Bernareggi, G., Bonanomi, G., Bricca, A., Brusa, G., Buffa, G., Burrascano, S., Caccianiga, M., Calabrese, V., Canullo, R., Carbognani, M., Carboni, M., Carranza, Ml., Catorci, A., Ciccarelli, D., Citterio, S., Cutini, M., Dalle Fratte, M., De Micco, V., Del Vecchio, S., Di Martino, L., Di Musciano, M., Fantinato, E., Filigheddu, R., Frattaroli, Ar., Gentili, R., Gerdol, R., Giarrizzo, E., Giordani, P., Gratani, L., Incerti, G., Lussu, M., Mazzoleni, S., Mondoni, A., Montagnani, C., Montagnoli, A., Paura, B., Petruzzellis, F., Pisanu, S., Rossi, G., Sgarbi, E., Simonetti, E., Siniscalco, C., Slaviero, A., Stanisci, A., Stinca, A., Tomaselli, M., Be, L. Cerabolini., Chelli, S, Marignani, M, Barni, E, Petraglia, A, Puglielli, G, Wellstein, C, Acosta, A, Bolpagni, R, Bragazza, L, Campetella, G, Chiarucci, A, Conti, L, Nascimbene, J, Orsenigo, S, Pierce, S, Ricotta, C, Tardella, F, Abeli, T, Aronne, G, Bacaro, G, Bagella, S, Benesperi, R, Bernareggi, G, Bonanomi, G, Bricca, A, Brusa, G, Buffa, G, Burrascano, S, Caccianiga, M, Calabrese, V, Canullo, R, Carbognani, M, Carboni, M, Carranza, M, Catorci, A, Ciccarelli, D, Citterio, S, Cutini, M, Dalle Fratte, M, De Micco, V, Del Vecchio, S, Di Martino, L, Di Musciano, M, Fantinato, E, Filigheddu, R, Frattaroli, A, Gentili, R, Gerdol, R, Giarrizzo, E, Giordani, P, Gratani, L, Incerti, G, Lussu, M, Mazzoleni, S, Mondoni, A, Montagnani, C, Montagnoli, A, Paura, B, Petruzzellis, F, Pisanu, S, Rossi, G, Sgarbi, E, Simonetti, E, Siniscalco, C, Slaviero, A, Stanisci, A, Stinca, A, Tomaselli, M, Cerabolini, B, Chelli, Stefano, Marignani, Michela, Barni, Elena, Petraglia, Alessandro, Puglielli, Giacomo, Wellstein, Camilla, Acosta, Alicia T. R., Bolpagni, Rossano, Bragazza, Luca, Campetella, Giandiego, Chiarucci, Alessandro, Conti, Luisa, Nascimbene, Juri, Orsenigo, Simone, Pierce, Simon, Ricotta, Carlo, Tardella, Federico M., Abeli, Thoma, Aronne, Giovanna, Bacaro, Giovanni, Bagella, Simonetta, Benesperi, Renato, Bernareggi, Giulietta, Bonanomi, Giuliano, Bricca, Alessandro, Brusa, Guido, Buffa, Gabriella, Burrascano, Sabina, Caccianiga, Marco, Calabrese, Valentina, Canullo, Roberto, Carbognani, Michele, Carboni, Marta, Carranza, Maria L., Catorci, Andrea, Ciccarelli, Daniela, Citterio, Sandra, Cutini, Maurizio, Dalle Fratte, Michele, De Micco, Veronica, Del Vecchio, Silvia, Di Martino, Luciano, Di Musciano, Michele, Fantinato, Edy, Filigheddu, Rossella, Frattaroli, Anna Rita, Gentili, Rodolfo, Gerdol, Renato, Giarrizzo, Eleonora, Giordani, Paolo, Gratani, Loretta, Incerti, Guido, Lussu, Michele, Mazzoleni, Stefano, Mondoni, Andrea, Montagnani, Chiara, Montagnoli, Antonio, Paura, Bruno, Petruzzellis, Francesco, Pisanu, Stefania, Rossi, Graziano, Sgarbi, Elisabetta, Simonetti, Enrico, Siniscalco, Consolata, Slaviero, Antonio, Stanisci, Angela, Stinca, Adriano, Tomaselli, Marcello, Cerabolini, Bruno E. L., Stefano, Chelli, Michela, Marignani, Elena, Barni, Alessandro, Petraglia, Giacomo, Puglielli, Camilla, Wellstein, Rossano, Bolpagni, Luca, Bragazza, Giandiego, Campetella, Alessandro, Chiarucci, Luisa, Conti, Simone, Orsenigo, Simon, Pierce, Carlo, Ricotta, Giovanna, Aronne, Simonetta, Bagella, Renato, Benesperi, Giulietta, Bernareggi, Giuliano, Bonanomi, Alessandro, Bricca, Guido, Brusa, Gabriella, Buffa, Sabina, Burrascano, Marco, Caccianiga, Valentina, Calabrese, Roberto, Canullo, Michele, Carbognani, Marta, Carboni, Andrea, Catorci, Daniela, Ciccarelli, Sandra, Citterio, Maurizio, Cutini, Michele Dalle Fratte, Veronica De Micco, Silvia Del Vecchio, Luciano Di Martino, Michele Di Musciano, Edy, Fantinato, Rossella, Filigheddu, Anna Rita Frattaroli, Rodolfo, Gentili, Renato, Gerdol, Eleonora, Giarrizzo, Loretta, Gratani, Michele, Lussu, Stefano, Mazzoleni, Andrea, Mondoni, Chiara, Montagnani, Antonio, Montagnoli, Bruno, Paura, Stefania, Pisanu, Graziano, Rossi, Elisabetta, Sgarbi, Enrico, Simonetti, Siniscalco, Maria Consolata, Antonio, Slaviero, Angela, Stanisci, Adriano, Stinca, and Marcello, Tomaselli
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0106 biological sciences ,land use change ,Evolution ,CSR plant strategy theory ,plant trait ,Forest management ,forest management ,Climate change ,Intraspecific variability ,Land use change ,Plant traits, Terrestrial and Freshwater environments ,Plant Science ,KEYWORDS Climate change ,intraspecific variability ,plant traits ,terrestrial and freshwater environments ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Behavior and Systematics ,Land use, land-use change and forestry ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Plant traits ,Plant diversity ,Italian studies ,Climate change, CSR plant strategy theory, forest management, intraspecific variability, land use change, plant traits, terrestrial and freshwater environments ,Ecology ,Settore BIO/02 - Botanica Sistematica ,Perspective (graphical) ,Ambientale ,Geography ,Trait ,010606 plant biology & botany ,Settore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale e Applicata - Abstract
Italy is among the European countries with the greatest plant diversity due to both a great environmental heterogeneity and a long history of man–environment interactions. Trait-based approaches to ecological studies have developed greatly over recent decades worldwide, although several issues concerning the relationships between plant functional traits and the environment still lack sufficient empirical evaluation. To draw insights on the association between plant functional traits and direct and indirect human and natural pressures on the environmental drivers, this article summarizes the existing knowledge on this topic by reviewing the results of studies performed in Italy adopting a functional trait approach on vascular plants, bryophytes and lichens. Although we recorded trait measurements for 1418 taxa, our review highlighted some major gaps in plant traits knowledge: Mediterranean ecosystems are poorly represented; traits related to belowground organs are still overlooked; traits measurements for bryophytes and lichens are lacking. Finally, intraspecific variation has been little studied at community level so far. We conclude by highlighting the need for approaches evaluating trait–environment relationship at large spatial and temporal scales and the need of a more effective contribution to online databases to tie more firmly Italian researchers to international scientific networks on plant traits.
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- 2019
27. Does an open access journal about vegetation still make sense in 2020?
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Simonetta Bagella, Daniela Gigante, Daniele Viciani, and Gianni Bacchetta
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0106 biological sciences ,Open science ,phytosociology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,SB1-1110 ,Plant science ,open science ,medicine ,QK900-989 ,Plant ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Plant diversity ,open science, phytosociology, plant diversity, plant science ,Ecology ,Phytosociology ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,open science phytosociology plant diversity plant science ,Plant culture ,Forestry ,plant diversity ,Geography ,plant science ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Vegetation (pathology) ,Open access journal ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
The current issue is the first one of the new version of Plant Sociology, the international peer-reviewed journal of the "Società Italiana di Scienza della Vegetazione" (SISV). The technical management of the journal has been entrusted to the editorial platform Pensoft, the Editorial Board has been largely reshaped, now including also a dedicated Social media team. Plant Sociology is focused on all aspects of vegetation from phytocoenosis to landscape level, through time and space, at different geographic and ecological scales; the journal contributes to spread around the issues related to management and conservation of plant communities and plant diversity. All the articles are freely available in Open Access (OA) with affordable article processing charge (APC). In the present Editorial, we briefly discuss the importance of opening the access to knowledge and data about vegetation. We believe that disseminating plant science might be a precious tool for understanding ecological processes, modelling future trends and supporting decision makers. The introduced technological improvement will hopefully allow a larger visibility and circulation for the papers published on Plant Sociology.
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- 2020
28. Impact of invasive alien plants on native plant communities and Natura 2000 habitats: State of the art, gap analysis and perspectives in Italy
- Author
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Alberto Selvaggi, Mariacristina Villani, Michele Aleffi, Andrea Mainetti, Lorenzo Lazzaro, S. Ceschin, Rodolfo Gentili, V. Di Cecco, Marina Allegrezza, L. Carnevali, Annalena Cogoni, Giovanni Spampinato, Fernando Lucchese, M. Bovio, Michele Lonati, A. Acosta, L. Sottovia, Simonetta Bagella, Francesco Bracco, Silvia Paola Assini, M. Vidali, L. Poggio, Adriano Stinca, Gianfranco Pirone, Bruno Paura, M. Adorni, Piero Genovesi, Anna Rita Frattaroli, Giuseppe Brundu, Bruno Foggi, Enrico V. Perrino, Rossano Bolpagni, Angela Stanisci, Roberto Venanzoni, Marco Caccianiga, Leonardo Rosati, Marta Puglisi, Daniele Viciani, Marcella Maria Mariotti, Gianmaria Bonari, Lorenzo Lastrucci, Daniela Gigante, M. Pellizzari, Livio Poldini, Filippo Prosser, Gabriella Buffa, S. Poponessi, Claudia Angiolini, I. Prisco, Giampiero Ciaschetti, Pietro Minissale, Lazzaro, L, Bolpagni, R, Buffa, G, Gentili, R, Lonati, M, Stinca, A, Acosta, A, Adorni, M, Aleffi, M, Allegrezza, M, Angiolini, C, Assini, S, Bagella, S, Bonari, G, Bovio, M, Bracco, F, Brundu, G, Caccianiga, M, Carnevali, L, Di Cecco, V, Ceschin, S, Ciaschetti, G, Cogoni, A, Foggi, B, Frattaroli, A, Genovesi, P, Gigante, D, Lucchese, F, Mainetti, A, Mariotti, M, Minissale, P, Paura, B, Pellizzari, M, Perrino, E, Pirone, G, Poggio, L, Poldini, L, Poponessi, S, Prisco, I, Prosser, F, Puglisi, M, Rosati, L, Selvaggi, A, Sottovia, L, Spampinato, G, Stanisci, A, Venanzoni, R, Viciani, D, Vidali, M, Villani, M, Lastrucci, L, Lazzaro, L., Bolpagni, R., Buffa, G., Gentili, R., Lonati, M., Stinca, A., Acosta, A. T. R., Adorni, M., Aleffi, M., Allegrezza, M., Angiolini, C., Assini, S., Bagella, S., Bonari, G., Bovio, M., Bracco, F., Brundu, G., Caccianiga, M., Carnevali, L., Di Cecco, V., Ceschin, S., Ciaschetti, G., Cogoni, A., Foggi, B., Frattaroli, A. R., Genovesi, P., Gigante, D., Lucchese, F., Mainetti, A., Mariotti, M., Minissale, P., Paura, B., Pellizzari, M., Perrino, E. V., Pirone, G., Poggio, L., Poldini, L., Poponessi, S., Prisco, I., Prosser, F., Puglisi, M., Rosati, L., Selvaggi, A., Sottovia, L., Spampinato, G., Stanisci, A., Venanzoni, R., Viciani, D., Vidali, M., Villani, M., and Lastrucci, L.
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Competition ,Ecological impact ,Expert survey ,Impact mechanism ,Impact outcome ,Natura 2000 network ,Environmental Engineering ,0208 environmental biotechnology ,Biodiversity ,Introduced species ,02 engineering and technology ,Alien ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,01 natural sciences ,Italy ,Plants ,Ecosystem ,Introduced Species ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European union ,Waste Management and Disposal ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,BIO/03 - BOTANICA AMBIENTALE E APPLICATA ,Ecology ,Plant community ,General Medicine ,Plant ,Native plant ,020801 environmental engineering ,Geography ,Habitat ,Natura 2000 ,Settore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale e Applicata - Abstract
Invasive alien plants are a major threat to biodiversity and they contribute to the unfavourable conservation status of habitats of interest to the European Community. In order to favour implementation of European Union Regulation no. 1143/2014 on invasive alien species, the Italian Society of Vegetation Science carried out a large survey led by a task force of 49 contributors with expertise in vegetation across all the Italian administrative regions. The survey summed up the knowledge on impact mechanisms of invasive alien plants in Italy and their outcomes on plant communities and the EU habitats of Community Interest, in accordance with Directive no. 92/43/EEC. The survey covered 241 alien plant species reported as having deleterious ecological impacts. The data collected illustrate the current state of the art, highlight the main gaps in knowledge, and suggest topics to be further investigated. In particular, the survey underlined competition as being the main mechanism of ecological impact on plant communities and Natura 2000 habitats. Of the 241 species, only Ailanthus altissima was found to exert an ecological impact on plant communities and Natura 2000 habitats in all Italian regions; while a further 20 species impact up to ten out of the 20 Italian administrative regions. Our data indicate that 84 out of 132 Natura 2000 Habitats (64%) are subjected to some degree of impact by invasive alien plants. Freshwater habitats and natural and semi-natural grassland formations were impacted by the highest number of alien species, followed by coastal sand dunes and inland dunes, and forests. Although not exhaustive, this research is the first example of nationwide evaluation of the ecological impacts of invasive alien plants on plant communities and Natura 2000 Habitats.
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- 2020
29. La dimensione storica delle invasioni nelle acque dolci italiane
- Author
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Carla, Lambertini, Fabrizio, Buldrini, Martina, Barbero, Alessandro, Chiarucci, Juri, Nascimbene, Alessandro, Alessandrini, Lucia, Amadei, Sebastiano, Andreatta, Nicola Maria Giuseppe Ardenghi, Stefano, Armiraglio, Simonetta, Bagella, Rossano, Bolpagni, Ilaria, Bonini, Daniela, Bouvet, Brancaleoni, Lisa, Giuseppe, Brundu, Massimo, Buccheri, Gabriella, Buffa, Simona, Ceschin, Annalena, Cogoni, Gianniantonio, Domina, Luigi, Forte, Riccardo, Guarino, Leonardo, Gubellini, Laura, Guglielmone, Nicole, Hofmann, Mauro, Iberite, Lorenzo, Lastrucci, Fernando, Lucchese, Rossella, Marcucci, Giacomo, Mei, Umberto, Mossetti, Nicodemo Giuseppe Passalacqua, Simonetta, Peccenini, Filippo, Prosser, Gianni, Repetto, Gabriele, Rinaldi, Enrico, Romani, Leonardo, Rosati, Annalisa, Santangelo, Anna, Scoppola, Giovanni, Spampinato, Adriano, Stinca, Maria, Tavano, Caruso Fulvio Tomsich, Roberta, Vangelisti, Roberto, Venanzoni, Marisa, Vidali, Thomas, Wilhalm, Francesco, Zonca, and Giovanna, Pezzi
- Subjects
Ambientale - Published
- 2020
30. Contrasting patterns of native and non-native plants in a network of protected areas across spatial scales
- Author
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Marta Carboni, Giovanni Bacaro, Goffredo Filibeck, Valerio Amici, Simonetta Bagella, Enrico Tordoni, Sara Landi, Anna Scoppola, Landi, S., Tordoni, E., Amici, V., Bacaro, G., Carboni, M., Filibeck, G., Scoppola, A., Bagella, S., Landini, Sara, Tordoni, Enrico, Amici, Valerio, Bacaro, Giovanni, Carboni, Marta, Filibeck, Goffredo, Scoppola, Anna, and Bagella, Simonetta
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,habitat heterogeneity ,Habitat directive ,Habitat heterogeneity ,Biodiversity ,human disturbance ,Introduced species ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Scale dependence ,plant species richness ,Plant species richne ,Natura 2000 ,Habitat Directive ,scale dependence ,protected areas ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Native plant ,Protected area ,Spatial heterogeneity ,Geography ,Habitat ,Human disturbance ,Spatial ecology ,Species richness - Abstract
Networks of protected areas are fundamental for biodiversity conservation, but many factors determine their conservation efficiency. In particular, on top of other human-driven disturbances, invasions by non-native species can cause habitat and biodiversity loss. Jointly understanding what drives patterns of plant diversity and of non-native species in protected areas is therefore a priority. We tested whether the richness and composition of native and non-native plant species within a network of protected areas follow similar patterns across spatial scales. Specifically, we addressed three questions: (a) what is the degree of congruence in species richness between native and non-native species? (b) do changes in the composition of non-native species across ecological gradients reflect a similar turnover of native species along the same gradients ? (c) what are the main environmental and human disturbance drivers controlling species richness in these two groups of species? Species richness and composition of native and non-native plant species were compared at two spatial scales: the plot scale (10m × 10m) and the Protected Area scale (PA). In addition, we fit Generalized Linear Models to identify the most important drivers of native and non-native species richness at each scale, focusing on environmental conditions (climate, topography) and on the main sources of human disturbance in the area (land use and roads). We found a significant positive correlation between the turnover of native and non-native species composition at both plot and PA scales, whereas their species richness was only correlated at the larger PA scale. The lack of congruence between the richness of native and non-native species at the plot scale was likely driven by differential responses to fine scale environmental factors, with non-natives favoring drier climates and milder slopes (climate and slope). In addition, more non-native species were found closer to road-ways in the reserve network. In contrast, the congruence in the richness of native and non-native species at the broader PA scale was mainly driven by the common influence of PA area, but also by similar responses of the two groups of species to climatic heterogeneity. Thus, our study highlights the strong spatial dependence of the relationship between native and non-native species richness and of their responses to environmental variation. Taken together, our results suggest that within the study region the introduction and establishment of non-native species would be more likely in warmer and dryer areas, with high native species richness at large spatial scale but intermediate levels of anthropogenic disturbances and mild slope inclinations and elevation at fine scale. Such an exhaustive understanding of the factors that influence the spread of non-native species, especially in networks of protected areas is crucial to inform conservation managers on how to control or curb non-native species.
- Published
- 2020
31. Notulae to the Italian alien vascular flora: 10
- Author
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Paola Bolzani, Simone Ravetto Enri, Adriano Stinca, Nicole Hofmann, Francesco Roma-Marzio, Veronica Ranno, Chiara Nepi, Giacomo Mei, Marco Pittarello, Gianniantonio Domina, Giovanni Spampinato, Nicola Olivieri, Francesco Liccari, Dario Azzaro, Antonio Pica, Filippo Scafidi, Giulio Barone, Marta Latini, Francesco Boscutti, Gabriele Galasso, Simonetta Bagella, Fabio Conti, Gianluca Nicolella, L. Gubellini, Emilio Di Gristina, Loredana Lunesu, Mattia Bianco, Daniela Longo, Carmelo Maria Musarella, Filippo Prosser, Sara Magrini, Fabio Miconi, Giovanni Rivieccio, Gianmarco Tavilla, Sergio Buono, Jacopo Lupoletti, Giuliano Mereu, Michele Lonati, Camilla Wellstein, Gianmaria Bonari, Fabrizio Bartolucci, Stefan Zerbe, Manuel Tiburtini, Lorenzo Pinzani, Valentina Laface, Jacopo Franzoni, Lorenzo Peruzzi, Emanuele Fanfarillo, Milena Villa, Carlo Cibei, V. Giacanelli, Galasso G., Domina G., Azzaro D., Bagella S., Barone G., Bartolucci F., Bianco M., Bolzani P., Bonari G., Boscutti F., Buono S., Cibei C., Conti F., Di Gristina E., Fanfarillo E., Franzoni J., Giacanelli V., Gubellini L., Hofmann N., Laface V.L.A., Latini M., Liccari F., Lonati M., Longo D., Lunesu L., Lupoletti J., Magrini S., Mei G., Mereu G., Miconi F., Musarella C.M., Nicolella G., Olivieri N., Peruzzi L., Pica A., Pinzani L., Pittarello M., Prosser F., Ranno V., Enri S.R., Rivieccio G., Roma-Marzio F., Scafidi F., Spampinato G., Stinca A., Tavilla G., Tiburtini M., Villa M., Wellstein C., Zerbe S., Nepi C., Galasso, Gabriele, Domina, Gianniantonio, Azzaro, Dario, Bagella, Simonetta, Barone, Giulio, Bartolucci, Fabrizio, Bianco, Mattia, Bolzani, Paola, Bonari, Gianmaria, Boscutti, Francesco, Buono, Sergio, Cibei, Carlo, Conti, Fabio, Di Gristina, Emilio, Fanfarillo, Emanuele, Franzoni, Jacopo, Giacanelli, Valeria, Gubellini, Leonardo, Hofmann, Nicole, Laface, Valentina L. A., Latini, Marta, Liccari, Francesco, Lonati, Michele, Longo, Daniela, Lunesu, Loredana, Lupoletti, Jacopo, Magrini, Sara, Mei, Giacomo, Mereu, Giuliano, Miconi, Fabio, Musarella, Carmelo M., Nicolella, Gianluca, Olivieri, Nicola, Peruzzi, Lorenzo, Pica, Antonio, Pinzani, Lorenzo, Pittarello, Marco, Prosser, Filippo, Ranno, Veronica, Ravetto Enri, Simone, Rivieccio, Giovanni, Roma-Marzio, Francesco, Scafidi, Filippo, Spampinato, Giovanni, Stinca, Adriano, Tavilla, Gianmarco, Tiburtini, Manuel, Villa, Milena, Wellstein, Camilla, Zerbe, Stefan, and Nepi, Chiara
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0106 biological sciences ,Alien species ,floristic data, Italy ,nomenclature ,Flora ,Distribution (economics) ,Plant Science ,Alien ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,floristic data ,lcsh:Botany ,Alien species floristic data Italy nomenclature ,Nomenclature ,Alien specie ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Settore BIO/02 - Botanica Sistematica ,lcsh:QK1-989 ,Geography ,Italy ,Alien species, floristic data, Italy, nomenclature ,Settore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E Applicata ,business ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
In this contribution, new data concerning the distribution of vascular flora alien to Italy are presented. It includes new records, confirmations, exclusions, and status changes for Italy or for Italian administrative regions. Nomenclatural and distribution updates published elsewhere are provided as Suppl. material 1.
- Published
- 2020
32. Thorn, spine and prickle patterns in the Italian flora
- Author
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Daniele Viciani, Gabriele Casazza, Paolo Giordani, Stefania Pisanu, Renato Benesperi, Rossella Speranza Filigheddu, Luigi Minuto, Simonetta Bagella, and Maria Carmela Caria
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0106 biological sciences ,Flora ,Evolution ,Plant Science ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Bioclimates ,chorotypes ,ecological features ,habitats ,herbivory ,physical defences ,plant traits ,spinescences ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Plant science ,Behavior and Systematics ,Plant traits ,Appendage ,Herbivore ,Ecology ,Spine (zoology) ,Habitat ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Spinescence refers to the presence of sharp appendages of various origins with ecological, evolutionary or biogeographic significance. This research was conducted to explore patterns and adaptive p...
- Published
- 2018
33. A new tool for the assessment of severe anthropogenic eutrophication in small shallow water bodies
- Author
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Laura Serrano, Susana Romo, Margarita Fernández-Aláez, Saúl Blanco, Simonetta Bagella, Xavier D. Quintana, Carla Olmo, Maria Carmela Caria, Juan M. Soria, Camino Fernández-Aláez, Marlene Pätzig, Marta Reina, and Thomas Kalettka
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Hydrology ,Pollution ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Marsh ,Ecology ,Primary producers ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Aquatic ecosystem ,media_common.quotation_subject ,General Decision Sciences ,Sediment ,Wetland ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Waves and shallow water ,Environmental science ,Eutrophication ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common - Abstract
Unlike in deep stratified lakes, the assessment of eutrophication in shallow aquatic systems (i.e., wetlands, marshes, ponds) should be based on the interaction between water and sediment. The availability of P to primary producers is naturally higher in shallow systems, because the sediment plays an active part via adsorption, precipitation and release processes. Thus, many wetlands in protected areas are naturally eutrophic and have a high trophic status due to intrinsic features and thus, display a high concentration of total-P in the water without necessarily implying pollution or poor quality. We have provided a diagnostic tool based on the chemical equilibrium of dissolved reactive P (operationally-defined as o-P) between water and sediment that distinguish anthropogenic eutrophication from a background of natural eutrophy. When the P-binding capacity of the sediment becomes saturated, the o-P concentration increases in the water as long as both the biological uptake and the sediment adsorption are unable to cope with the rate of P-release from the sediment under a long-term P load (or severe anthropogenic eutrophication). In such conditions, we have found that the ratio of total-P/particulate-P exceeds 2.0 in the water, and have used this threshold to validate this tool in other sets of wetlands.
- Published
- 2017
34. Ecological and Conservation Value of Small Standing-Water Ecosystems: A Systematic Review of Current Knowledge and Future Challenges
- Author
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Marco Bartoli, Sandra Poikane, Alex Laini, Rossano Bolpagni, Simonetta Bagella, and Marco Cantonati
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0106 biological sciences ,Watershed ,lcsh:Hydraulic engineering ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Biodiversity ,WFD ,Aquatic Science ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,lcsh:Water supply for domestic and industrial purposes ,lcsh:TC1-978 ,Ecosystem ,nature conservation priorities ,Water Science and Technology ,media_common ,lcsh:TD201-500 ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Lake ecosystem ,Global strategy ,refuges ,Aquatic biodiversity ,Eutrophication ,Lentic water bodies ,Metabolism ,Nature conservation priorities ,Refuges ,Small natural features ,Geography ,eutrophication ,Work (electrical) ,Water Framework Directive ,aquatic biodiversity ,lentic water bodies ,small natural features ,Psychological resilience ,metabolism - Abstract
A small standing-water ecosystem (SWE) is a shallow (
- Published
- 2019
35. Mediterranean Temporary Ponds: new challenges from a neglected habitat
- Author
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Rossella Speranza Filigheddu, Stéphanie Gascón, Dani Boix, Simonetta Bagella, and Annalena Cogoni
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0106 biological sciences ,Mediterranean climate ,Geography ,Habitat ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Aquatic Science ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences - Published
- 2016
36. Plant exploitation and cultural landscape related to the Medieval village of Geridu (Sardinia, Italy)
- Author
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A. Deiana, M. Milanese, Rossella Speranza Filigheddu, and Simonetta Bagella
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Mediterranean climate ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Cultural landscape ,Distribution (economics) ,Plant Science ,Vegetation ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Taxon ,Geography ,Agriculture ,Paleobotany ,business ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,010606 plant biology & botany ,Woody plant - Abstract
We analyzed the archaeobotanical remains from the Mediterranean Medieval village of Geridu (Sardinia-Italy) in order: (1) to formulate hypotheses concerning different uses of woody plants; (2) to reconstruct the distribution patterns of charcoals and to compare them with the results of the archeological interpretation and (3) to describe the agricultural activities and cultural landscape around the village. In total, 29 plant taxa were identified from charcoals and 14 from carpological remains. The number of charcoals and the ubiquity of plant taxa were correlated with each other (rp = 0.735; n = 29). Only the stratigraphic units referred to as the “construction layer” in the archeological interpretation significantly differed from the other archeological contexts which were related to the life and abandonment phases of the village. Some hypotheses regarding the agricultural activities of the village were formulated on the basis of carpological remains, largely of cereals and legumes. Integration ...
- Published
- 2016
37. Patchy landscapes support more plant diversity and ecosystem services than wood grasslands in Mediterranean silvopastoral agroforestry systems
- Author
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Pier Paolo Roggero, Simonetta Bagella, Laura P. Leites, Giovanna Seddaiu, and Maria Carmela Caria
- Subjects
Mediterranean climate ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,biology ,Land use ,Agroforestry ,Biodiversity ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Quercus suber ,biology.organism_classification ,Acorn ,01 natural sciences ,Ecosystem services ,Geography ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Land tenure ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Stock (geology) ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Plant diversity and proxy indicators of ecosystem services were assessed for three structural components of Mediterranean silvopastoral agroforestry systems: WL = cork oak woodlands, WG = cork oak wood grasslands, and OG = open grasslands. Our study was conducted in a long-term observatory located in NE Sardinia, characterized by fragmented land ownership and land use, which generates a patchy landscape that is different from the extensively studied large scale Iberian dehesas and montados. Our research question was focused on assessing whether, a “patchy” land use scenario made of the combination of WL, WG and OG or a “specialized” scenario could provide more plant diversity and ecosystem services than a “dehesa type” scenario including only WG under the same overall tree cover. The results showed that γ and β diversity, species unique to a position, C stock, cork and acorn production, Hemicryptophytes cover, nectariferous species cover, decreased and pastoral value, excellent and good forage species and legume cover, increased along the WL➔WG➔OG land use gradient. Isolated trees in WG and clearings in WL highly contributed to achieving mainly high C stock and plant diversity respectively. The results also showed that the “specialized” scenario can support higher biodiversity and better ecosystem services than the “dehesa type” scenario, but the “patchy” scenario made of all three components proved to support the highest level of both biodiversity and ecosystem services in Mediterranean silvopastoral agroforestry systems.
- Published
- 2020
38. Epiphytic lichen diversity and sustainable forest management criteria and indicators: A multivariate and modelling approach in coppice forests of Italy
- Author
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Luisa Frati, Roberto Fratini, Giada Bertini, Francesco Chianucci, Giorgio Brunialti, Francesca Giorgolo, Elena Gottardini, Andrea Cutini, Simonetta Bagella, and Marco Calderisi
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Ecology ,Agroforestry ,European forest types ,Sustainable forest management ,Biodiversity ,Settore BIO/03 - BOTANICA AMBIENTALE E APPLICATA ,General Decision Sciences ,Context (language use) ,010501 environmental sciences ,Vitality ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Predictive models ,Coppicing ,Geography ,Management system ,Lichen Diversity Value (LDV) ,Epiphyte ,Lichen ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Epiphytic lichens represent one of the most suitable indicators of forest continuity and management, especially in the context of ancient and old-growth forests. Nevertheless, they have not yet been included among Sustainable Forest Management (SFM) indicators to which Pan-European forest policy and governance refer. In addition, currently adopted SFM indicators are mainly designed for high forests rather than coppice forests, despite the fact that today this management system covers more than 10% of the total European forests. In this study we investigated these two issues by examining epiphytic lichen diversity in three coppice forest stands, located in the two Italian regions of Tuscany and Sardinia. In particular, we addressed: i) the role of lichen diversity as SFM indicator and ii) its relationship with consolidated and new SFM indicators dealing with structural, health, biodiversity, protective and socioeconomic functions. Multivariate Factor Analysis and Generalised Linear Models were adopted for data analysis. We found that lichen diversity and the frequency of single sensitive species were mainly related to the biodiversity of plants and fungi (Criterion 4), the health and vitality of the forests (Criterion 2) and their protective functions (Criterion 5). Furthermore, our results show that the lichen species highlighted by the models may represent suitable indicators in long-term studies, especially in relation to complex and interconnected aspects of sustainable forest management. Although our findings represent a first contribute to this issue, more in-depth researches will be needed to clarify further aspects of the complex interactions among SFM indicators in the context of coppice forests.
- Published
- 2020
39. Dispersal mode and spatial extent influence distance-decay patterns in pond metacommunities
- Author
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Jordi Sala, Stéphanie Gascón, Dani Boix, Jordi Compte, Anabela Belo, Ana Lumbreras, Simonetta Bagella, Carla Pinto-Cruz, Irene Tornero, and Maria Carmela Caria
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Metacommunity ,lcsh:Medicine ,Models, Biological ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Animals ,Integrated geography ,Ponds ,lcsh:Science ,Distance decay ,Spatial Analysis ,Multidisciplinary ,Community ,Plant Dispersal ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,lcsh:R ,Community structure ,Species sorting ,Plant community ,Biodiversity ,Plants ,Environmental science ,Biological dispersal ,lcsh:Q - Abstract
Assuming that dispersal modes or abilities can explain the different responses of organisms to geographic or environmental distances, the distance-decay relationship is a useful tool to evaluate the relative role of local environmental structuring versus regional control in community composition. Based on continuing the current theoretical framework on metacommunity dynamics and based on the predictive effect of distance on community similarity, we proposed a new framework that includes the effect of spatial extent. In addition, we tested the validity of our proposal by studying the community similarity among three biotic groups with different dispersal modes (macrofaunal active and passive dispersers and plants) from two pond networks, where one network had a small spatial extent, and the other network had an extent that was 4 times larger. Both pond networks have similar environmental variability. Overall, we found that environmental distance had larger effects than geographical distances in both pond networks. Moreover, our results suggested that species sorting is the main type of metacommunity dynamics shaping all biotic groups when the spatial extent is larger. In contrast, when the spatial extent is smaller, the observed distance-decay patterns suggested that different biotic groups were mainly governed by different metacommunity dynamics. While the distance-decay patterns of active dispersers better fit the trend that was expected when mass effects govern a metacommunity, passive dispersers showed a pattern that was expected when species sorting prevails. Finally, in the case of plants, it is difficult to associate their distance-decay patterns with one type of metacommunity dynamics.
- Published
- 2018
40. Habitat conservation in Italy: the state of the art in the light of the first European Red List of Terrestrial and Freshwater Habitats
- Author
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Emiliano Agrillo, Luigi Casella, Stefano Armiraglio, Gabriella Buffa, C Giancola, Giovanna Pezzi, Daniele Viciani, Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta, Simonetta Bagella, I. Prisco, Gianpietro Giusso del Galdo, Roberto Venanzoni, Silvia Paola Assini, Fabio Attorre, Corrado Marcenò, Daniela Gigante, Gigante, D., Acosta, A. T. R., Agrillo, E., Armiraglio, S., Assini, S., Attorre, F., Bagella, S., Buffa, G., Casella, L., Giancola, C., Giusso del Galdo, G. P., Marcenò, C., Pezzi, G., Prisco, Irene, Venanzoni, R., Viciani, D., Acosta, A.T.R., Giusso Del Galdo, G.P., and Prisco, I.
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Biodiversity ,Distribution (economics) ,Plant community ,Assessment ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Critically endangered ,Risk of extinction ,IUCN Red List ,Threat ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Habitat conservation ,Vegetation ,Assessment · Biodiversity · Plant community · Risk of extinction · Threat ,Geography ,Habitat ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all) ,2300 ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (all) ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,business ,Settore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale e Applicata - Abstract
The importance of taking into account ecosystems, plant communities and habitats for the development of biodiversity conservation strategies is increasingly acknowledged. Recently, the first ever European Red List of Habitats was produced, which provided an evaluation of the extinction risk of EUNIS-based natural and semi-natural habitats in Europe. As assessment unit, it used the habitat intended as a plant community, thus representing a landmark for the role of vegetation science in nature conservation. In the present paper, the results of the European Red List of Habitats are analyzed at the national scale with specific reference to the terrestrial and freshwater habitat types occurring in Italy. More than three-quarters of the assessed European habitat types were recognized for the Italian territory. The distribution of the threat categories reflects approximately the situation at the EU28 level. About 35% of the assessed habitat types are referred to a threat category; no critically endangered habitat is present in Italy. The most frequently used criteria are those related to a reduction in quantity. Some critical issues arising from the analyses are discussed. In particular, the presence of knowledge gaps is pointed out, with remarkable reference to the poor availability of spatial and quantitative data, severely affecting the application of the criteria adopted for the assessment. Descriptions of habitat types from Italy are reported, some of which are representative, emblematic or even exclusive to the Italian territory. The outcomes of the analysis represent the starting point for the future development of a national-scale Red List of Habitats. Results also emphasized how habitat types with a too broad definition pose a limit to a proper evaluation of the regional biogeographic variability, often very high in Italy, with local floristic and phytocoenotic peculiarities which do not find room in the adopted European typology. This is the reason why the development of national subtypes stands as a necessary step for the development of a realistic and effective assessment at the national scale.
- Published
- 2018
41. Ecological responses of selected vascular plants to water chemistry parameters in habitat types 3120, 3130 and 3170* (Habitat Directive 92/43/EEC)
- Author
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Vincenzo Zuccarello, Simonetta Bagella, L. Beccarisi, Maria Carmela Caria, Bagella, S., Caria, M. C., Beccarisi, L., and Zuccarello, V.
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Mediterranean climate ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,Apulia ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,guide specie ,Wetland ,Plant Science ,Sardinia ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,wetlands ,Habitat ,Principal Component Analysi ,Principal component analysis ,Environmental science ,Water chemistry ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The article aims to examine the main water chemistry parameters (i.e. conductivity, pH, dissolved O2) and the ecological responses of 20 guide species in Mediterranean Temporary Ponds (MTPs). A complete data-set of 37 MTPs located in two different regions of Italy, Sardinia and Apulia, was compiled and the data were examined by means of Principal Component Analysis (PCA). The pattern of MTPs into the water chemistry space showed a clear separation between the two geographical regions. A “daisy diagram” obtained by overlapping five typologies of MTPs, obtained by the fuzzy cluster analysis and the PCA, revealed a good agreement between the sequence of groups and the water chemistry gradient. Groups of species sharing similar responses to the same chemical features were finally identified. These groups could be effective to acquire detailed information on the characteristics of MTPs and to improve their classification into different typologies. The guide species respond selectively to the wide variability range of conductivity, pH and dissolved oxygen. Despite the small size and the short hydroperiod water parameters in MTPs presented specific patterns to which the guide species are able to give specific responses.
- Published
- 2018
42. Isolated cork oak trees affect soil properties and biodiversity in a Mediterranean wooded grassland
- Author
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Giovanna Seddaiu, José Paulo Sousa, Pascal Querner, P. Martins da Silva, Pier Paolo Roggero, Simonetta Bagella, Maria Carmela Caria, Roberto Lai, Chiara Cappai, and Ivo Rossetti
- Subjects
geography ,Topsoil ,Tree canopy ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,Soil biodiversity ,Agroforestry ,Soil organic matter ,Soil biology ,Biodiversity ,Evergreen ,Grassland ,Environmental science ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Mediterranean wooded grasslands are multipurpose systems that support high plant and animal diversity levels and are habitats of European importance (i.e., 6310 – Dehesas with evergreen Quercus spp.). Moreover, these systems offer a number of agro-ecosystem services such as forage production, soil carbon sequestration, nutrient recycling and soil protection. The scattered trees enhance the ecological complexity of grassland influencing the soil properties, the herbaceous layer diversity and composition and the soil communities. Understanding how isolated trees influence the other components of the system is essential to comprehend their role supporting high levels of above and below ground biodiversity and ecosystem services. In the present study, we present a hypothetical framework of the effects of isolated trees on soil properties, plant and soil fauna assemblages, the latter here represented by the class Collembola. The floor litter and the associated input of organic matter to the soil was a key factor linking the components of the tree-soil-biodiversity system in a Mediterranean cork oak wooded grassland. Topsoil C increased by +50% under the tree canopy in comparison with the areas beyond the tree canopy. Plant diversity was lower under tree canopy, but contributed to enhance the total species richness of the grassland. Collembolan diversity was higher under the peculiar conditions beneath the tree canopy. Relationships between plant and collembolan species emerged. The findings of this study suggest that isolated trees have direct and indirect effects on soil properties, plant and collembolan assemblages, hence they can influence the ecological processes of wooded grasslands, with implications for food webs, nutrient cycling and productivity of the agro-ecosystem.
- Published
- 2015
43. Contrasting land uses in Mediterranean agro-silvo-pastoral systems generated patchy diversity patterns of vascular plants and below-ground microorganisms
- Author
-
Pier Paolo Roggero, Rossella Speranza Filigheddu, Simonetta Bagella, Mariangela Girlanda, and Maria Carmela Caria
- Subjects
Vascular plant ,Mediterranean climate ,Biomass (ecology) ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,Land use ,Mediterranean Region ,Ecology ,Biodiversity ,Genetic Variation ,Agriculture ,General Medicine ,Forests ,Plants ,Poaceae ,biology.organism_classification ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Diversity index ,Ascomycota ,Grazing ,Biomass ,Species richness ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Ecosystem ,Soil Microbiology - Abstract
The aims of this paper were (i) to define how contrasting land uses affected plant biodiversity in Mediterranean agro-silvo-pastoral-systems across a gradient of disturbance regimes: cork oak forests, secondary grasslands, hay crops, grass covered vineyards, tilled vineyards; (ii) to determine whether these patterns mirrored those of below-ground microorganisms and whether the components of γ-diversity followed a similar model. The disturbance regimes affected plant assemblage composition. Species richness decreased with increasing land use intensity, the Shannon index showed the highest values in grasslands and hay crops. Plant assemblage composition patterns mirrored those of Basidiomycota and Ascomycota. Richness in Basidiomycota, denitrifying bacteria and microbial biomass showed the same trend as that observed for vascular plant richness. The Shannon index pattern of below-ground microorganisms was different from that of plants. The plant γ-diversity component model weakly mirrored those of Ascomycota. Patchy diversity patterns suggest that the maintenance of contrasting land uses associated with different productions typical of agro-silvo-pastoral-systems can guarantee the conservation of biodiversity.
- Published
- 2014
44. Climate change hastens the urgency of conservation for range-restricted plant species in the central-northern Mediterranean region
- Author
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Stefania Pisanu, Daniele Viciani, Renato Benesperi, Bruno Foggi, Simonetta Bagella, Gabriele Casazza, Paolo Giordani, Emmanuele Farris, Rossella Speranza Filigheddu, and Mauro Mariotti
- Subjects
Mediterranean climate ,Rare species ,Range (biology) ,Ecology ,Extinction risk ,Climate change ,Environmental niche modelling ,Geography ,Projected threat ,Habitat ,Effects of global warming ,Indicator species ,Distribution models, Extinction risk, Projected threat, Rare species ,Distribution models ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
With the consensus that human activities are leading to dangerous interference in Earth’s climate, there has been growing policy pressure for clear quantification and attribution of the resulting biological impacts. Despite the exceptional diversity in the Mediterranean biome, largely due to the number of rare and endemic plant species, the effect of future climate change on present Mediterranean plant species has only been examined in a few studies. In this study we presented an analysis of the potential effects of climate change on 22 plant species whose range is restricted to central-northern Mediterranean region. We used species distribution modelling to test whether projected climate change may affect the current suitability of species’ habitat; to evaluate possible future threats due to climate change; and to test any relationship between extinction risk and ecological and life-history predictors. The studied species were predicted to lose some 50% of their current range by 2020. Similarly, the probability of occurrence in known localities was predicted to drop drastically by 2020. Our results support a relationship between biological characteristics and range contractions. Although the Mediterranean species were projected to lose a lower amount of habitat than Alpine ones, species with restricted geographic range seem to be more prone to climate change effects than widespread ones. Our results emphasize the need for immediate monitoring and conservation actions and suggest that rare species might be useful for monitoring the conservation status of habitat in relationship to the effects of global warming in the Mediterranean region.
- Published
- 2014
45. Mediterranean Quercus suber wooded grasslands risk disappearance: New evidences from Sardinia (Italy)
- Author
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Simonetta Bagella and Ivo Rossetti
- Subjects
Mediterranean climate ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,Agroforestry ,Forestry ,Quercus suber ,Woodland ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,biology.organism_classification ,Grassland ,Tillage ,Habitat ,Grazing ,Natura 2000 ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Wooded grasslands are the most widespread agro-forestry systems in Europe, and are included in the Natura 2000 network due to their importance in biodiversity conservation. Similar to many man-made systems, long-term wooded grasslands conservation depends on sustainable use practices. Regeneration of the tree layer is indispensable to assure wooded grassland maintenance. Several studies in Spanish dehesas and Portuguese montados generated concerns regarding the long-term conservation of these agro-silvo-pastoral systems. In the present study, we tested if tree regeneration issues documented for the Iberian Peninsula also affected wooded grasslands located in another Mediterranean area inside and outside Natura 2000 network. The size structure of Quercus suber L. stands, and the abundance and height of seedlings and saplings were determined at farm and landscape scales, in grazed, grazed and tilled wooded grasslands, and non-grazed woodlands to test the compatibility of management type for tree regeneration. A frequency model of size structure was calculated to estimate the probability of cork oak stand survival in a medium and long term time period. New evidences of a generalised absence of regeneration in grazed wooded grasslands emerged from all the study sites. Some management practices are indicated for the long-term conservation of the habitat.
- Published
- 2014
46. Traditional land uses enhanced plant biodiversity in a Mediterranean agro-silvo-pastoral system
- Author
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Rossella Speranza Filigheddu, Marcello Alessandro Caria, Simonetta Bagella, Ivo Rossetti, and Emmanuele Farris
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Mediterranean climate ,Sustainable development ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Land use ,Phytosociology ,Ecology ,Agroforestry ,business.industry ,Biodiversity ,Plant Science ,Potential natural vegetation ,Vegetation ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Geography ,Agriculture ,business ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Mediterranean agro-silvo-pastoral systems play a key role in view of the positive contribution that they could offer to a sustainable development of European agriculture. The knowledge of the vegetation dynamics and of the processes and land uses favoring different vegetation types related to the same actual potential natural vegetation (PNV) could represent a sound reference framework for monitoring and managing plant biodiversity in these systems. The aim of the research was to evaluate plant diversity along a gradient of use intensity comparing the actual vegetation versus the PNV. The results of our research showed that in the studied Mediterranean agro-silvo-pastoral system, included in the same environmental unit, human activities enhanced plant biodiversity. Moreover, the case study presented here confirmed the effectiveness of those landscape approaches comparing actual vegetation versus the PNV for plant biodiversity monitoring and reinforced previous studies showing the effect of human activities on plant community diversity at the environmental unit scale in different biogeographical contexts.
- Published
- 2014
47. Is time on our side? Strengthening the link between field efforts and conservation needs
- Author
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Carlo Blasi, Michela Marignani, Gianluigi Bacchetta, Simonetta Bagella, Francesco Delogu, Giuseppe Fenu, Maria Carmela Caria, Rossella Speranza Filigheddu, and Emmanuele Farris
- Subjects
Prioritization ,Ecology ,Evolution ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Biodiversity ,Distribution (economics) ,Mediterranean ,Biology ,Sardinia ,Vascular flora ,Field (computer science) ,Taxon ,Behavior and Systematics ,Important Plant Areas ,Ranking ,Field research ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,business ,Diversity (business) - Abstract
The collection and organization of distributional data is the first crucial stage of any conservation planning action: therefore the decline in field research has implications in both the systematic, floristic and conservation fields. The aim of this paper is to analyze the effects of data updating on conservation planning and priorities. Focusing on the short time frame ranging from 2006 to 2011, we present a case study showing the rate of increase of collected data (taxa and records) and the consequential effects on the definition of areas of priority interest for plant conservation (Important Plant Areas—IPAs). We gathered data on a total of 193 taxa and 849 records with a mean rate of increase of +97 % for taxa and +166 % for records (2006/2011). This increase caused a positive rate of change in high ranking cells (+78 %) defining IPAs, while the number of low ranking cells and no data cells slightly decreased (−12 and −8 %, respectively). Our results suggest that specific investment to complete the knowledge on the distribution of selected taxa (e.g. 193 taxa represent the 7.5 % of the total vascular flora of Sardinia) would dramatically reduce both the Linnean and Wallacean shortfalls and would allow robust conservation programs to preserve the diversity of the island. Updating the IPAs on a regular basis is a good example of a process that has a low impact as well as a big potential gain especially when field research can only be performed with low intensity and small monetary investments.
- Published
- 2014
48. Small-scale patterns of plant functional types and soil features within Mediterranean temporary ponds
- Author
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Maria Carmela Caria, Andrea Buondonno, G. Seddaiu, Simonetta Bagella, Sergio Vacca, Gian Franco Capra, Mc, Caria, Gf, Capra, Buondonno, Andrea, G., Seddaiu, S., Vacca, and S., Bagella
- Subjects
Mediterranean climate ,Water depth ,Waves and shallow water ,Hydrology (agriculture) ,Pedogenesis ,Flooding (psychology) ,Elevation ,Environmental science ,Soil science ,Plant Science ,Scale (map) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Temporary ponds (TPs) are shallow water bodies characterized by alternating phases of drought and flooding. They exhibit a small-scale zonation with a central belt (CB), an intermediate belt, and an outer belt (OB). Starting from the hypothesis that plant assemblage composition is affected by the position within TPs, our aims were to define the small-scale patterns of plant functional types, soil evolution, and soil physicochemical properties and to analyze their relationships and how they were affected by pond characteristics (i.e., elevation, substratum, total size, belt size, maximum water depth, and hydroperiod). Our results pointed out that patterns of plant functional types and soil evolution followed the position within the pond, soil physicochemical properties were weakly affected, and there was a relationship between plant functional types, soil small-scale patterns, and pond characteristics. Principal component analysis showed a positive correlation of Alfisols with CB, aquatic and amphibious species, maximum water depth, and hydroperiod, and of Entisols with OB and terrestrial species. A combined microtopography-hydrology effect was the primary factor controlling soil evolution and plant functional type patterns. As a consequence, modification in topographic shape and/or hydrologic parameters could alter TP environments. The results provide information for management strategies as an answer to the concerns surrounding continued worldwide TP decline
- Published
- 2013
49. Effects of long-term management practices on grassland plant assemblages in Mediterranean cork oak silvo-pastoral systems
- Author
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Gian Marco Marrosu, Maria Carmela Caria, Pier Paolo Roggero, Stefania Fanni, Simonetta Bagella, Lorenzo Salis, and Ivo Rossetti
- Subjects
Plant ecology ,Ecology ,Agroforestry ,Soil pH ,Grazing ,Biodiversity ,Environmental science ,Context (language use) ,Ecosystem ,Plant Science ,Species richness ,Conservation grazing - Abstract
The assessment of the effects of long-term management practices is relevant in understanding the current patterns of plant assemblages in semi-natural ecosystems. We hypothesized that the variety of management practices across different farming systems under the same ecological conditions directly and indirectly shapes these patterns via the long-term changes induced in soil features. The aims of this paper were to evaluate the influence of two sets of variables describing long-term management practices and soil features on plant assemblages and their importance in the context of Mediterranean silvo-pastoral systems. The analysis of variance revealed that richness and grazing value were not affected at all by grazing livestock species and soil tillage frequency and that they both showed relatively high absolute values for the specific context under study. Trifolium subterraneum was a key species in contributing to grassland grazing value and habitat biodiversity. The Canonical Correspondence Analysis highlighted the influence of management practices and soil features on plant assemblage composition, which was significantly affected by grazing livestock species and stocking rate and by soil pH and K content. The Redundancy Analysis showed that soil pH and related features were in turn affected by stocking rate, supporting our hypothesis that management practices influenced plant assemblage composition directly and indirectly via their long-term effects on soil features. The results also highlighted that a systemic analytical perspective applied at a grazing system scale can be effective in addressing sustainable grassland management issues in Mediterranean silvo-pastoral systems.
- Published
- 2013
50. Effects of plant community composition and flowering phenology on honeybee foraging in Mediterranean sylvo-pastoral systems
- Author
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Alberto Satta, Simonetta Bagella, Maria Carmela Caria, Ivo Rossetti, János Podani, and Ignazio Floris
- Subjects
Ecology ,biology ,Apiary ,Phenology ,Foraging ,Plant community ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease_cause ,Melissopalynology ,Pollen ,medicine ,Nectar ,Lavandula stoechas ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Questions : Which are the most effective plant communities for honeybee foraging and honey production in Mediterranean sylvo-pastoral systems? What is the relationship between flowering phenology and pollen occurring in honey sediments? Location : Mediterranean sylvo-pastoral system in Gallura, Sardinia, Italy. Methods : Phytosociological and phenological surveys were performed in a circular area of 1.5 km radius with a small apiary placed in the centre. Polleniferous and nectariferous values of plant communities were assessed based on the cover and the polleniferous and nectariferous value of each constituting species. Honey production was quantified during the main flow (March–June) and subjected to melissopalynological analysis. Data were evaluated by ordination through principal components analysis and principal coordinates analysis. The latter utilized a new index, developed for calculating the phenological distances based on the individual distributions of flowering frequencies. Results : Plant communities richest in species providing pollen and nectar were Rhamnus hedges. There was a close correlation between polleniferous and nectariferous values, suggesting that plant communities are important for honeybee foraging of both resources. The temporal flowering sequence ensured the supply of nectar and pollen throughout the spring season. Pollen foraged from 12 Trifolium species with different flowering phenology was the most abundant. Salix purpurea and Rhamnus alaternus were productive at the beginning of the season, followed by Lavandula stoechas , Echium plantagineum and E. italicum . Conclusions : Plant communities vary in importance for honeybee foraging mainly due to differences in floristic composition and flowering phenology. Communities characterized by human presence ( e . g . semi-natural grasslands and hedges) are the most relevant. Some target species ( e . g . Trifolium spp .) favoured by grazing livestock ensure foraging for honeybees throughout the season. Plant communities of wild areas, such as the garrigue vegetation, provide foraging for unifloral valuable honey ( i . e . ‘Lavandula’ honey).
- Published
- 2013
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