37 results on '"Carozzi, M."'
Search Results
2. Data monitoring roadmap. The experience of the Italian Multiple Sclerosis and Related Disorders Register
- Author
-
Mosconi, P, Guerra, T, Paletta, P, D'Ettorre, A, Ponzio, M, Battaglia, M, Amato, M, Bergamaschi, R, Capobianco, M, Comi, G, Gasperini, C, Patti, F, Pugliatti, M, Ulivelli, M, Trojano, M, Lepore, V, Aguglia, U, Ancona, A, Ardito, B, Avolio, C, Balgera, R, Banfi, P, Barcella, V, Barone, P, Bellantonio, P, Berardinelli, A, Bertora, P, Bianchi, M, Bramanti, P, Brescia Morra, V, Brichetto, G, Brioschi, A, Buccafusca, M, Bucello, S, Busillo, V, Calchetti, B, Cantello, R, Capone, F, Capone, L, Cargnelutti, D, Carozzi, M, Cartechini, E, Cavaletti, G, Cavalla, P, Celani, M, Clerici, R, Clerico, M, Cocco, E, Torri Clerici, V, Coniglio, M, Conte, A, Corea, F, Cottone, S, Crociani, P, D'Andrea, F, Danni, M, De Luca, G, de Pascalis, D, De Riz, M, De Robertis, F, De Rosa, G, De Stefano, N, Della Corte, M, Di Sapio, A, Docimo, R, Falcini, M, Falcone, N, Fermi, S, Ferraro, E, Ferro, M, Fortunato, M, Foschi, M, Gajofatto, A, Gallo, A, Gallo, P, Gatto, M, Gazzola, P, Giordano, A, Granella, F, Grasso, M, Grimaldi, L, Iaffaldano, P, Immovilli, P, Imperiale, D, Inglese, M, Iodice, R, Leva, S, Leuzzi, V, Lugaresi, A, Lus, G, Maimone, D, Mancinelli, L, Maniscalco, G, Marfia, G, Margari, L, Marinelli, F, Marini, B, Marson, A, Mascoli, N, Massacesi, L, Melani, F, Merello, M, Fioretti, C, Mirabella, M, Montepietra, S, Nasuelli, D, Nicolao, P, Pasquali, L, Passantino, F, Pecori, C, Peresson, M, Pesci, I, Piantadosi, C, Piras, M, Pizzorno, M, Plewnia, K, Pozzilli, C, Protti, A, Quatrale, R, Realmuto, S, Ribizzi, G, Rinalduzzi, S, Rini, A, Romano, S, Filippi, M, Ronzoni, M, Rossi, P, Rovaris, M, Salemi, G, Santangelo, G, Santangelo, M, Leone, A, Sarchielli, P, Sinisi, L, Ferraro, D, Solaro, C, Spitaleri, D, Strumia, S, Tassinari, T, Santuccio, G, Tortorella, C, Totaro, R, Tozzo, A, Trivelli, G, Turano, G, Valentino, P, Venturi, S, Vianello, M, Zaffaroni, M, Zarbo, R, Mosconi P., Guerra T., Paletta P., D'Ettorre A., Ponzio M., Battaglia M. A., Amato M. P., Bergamaschi R., Capobianco M., Comi G., Gasperini C., Patti F., Pugliatti M., Ulivelli M., Trojano M., Lepore V., Aguglia U., Amato M., Ancona A., Ardito B., Avolio C., Balgera R., Banfi P., Barcella V., Barone P., Bellantonio P., Berardinelli A., Bertora P., Bianchi M., Bramanti P., Brescia Morra V., Brichetto G., Brioschi A., Buccafusca M., Bucello S., Busillo V., Calchetti B., Cantello R., Capone F., Capone L., Cargnelutti D., Carozzi M., Cartechini E., Cavaletti G., Cavalla P., Celani M., Clerici R., Clerico M., Cocco E., Torri Clerici V., Coniglio M., Conte A., Corea F., Cottone S., Crociani P., D'Andrea F., Danni M., De Luca G., de Pascalis D., De Riz M., De Robertis F., De Rosa G., De Stefano N., Della Corte M., Di Sapio A., Docimo R., Falcini M., Falcone N., Fermi S., Ferraro E., Ferro M., Fortunato M., Foschi M., Gajofatto A., Gallo A., Gallo P., Gatto M., Gazzola P., Giordano A., Granella F., Grasso M., Grimaldi L., Iaffaldano P., Immovilli P., Imperiale D., Inglese M., Iodice R., Leva S., Leuzzi V., Lugaresi A., Lus G., Maimone D., Mancinelli L., Maniscalco G., Marfia G., Margari L., Marinelli F., Marini B., Marson A., Mascoli N., Massacesi L., Melani F., Merello M., Fioretti C., Mirabella M., Montepietra S., Nasuelli D., Nicolao P., Pasquali L., Passantino F., Pecori C., Peresson M., Pesci I., Piantadosi C., Piras M., Pizzorno M., Plewnia K., Pozzilli C., Protti A., Quatrale R., Realmuto S., Ribizzi G., Rinalduzzi S., Rini A., Romano S., Filippi M., Ronzoni M., Rossi P., Rovaris M., Salemi G., Santangelo G., Santangelo M., Leone A., Sarchielli P., Sinisi L., Ferraro D., Solaro C., Spitaleri D., Strumia S., Tassinari T., Santuccio G., Tortorella C., Totaro R., Tozzo A., Trivelli G., Turano G., Valentino P., Venturi S., Vianello M., Zaffaroni M., Zarbo R., Mosconi, P, Guerra, T, Paletta, P, D'Ettorre, A, Ponzio, M, Battaglia, M, Amato, M, Bergamaschi, R, Capobianco, M, Comi, G, Gasperini, C, Patti, F, Pugliatti, M, Ulivelli, M, Trojano, M, Lepore, V, Aguglia, U, Ancona, A, Ardito, B, Avolio, C, Balgera, R, Banfi, P, Barcella, V, Barone, P, Bellantonio, P, Berardinelli, A, Bertora, P, Bianchi, M, Bramanti, P, Brescia Morra, V, Brichetto, G, Brioschi, A, Buccafusca, M, Bucello, S, Busillo, V, Calchetti, B, Cantello, R, Capone, F, Capone, L, Cargnelutti, D, Carozzi, M, Cartechini, E, Cavaletti, G, Cavalla, P, Celani, M, Clerici, R, Clerico, M, Cocco, E, Torri Clerici, V, Coniglio, M, Conte, A, Corea, F, Cottone, S, Crociani, P, D'Andrea, F, Danni, M, De Luca, G, de Pascalis, D, De Riz, M, De Robertis, F, De Rosa, G, De Stefano, N, Della Corte, M, Di Sapio, A, Docimo, R, Falcini, M, Falcone, N, Fermi, S, Ferraro, E, Ferro, M, Fortunato, M, Foschi, M, Gajofatto, A, Gallo, A, Gallo, P, Gatto, M, Gazzola, P, Giordano, A, Granella, F, Grasso, M, Grimaldi, L, Iaffaldano, P, Immovilli, P, Imperiale, D, Inglese, M, Iodice, R, Leva, S, Leuzzi, V, Lugaresi, A, Lus, G, Maimone, D, Mancinelli, L, Maniscalco, G, Marfia, G, Margari, L, Marinelli, F, Marini, B, Marson, A, Mascoli, N, Massacesi, L, Melani, F, Merello, M, Fioretti, C, Mirabella, M, Montepietra, S, Nasuelli, D, Nicolao, P, Pasquali, L, Passantino, F, Pecori, C, Peresson, M, Pesci, I, Piantadosi, C, Piras, M, Pizzorno, M, Plewnia, K, Pozzilli, C, Protti, A, Quatrale, R, Realmuto, S, Ribizzi, G, Rinalduzzi, S, Rini, A, Romano, S, Filippi, M, Ronzoni, M, Rossi, P, Rovaris, M, Salemi, G, Santangelo, G, Santangelo, M, Leone, A, Sarchielli, P, Sinisi, L, Ferraro, D, Solaro, C, Spitaleri, D, Strumia, S, Tassinari, T, Santuccio, G, Tortorella, C, Totaro, R, Tozzo, A, Trivelli, G, Turano, G, Valentino, P, Venturi, S, Vianello, M, Zaffaroni, M, Zarbo, R, Mosconi P., Guerra T., Paletta P., D'Ettorre A., Ponzio M., Battaglia M. A., Amato M. P., Bergamaschi R., Capobianco M., Comi G., Gasperini C., Patti F., Pugliatti M., Ulivelli M., Trojano M., Lepore V., Aguglia U., Amato M., Ancona A., Ardito B., Avolio C., Balgera R., Banfi P., Barcella V., Barone P., Bellantonio P., Berardinelli A., Bertora P., Bianchi M., Bramanti P., Brescia Morra V., Brichetto G., Brioschi A., Buccafusca M., Bucello S., Busillo V., Calchetti B., Cantello R., Capone F., Capone L., Cargnelutti D., Carozzi M., Cartechini E., Cavaletti G., Cavalla P., Celani M., Clerici R., Clerico M., Cocco E., Torri Clerici V., Coniglio M., Conte A., Corea F., Cottone S., Crociani P., D'Andrea F., Danni M., De Luca G., de Pascalis D., De Riz M., De Robertis F., De Rosa G., De Stefano N., Della Corte M., Di Sapio A., Docimo R., Falcini M., Falcone N., Fermi S., Ferraro E., Ferro M., Fortunato M., Foschi M., Gajofatto A., Gallo A., Gallo P., Gatto M., Gazzola P., Giordano A., Granella F., Grasso M., Grimaldi L., Iaffaldano P., Immovilli P., Imperiale D., Inglese M., Iodice R., Leva S., Leuzzi V., Lugaresi A., Lus G., Maimone D., Mancinelli L., Maniscalco G., Marfia G., Margari L., Marinelli F., Marini B., Marson A., Mascoli N., Massacesi L., Melani F., Merello M., Fioretti C., Mirabella M., Montepietra S., Nasuelli D., Nicolao P., Pasquali L., Passantino F., Pecori C., Peresson M., Pesci I., Piantadosi C., Piras M., Pizzorno M., Plewnia K., Pozzilli C., Protti A., Quatrale R., Realmuto S., Ribizzi G., Rinalduzzi S., Rini A., Romano S., Filippi M., Ronzoni M., Rossi P., Rovaris M., Salemi G., Santangelo G., Santangelo M., Leone A., Sarchielli P., Sinisi L., Ferraro D., Solaro C., Spitaleri D., Strumia S., Tassinari T., Santuccio G., Tortorella C., Totaro R., Tozzo A., Trivelli G., Turano G., Valentino P., Venturi S., Vianello M., Zaffaroni M., and Zarbo R.
- Abstract
Introduction: Over the years, disease registers have been increasingly considered a source of reliable and valuable population studies. However, the validity and reliability of data from registers may be limited by missing data, selection bias or data quality not adequately evaluated or checked. This study reports the analysis of the consistency and completeness of the data in the Italian Multiple Sclerosis and Related Disorders Register. Methods: The Register collects, through a standardized Web-based Application, unique patients. Data are exported bimonthly and evaluated to assess the updating and completeness, and to check the quality and consistency. Eight clinical indicators are evaluated. Results: The Register counts 77,628 patients registered by 126 centres. The number of centres has increased over time, as their capacity to collect patients. The percentages of updated patients (with at least one visit in the last 24 months) have increased from 33% (enrolment period 2000–2015) to 60% (enrolment period 2016–2022). In the cohort of patients registered after 2016, there were ≥ 75% updated patients in 30% of the small centres (33), in 9% of the medium centres (11), and in all the large centres (2). Clinical indicators show significant improvement for the active patients, expanded disability status scale every 6 months or once every 12 months, visits every 6 months, first visit within 1 year and MRI every 12 months. Conclusions: Data from disease registers provide guidance for evidence-based health policies and research, so methods and strategies ensuring their quality and reliability are crucial and have several potential applications.
- Published
- 2023
3. Conservation Agriculture and Climate Change
- Author
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Pisante, M., Stagnari, F., Acutis, M., Bindi, M., Brilli, L., Di Stefano, V., Carozzi, M., Farooq, Muhammad, editor, and Siddique, Kadambot H. M., editor
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Data monitoring roadmap. The experience of the Italian Multiple Sclerosis and Related Disorders Register
- Author
-
Mosconi, P., Guerra, T., Paletta, P., D’Ettorre, A., Ponzio, M., Battaglia, M. A., Amato, M. P., Bergamaschi, R., Capobianco, M., Comi, G., Gasperini, C., Patti, F., Pugliatti, M., Ulivelli, M., Trojano, M., Lepore, V., Aguglia, U., Amato, M., Ancona, A., Ardito, B., Avolio, C., Balgera, R., Banfi, P., Barcella, V., Barone, P., Bellantonio, P., Berardinelli, A., Bertora, P., Bianchi, M., Bramanti, P., Brescia Morra, V., Brichetto, G., Brioschi, A., Buccafusca, M., Bucello, S., Busillo, V., Calchetti, B., Cantello, R., Capone, F., Capone, L., Cargnelutti, D., Carozzi, M., Cartechini, E., Cavaletti, G., Cavalla, P., Celani, M., Clerici, R., Clerico, M., Cocco, E., Torri Clerici, V., Coniglio, M., Conte, A., Corea, F., Cottone, S., Crociani, P., D’Andrea, F., Danni, M., De Luca, G., de Pascalis, D., De Riz, M., De Robertis, F., De Rosa, G., De Stefano, N., Della Corte, M., Di Sapio, A., Docimo, R., Falcini, M., Falcone, N., Fermi, S., Ferraro, E., Ferrò, M., Fortunato, M., Foschi, M., Gajofatto, A., Gallo, A., Gallo, P., Gatto, M., Gazzola, P., Giordano, A., Granella, F., Grasso, M., Grimaldi, L., Iaffaldano, P., Immovilli, P., Imperiale, D., Inglese, M., Iodice, R., Leva, S., Leuzzi, V., Lugaresi, A., Lus, G., Maimone, D., Mancinelli, L., Maniscalco, G., Marfia, G., Margari, L., Marinelli, F., Marini, B., Marson, A., Mascoli, N., Massacesi, L., Melani, F., Merello, M., Fioretti, C., Mirabella, Massimiliano, Montepietra, S., Nasuelli, D., Nicolao, P., Pasquali, L., Passantino, F., Pecori, C., Peresson, M., Pesci, I., Piantadosi, C., Piras, M. L., Pizzorno, M., Plewnia, K., Pozzilli, C., Protti, A., Quatrale, R., Realmuto, S., Ribizzi, G., Rinalduzzi, S., Rini, A., Romano, S., Filippi, M., Ronzoni, M., Rossi, P., Rovaris, M., Salemi, G., Santangelo, G., Santangelo, M., Leone, A., Sarchielli, P., Sinisi, L., Ferraro, D., Solaro, C., Spitaleri, D., Strumia, S., Tassinari, T., Santuccio, G., Tortorella, C., Totaro, R., Tozzo, A., Trivelli, G., Turano, G., Valentino, P., Venturi, S., Vianello, M., Zaffaroni, M., Zarbo, R., Mirabella M. (ORCID:0000-0002-7783-114X), Mosconi, P., Guerra, T., Paletta, P., D’Ettorre, A., Ponzio, M., Battaglia, M. A., Amato, M. P., Bergamaschi, R., Capobianco, M., Comi, G., Gasperini, C., Patti, F., Pugliatti, M., Ulivelli, M., Trojano, M., Lepore, V., Aguglia, U., Amato, M., Ancona, A., Ardito, B., Avolio, C., Balgera, R., Banfi, P., Barcella, V., Barone, P., Bellantonio, P., Berardinelli, A., Bertora, P., Bianchi, M., Bramanti, P., Brescia Morra, V., Brichetto, G., Brioschi, A., Buccafusca, M., Bucello, S., Busillo, V., Calchetti, B., Cantello, R., Capone, F., Capone, L., Cargnelutti, D., Carozzi, M., Cartechini, E., Cavaletti, G., Cavalla, P., Celani, M., Clerici, R., Clerico, M., Cocco, E., Torri Clerici, V., Coniglio, M., Conte, A., Corea, F., Cottone, S., Crociani, P., D’Andrea, F., Danni, M., De Luca, G., de Pascalis, D., De Riz, M., De Robertis, F., De Rosa, G., De Stefano, N., Della Corte, M., Di Sapio, A., Docimo, R., Falcini, M., Falcone, N., Fermi, S., Ferraro, E., Ferrò, M., Fortunato, M., Foschi, M., Gajofatto, A., Gallo, A., Gallo, P., Gatto, M., Gazzola, P., Giordano, A., Granella, F., Grasso, M., Grimaldi, L., Iaffaldano, P., Immovilli, P., Imperiale, D., Inglese, M., Iodice, R., Leva, S., Leuzzi, V., Lugaresi, A., Lus, G., Maimone, D., Mancinelli, L., Maniscalco, G., Marfia, G., Margari, L., Marinelli, F., Marini, B., Marson, A., Mascoli, N., Massacesi, L., Melani, F., Merello, M., Fioretti, C., Mirabella, Massimiliano, Montepietra, S., Nasuelli, D., Nicolao, P., Pasquali, L., Passantino, F., Pecori, C., Peresson, M., Pesci, I., Piantadosi, C., Piras, M. L., Pizzorno, M., Plewnia, K., Pozzilli, C., Protti, A., Quatrale, R., Realmuto, S., Ribizzi, G., Rinalduzzi, S., Rini, A., Romano, S., Filippi, M., Ronzoni, M., Rossi, P., Rovaris, M., Salemi, G., Santangelo, G., Santangelo, M., Leone, A., Sarchielli, P., Sinisi, L., Ferraro, D., Solaro, C., Spitaleri, D., Strumia, S., Tassinari, T., Santuccio, G., Tortorella, C., Totaro, R., Tozzo, A., Trivelli, G., Turano, G., Valentino, P., Venturi, S., Vianello, M., Zaffaroni, M., Zarbo, R., and Mirabella M. (ORCID:0000-0002-7783-114X)
- Abstract
IntroductionOver the years, disease registers have been increasingly considered a source of reliable and valuable population studies. However, the validity and reliability of data from registers may be limited by missing data, selection bias or data quality not adequately evaluated or checked.This study reports the analysis of the consistency and completeness of the data in the Italian Multiple Sclerosis and Related Disorders Register.MethodsThe Register collects, through a standardized Web-based Application, unique patients.Data are exported bimonthly and evaluated to assess the updating and completeness, and to check the quality and consistency. Eight clinical indicators are evaluated.ResultsThe Register counts 77,628 patients registered by 126 centres. The number of centres has increased over time, as their capacity to collect patients.The percentages of updated patients (with at least one visit in the last 24 months) have increased from 33% (enrolment period 2000-2015) to 60% (enrolment period 2016-2022). In the cohort of patients registered after 2016, there were >= 75% updated patients in 30% of the small centres (33), in 9% of the medium centres (11), and in all the large centres (2).Clinical indicators show significant improvement for the active patients, expanded disability status scale every 6 months or once every 12 months, visits every 6 months, first visit within 1 year and MRI every 12 months.ConclusionsData from disease registers provide guidance for evidence-based health policies and research, so methods and strategies ensuring their quality and reliability are crucial and have several potential applications.
- Published
- 2023
5. Challenges of accounting nitrous oxide emissions from agricultural crop residues
- Author
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Olesen, Jørgen E., Ress, Robert, Recous, Sylvie, Bleken, Marina Azzaroli, Abalos, D, Ahuja, Ishita, Butterbach-Bahl, K., Carozzi, M., Notaris, C., Ernfors, Maria, Haas, E. De, Hansen, Sissel, Janz, Baldur, Lashermes, G, Massad, R, Petersen, Søren O., Rittl, Tatiana, Scheer, C., Smith, K. E., Thiébeau, P, Taghizadeh-Toosi, Arezoo, Thorman, R. E., Topp, Cairistiona F E, Olesen, Jørgen E., Ress, Robert, Recous, Sylvie, Bleken, Marina Azzaroli, Abalos, D, Ahuja, Ishita, Butterbach-Bahl, K., Carozzi, M., Notaris, C., Ernfors, Maria, Haas, E. De, Hansen, Sissel, Janz, Baldur, Lashermes, G, Massad, R, Petersen, Søren O., Rittl, Tatiana, Scheer, C., Smith, K. E., Thiébeau, P, Taghizadeh-Toosi, Arezoo, Thorman, R. E., and Topp, Cairistiona F E
- Abstract
Crop residues are important inputs of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) to soils and thus directly and indirectly affect nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions. As the current inventory methodology considers N inputs by crop residues as the sole determining factor for N2O emissions, it fails to consider other underlying factors and processes. There is compelling evidence that emissions vary greatly between residues with different bio-chemical and physical characteristics, with the concentrations of mineralizable N and decomposable C in the residue biomass both enhancing the soil N2O production po-tential. High concentrations of these components are associated with immature resi-dues (e.g., cover crops, grass, legumes, and vegetables) as opposed to mature residues (e.g., straw). A more accurate estimation of the short-term (months) effects of the crop residues on N2O could involve distinguishing mature and immature crop residues with distinctly different emission factors. The medium-term (years) and long-term (decades) effects relate to the effects of residue management on soil N fertility and soil physical and chemical properties, considering that these are affected by local cli-matic and soil conditions as well as land use and management. More targeted mitiga-tion efforts for N2O emissions, after addition of crop residues to the soil, are urgently needed and require an improved methodology for emission accounting. This work needs to be underpinned by research to (1) develop and validate N2O emission fac-tors for mature and immature crop residues, (2) assess emissions from belowground residues of terminated crops, (3) improve activity data on management of different residue types, in particular immature residues, and (4) evaluate long-term effects of residue addition on N2O emissions.
- Published
- 2023
6. How Modelers Model: the Overlooked Social and Human Dimensions in Model Intercomparison Studies.
- Author
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Albanito, F, McBey, D, Harrison, M, Smith, P, Ehrhardt, F, Bhatia, A, Bellocchi, G, Brilli, L, Carozzi, M, Christie, K, Doltra, J, Dorich, C, Doro, L, Grace, P, Grant, B, Léonard, J, Liebig, M, Ludemann, C, Martin, R, Meier, E, Meyer, R, De Antoni Migliorati, M, Myrgiotis, V, Recous, S, Sándor, R, Snow, V, Soussana, J-F, Smith, WN, Fitton, N, Albanito, F, McBey, D, Harrison, M, Smith, P, Ehrhardt, F, Bhatia, A, Bellocchi, G, Brilli, L, Carozzi, M, Christie, K, Doltra, J, Dorich, C, Doro, L, Grace, P, Grant, B, Léonard, J, Liebig, M, Ludemann, C, Martin, R, Meier, E, Meyer, R, De Antoni Migliorati, M, Myrgiotis, V, Recous, S, Sándor, R, Snow, V, Soussana, J-F, Smith, WN, and Fitton, N
- Abstract
There is a growing realization that the complexity of model ensemble studies depends not only on the models used but also on the experience and approach used by modelers to calibrate and validate results, which remain a source of uncertainty. Here, we applied a multi-criteria decision-making method to investigate the rationale applied by modelers in a model ensemble study where 12 process-based different biogeochemical model types were compared across five successive calibration stages. The modelers shared a common level of agreement about the importance of the variables used to initialize their models for calibration. However, we found inconsistency among modelers when judging the importance of input variables across different calibration stages. The level of subjective weighting attributed by modelers to calibration data decreased sequentially as the extent and number of variables provided increased. In this context, the perceived importance attributed to variables such as the fertilization rate, irrigation regime, soil texture, pH, and initial levels of soil organic carbon and nitrogen stocks was statistically different when classified according to model types. The importance attributed to input variables such as experimental duration, gross primary production, and net ecosystem exchange varied significantly according to the length of the modeler's experience. We argue that the gradual access to input data across the five calibration stages negatively influenced the consistency of the interpretations made by the modelers, with cognitive bias in "trial-and-error" calibration routines. Our study highlights that overlooking human and social attributes is critical in the outcomes of modeling and model intercomparison studies. While complexity of the processes captured in the model algorithms and parameterization is important, we contend that (1) the modeler's assumptions on the extent to which parameters should be altered and (2) modeler perceptions of the importance
- Published
- 2022
7. Conservation Agriculture and Climate Change
- Author
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Pisante, M., primary, Stagnari, F., additional, Acutis, M., additional, Bindi, M., additional, Brilli, L., additional, Di Stefano, V., additional, and Carozzi, M., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Evaluation of total and bioavailable heavy metals and other soil-related variables in a rice paddy after the application of defecation lime
- Author
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Chiodini, M.E., primary, Tambone, F., additional, Carozzi, M., additional, Sanna, M., additional, Salati, S., additional, Adani, F., additional, Acutis, M., additional, and Perego, A., additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. D3.4 + D3.6: Cover report Results logistical case studies
- Author
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Annevelink, E., Gabrielle, B., Carozzi, M., Garcia Galindo, D., Espatolero, S., Izquierdo, M., Väätäinen, K., Anttila, P., Staritsky, I.G., Vanmeulebrouk, B., Elbersen, Berien, and Leduc, S.
- Subjects
Earth Observation and Environmental Informatics ,hulpbronnengebruik ,biomass ,databases ,Applied Spatial Research ,logistics ,biomassa ,biobased economy ,sustainability ,logistiek ,resource utilization ,europa ,models ,duurzaamheid (sustainability) ,Aardobservatie en omgevingsinformatica ,BBP Biorefinery & Sustainable Value Chains ,europe ,databanken ,modellen - Abstract
The S2Biom project - Delivery of sustainable supply of non-food biomass to support a “resource-efficient” Bioeconomy in Europe - supports the sustainable delivery of nonfood biomass feedstock at local, regional and pan European level through developing strategies, and roadmaps that will be informed by a “computerized and easy to use” toolset (and respective databases) with updated harmonized datasets at local, regional, national and pan European level for EU28, Western Balkans, Moldova, Turkey and Ukraine. A case based approach was followed, where optimal logistical concepts (conceptual designs) were matched with the specific regional situation. This was done in three logistical case studies that were performed: 1. Small-scale power production with straw and Miscanthus in the Burgundy region (France); 2. Large-scale power production with straw and with residual woody biomass in the Aragon region (Spain); 3. Advanced wood logistics in the Province of Central Finland.
- Published
- 2016
10. Evaluation of total and bioavailable heavy metals and other soilrelated variables in a rice paddy after the application of defecation lime.
- Author
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CHIODINI, M. E., TAMBONE, F., CAROZZI, M., SANNA, M., SALATI, S., ADANI, F., ACUTIS, M., and PEREGO, A.
- Subjects
PADDY fields ,SLUDGE management ,FERTILIZATION (Biology) ,FERTILIZERS ,HEAVY metals - Abstract
A two-year experiment was carried out in a paddy field to investigate the effects of the use of defecation lime derived from treated sewage sludge on soil total and soil phytoavailable heavy metals concentration. Heavy metals concentration was determined also in raw rice. Four treatments were arranged in a completely randomized block design: not fertilised (T0), organic fertilisation + chemical fertilisers (T1), defecation lime + chemical fertilisers (T2), defecation lime at pre-sowing (T3). For T3, the pH value increased significantly at the end of the second year, increasing from 5.8 to 6.11. T3 resulted in the highest soil organic carbon content (9.4 g kg-1), suggesting the potential of defecation lime both as soil corrective material and soil amendment. The application of defecation lime in the paddy field did not result in an increased phytoavailable amount of heavy metals in soil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. D3.4 + D3.6: Annex 1 Results logistical case study Burgundy
- Author
-
Annevelink, E., Gabrielle, B., Carozzi, M., Staritsky, I.G., Vanmeulebrouk, B., Elbersen, Berien, Leduc, S., Annevelink, E., Gabrielle, B., Carozzi, M., Staritsky, I.G., Vanmeulebrouk, B., Elbersen, Berien, and Leduc, S.
- Abstract
In the S2Biom project the logistical case study in Burgundy was the first that wasperformed. The data were based on the results of the LogistEC project, which had already performed a thorough assessment of the case. Therefore, the S2Biom case study was especially used to develop the new tool LocaGIStics, and to illustrate the possibilities of such a new logistical tool in combination with an existing tool, the BeWhere model. So the results of the case study were not primarily intended to further assess the real life case or to advise an actual company for taking decisions on their biomass supply chain yet.The BeWhere model has been applied for the case study of Burgundy in order toidentify the optimal locations of bioenergy production plants. It should be emphasized that the locations of the plants were highly driven by the location and amount of the demand of heat over the transport collection of the feedstock at least for this particular case study. The collection points of the biomass are nevertheless very well concentrated around the production plants. Anyhow to validate those results, LocaGIStics is a valuable tool for the simulation of the feedstock collection from the plants determined from BeWhere. The quality check controls the feedstock collection, capacity and therefore the validity of the chosen location.The LocaGIStics model has especially been developed using the Burgundy casestudy. Several logistical concepts have been tested in the Burgundy case. These are:i) mixing different biomass types (straw as a biomass residue and Miscanthus as an energy crop), ii) applying pretreatment technology (pelletizing) to densify the material in order to lower the transportation costs and increase handling properties, iii) switching between different types of transport means (truck and walking floor vehicle)and iv) direct delivery to a power plant versus putting an intermediate collection point in the value chain. Due to the nature of this development case less value
- Published
- 2016
12. Carbohydrate-deficient transferrin assay in pediatrics and pregnancy: expression of results
- Author
-
Tamaro, G., Simeone, R., Mangiarotti, M., Ciana, G., Martini, C., Bembi, B., and Carozzi, M.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Short-term experiments in using digestate products as substitutes for mineral (N) fertilizer: Agronomic performance, odours, and ammonia emission impacts
- Author
-
Riva, C., primary, Orzi, V., additional, Carozzi, M., additional, Acutis, M., additional, Boccasile, G., additional, Lonati, S., additional, Tambone, F., additional, D'Imporzano, G., additional, and Adani, F., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The influence of tillage on N<sub>2</sub>O fluxes from an intensively managed grazed grassland in Scotland
- Author
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Cowan, N.J., primary, Levy, P.E., additional, Famulari, D., additional, Anderson, M., additional, Drewer, J., additional, Carozzi, M., additional, Reay, D.S., additional, and Skiba, U.M., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The 'semilunette' in the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II in Milan: an open study
- Author
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Marelli, I., Fratelli, M., Salsi, C., Tibiletti, A., Carozzi, M., Fossati, V., Fuggini, M., Morosi, D., Splendore, A., Fazzari, D., Traversi, A., Albanese, G., Leo, A., Cremonesi, P., Finozzi, A., Riggiardi, D., Signorini, E., Tumminello, A., Volpin, S., Massafra, M. R., Romanò, M., Bacci, M., Picollo, M., Petrucci, Ferruccio Carlo, and Tisato, Flavia
- Subjects
minimal intervention ,Open studio ,cleaning ,consolidation ,colorimetry - Published
- 2012
16. Open studio sulle semilunette della Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II conservate alla Galleria d’Arte Moderna di Milano
- Author
-
Marelli, I., Fratelli, M., Salsi, C., Carozzi, M., Fazzari, D., Fossati, V., Fuggini, M., Morosi, D., Riggiardi, D., Splendore, A., Tibiletti, A., Traversi, A., Albanese, G., Leo, A., Cremonesi, P., Finozzi, A., Signorini, E., Tumminello, A., Volpin, S., Massafra, M. R., Romanò, M., Bacci, M., Picollo, M., Petrucci, Ferruccio Carlo, and Tisato, Flavia
- Subjects
open studio ,minimo intervento ,pulitura ,colorimetria ,consolidamento - Published
- 2011
17. Ammonia volatilization after slurry spreading in North Italy: comparison between eddy covariance measurements and inverse dispersion modelling
- Author
-
Ferrara, R.M., Loubet, B., Bertolini, T., Carozzi, M., Acutis, M., Di Tommasi, P., Magliulo, V., Martinelli, N., and Rana, G.
- Subjects
ammonia volatilization ,dispersion models ,slurry spreading - Abstract
Ammonia (NH3) volatilization after organic and inorganic fertilizers should be measured by means of non-invasive methodologies like micrometeorological ones in order to avoid alteration of processes involved in the phenomenon. The eddy covariance (EC) technique could be an optimal solution for monitoring NH3, but, nowadays, it is considered a challenge by scientific community due to the difficulties encountered in its actual application. In particular, few data are available in literature and, in general, an underestimation of NH3 fluxes is reported by experimental trials carried out both in laboratory and field. An experimental campaign was carried out in North Italy during and after slurry spreading on bare soil at the end of March 2009. An improvement of the EC system used for the first time during a trial in South Italy in 2008 was employed for measuring the NH3 fluxes. The EC system was equipped with a sonic anemometer (Gill-R2, UK) and a fast-response sensor for NH3, the compact QC-TILDAS-76 SN002-U developed by Aerodyne Research Inc. (ARI, USA). Great care was put in the setup of the system, facing the issues of power supply, thermal stability of the fast response NH3 detector and the warming of its inlet tube to avoid inside water condensation. Moreover, the input data needed for running the inverse dispersion model "FIDES" were collected in order to compare the performance of the EC system with these simulated data. An underestimation by the EC system was recorded with respect to the FIDES simulated data, even if this underestimation was lower than the results obtained by the same EC system during the previous trial. The observed differences between the two approaches are discussed, especially in terms of flux footprint and high frequency loss corrections. These results confirm the efficacy of the above mentioned improvements, even if the question about the applicability on large scale of the EC approach to NH3 monitoring is still open
- Published
- 2010
18. ValorE: An integrated and GIS-based decision support system for livestock manure management in the Lombardy region (northern Italy)
- Author
-
Acutis, M, Alfieri, L, Giussani, A, Provolo, G, DI GUARDO, A, Colombini, S, Bertoncini, G, Castelnuovo, M, Sali, G, Moschini, M, Sanna, M, Perego, A, Carozzi, M, Chiodini, M, Fumagalli, M, Fumagalli, M., DI GUARDO, ANDREA, Acutis, M, Alfieri, L, Giussani, A, Provolo, G, DI GUARDO, A, Colombini, S, Bertoncini, G, Castelnuovo, M, Sali, G, Moschini, M, Sanna, M, Perego, A, Carozzi, M, Chiodini, M, Fumagalli, M, Fumagalli, M., and DI GUARDO, ANDREA
- Abstract
Intensive agriculture and livestock breeding represent critical factors in the Lombardy region since the nitrate vulnerable zones are 62% of utilised agricultural plain area. The aim of reducing the environmental risk caused by agriculture activities (e.g. nitrogen losses into groundwater and atmosphere) can be only achieved through a critical and scientific analysis of livestock manure management in a whole-farm perspective. Keeping in mind this objective, the decision support system (DSS) ValorE was developed. It can be described as a tool able to evaluate from the environmental, technical, agronomic and economic points of view the main components of manure management (production, storage, treatment and land application) for a variety of livestock types (i.e., cattle, swine, poultry, sheep, goats and horses), under different scenarios adopted at farm and territorial scale. ValorE consists of three main components: data management subsystem, model management subsystem and two versions of user-interface, both for farm and territorial scale. Most of the inputs to the DSS comes from external databases, while a software tool developed in the .NET environment and implemented using object oriented programming (C# language), provides the logic to manage the scenario simulation of agronomic and environmental farm-scale models. Users and stakeholders can carry out comparative analysis, starting from the knowledge of the current perspective, in terms of manure management system at farm or territorial scale by interrogating the available databases. Moreover, they can generate different alternative scenarios thanks to different options for the manure handling and cropping system simulation. Then they can finally evaluate and compare different scenarios through multidisciplinary and synthetic indicators but also visualise spatial effects exploiting the coupled webGIS. ValorE is therefore an attempt to offer a comprehensive tool for improving both farm strategy and decision maki
- Published
- 2014
19. Valutazione delle emissioni di ammoniaca da suoli agricoli in Lombardia: possibili approcci
- Author
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Carozzi M ., Ferrara R.M., Rana G., Martinelli N., Di Tommasi P., Bertolini T., Bernardoni E., Brenna S., and Acutis M.
- Published
- 2009
20. The development of a methodology using fuzzy logic to assess the performance of cropping systems based on a case study of maize in the Po Valley
- Author
-
Carozzi, M., primary, Bregaglio, S., additional, Scaglia, B., additional, Bernardoni, E., additional, Acutis, M., additional, and Confalonieri, R., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Evaluation of mitigation strategies to reduce ammonia losses from slurry fertilisation on arable lands
- Author
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Carozzi, M., primary, Ferrara, R.M., additional, Rana, G., additional, and Acutis, M., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. I riflessi transcorticali nel controllo dell'eloquio in età evolutiva
- Author
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Scabar, A, Fabbro, Franco, Carozzi, M, and Chiarelli, F.
- Published
- 1991
23. Carbohydrate-deficient transferrin assay in pediatrics and pregnancy: expression of results
- Author
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G. Tamaro, Mangiarotti M, Bruno Bembi, Giovanni Ciana, C. Martini, Carozzi M, and Roberto Simeone
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Pregnancy ,Allergy ,Hematology ,Biochemistry ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Immunology ,medicine ,Carbohydrate deficient transferrin ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 1998
24. The ARMOSA simulation crop model: Overall features, calibration and validation results
- Author
-
Perego, A., Giussani, A., Mattia Sanna, Fumagalli, M., Carozzi, M., Alfieri, L., Brenna, S., and Acutis, M.
25. Technical approach for the measurement of surface runoff
- Author
-
Bernardoni, E., Carozzi, M., Marco Acutis, Department of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, and University of Milan
- Subjects
[SDV.SA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences ,floating level system ,runoff ,multislot - Abstract
International audience; In this paper we describe practical application, design and installation of an in-field runoff collector exploitable for monitoring nutrients, pesticides and sediments loadings in runoff, improved with a home made level reading system able to measure with high temporal resolution, the runoff rate variation. This configuration simplifies and lower the cost of conventional instruments used for measuring runoff. A multislot divisor was used to reduce the volume of runoff and plastic tank were use to collect it. An electro-mechanic type, floating level transducer was proposed. The homemade level reading system is composed of three parts: floating level transducer, signal conditioning system and data storage. The total cost for entire system is approximately € 642
26. Crop rotation, fertilizer types and application timing affecting nitrogen leaching in nitrate vulnerable zones in Po Valley
- Author
-
Perego, A., Giussani, A., Fumagalli, M., Sanna, M., Marcello Ermido Chiodini, Carozzi, M., Alfieri, L., Brenna, S., and Acutis, M.
27. Field-scale ammonia emissions from surface spreading of dairy slurry in Po Valley
- Author
-
Carozzi, M., Ferrara, R. M., Fumagalli, M., Sanna, M., Marcello Ermido Chiodini, Perego, A., Chierichetti, A., Brenna, S., Rana, G., Acutis, M., University of Milan, Research Unit for Agriculture in Dry Environments, Consiglio per la Ricerca e la Sperimentazione in Agricoltura, Dept Agr & Environm Sci Prod, Landscape, Agroenergy, Dipartimento di Scienza e Alta Tecnologia [Como], Università dell’Insubria, and Consiglio per la Ricerca in Agricoltura e l’analisi dell’economia agraria (CREA)
- Subjects
[SDV.SA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences ,ammonia emissions ,surface slurry application ,passive samplers ,inverse dispersion modeling - Abstract
International audience; Po Valley (Northern Italy) is one of the major ammonia (NH3) emitting regions of Europe, where the slurry spreading causes high NH3 volatilisation, reducing its agronomic value and becoming a potential cause of environmental concerns. In autumn 2011 a field trial was conducted to estimate the NH3 losses from the application of dairyslurry at rate of 57 m3 ha-1 on bare soil. The emissions were estimated from surface application of dairy slurry by using an inverse dispersion modelling technique associated with long term exposure passive samplers and the measure of the atmospheric turbulence. NH3 emissions levels resulted high within the first 24 hours from the spreading, reaching the 73% of the entire losses, with a maximum value of 163 μg m-2 s-1 after 3 hours and 20 minutes, whereas the 50% of the emissions was achieved after 10 hours. The phenomenon stopped after 168 hours with a total NH3 losses equal to 44% of the total ammoniacal nitrogen (TAN) applied. Results showed and confirmed that surface application involves high NH3 emissions and then alternative low-emission techniques have to be adopted.
28. ValorE: An integrated and GIS-based decision support system for livestock manure management in the Lombardy region (northern Italy)
- Author
-
Mattia Fumagalli, Giorgio Provolo, Lodovico Alfieri, Alessia Perego, Andrea Di Guardo, Gianpaolo Bertoncini, Marco Carozzi, Guido Sali, Marco Castelnuovo, M.E. Chiodini, Mattia Sanna, Andrea Giussani, Stefania Colombini, Maurizio Moschini, Marco Acutis, Production,Landscape,Agroenergy, University of Milan, Production, Landscape, Agroenergy, Informatica ambientale S.r.I., Department of Animal Science, Regione Lombardia, Institute of food Science and Nutrition, Catholic University of Piacenza (UNICATT), Production,Landscape, Agroenergy, Environnement et Grandes Cultures (EGC), AgroParisTech-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), Acutis, M, Alfieri, L, Giussani, A, Provolo, G, DI GUARDO, A, Colombini, S, Bertoncini, G, Castelnuovo, M, Sali, G, Moschini, M, Sanna, M, Perego, A, Carozzi, M, Chiodini, M, Fumagalli, M, and Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-AgroParisTech
- Subjects
Engineering ,Decision support system ,Manure management ,decision support system ,manure management ,Data management ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Geography, Planning and Development ,multidisciplinary indicators ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,01 natural sciences ,Decision-making ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,2. Zero hunger ,Settore AGR/18 - NUTRIZIONE E ALIMENTAZIONE ANIMALE ,business.industry ,Intensive farming ,Environmental resource management ,Forestry ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,15. Life on land ,GIS ,Manure ,Agriculture ,Multidisciplinary indicator ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,integrated evaluation ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Livestock ,business - Abstract
Intensive agriculture and livestock breeding represent critical factors in the Lombardy region since the nitrate vulnerable zones are 62% of utilised agricultural plain area. The aim of reducing the environmental risk caused by agriculture activities (e.g. nitrogen losses into groundwater and atmosphere) can be only achieved through a critical and scientific analysis of livestock manure management in a whole-farm perspective. Keeping in mind this objective, the decision support system (DSS) ValorE was developed. It can be described as a tool able to evaluate from the environmental, technical, agronomic and economic points of view the main components of manure management (production, storage, treatment and land application) for a variety of livestock types (i.e., cattle, swine, poultry, sheep, goats and horses), under different scenarios adopted at farm and territorial scale. ValorE consists of three main components: data management subsystem, model management subsystem and two versions of user-interface, both for farm and territorial scale. Most of the inputs to the DSS comes from external databases, while a software tool developed in the .NET environment and implemented using object oriented programming (C# language), provides the logic to manage the scenario simulation of agronomic and environmental farm-scale models. Users and stakeholders can carry out comparative analysis, starting from the knowledge of the current perspective, in terms of manure management system at farm or territorial scale by interrogating the available databases. Moreover, they can generate different alternative scenarios thanks to different options for the manure handling and cropping system simulation. Then they can finally evaluate and compare different scenarios through multidisciplinary and synthetic indicators but also visualise spatial effects exploiting the coupled webGIS. ValorE is therefore an attempt to offer a comprehensive tool for improving both farm strategy and decision making process, which is particularly important in a very intensive agricultural area, with one of the highest livestock density in the world, as Lombardy. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd.
- Published
- 2014
29. Including land management in a European carbon model with lateral transfer to the oceans.
- Author
-
Fendrich AN, Ciais P, Panagos P, Martin P, Carozzi M, Guenet B, and Lugato E
- Subjects
- Conservation of Natural Resources, Agriculture methods, Carbon Cycle, Dust, Crops, Agricultural, Soil, Carbon
- Abstract
The use of cover crops (CCs) is a promising cropland management practice with multiple benefits, notably in reducing soil erosion and increasing soil organic carbon (SOC) storage. However, the current ability to represent these factors in land surface models remains limited to small scales or simplified and lumped approaches due to the lack of a sediment-carbon erosion displacement scheme. This precludes a thorough understanding of the consequences of introducing a CC into agricultural systems. In this work, this problem was addressed in two steps with the spatially distributed CE-DYNAM model. First, the historical effect of soil erosion, transport, and deposition on the soil carbon budget at a continental scale in Europe was characterized since the early industrial era, using reconstructed climate and land use forcings. Then, the impact of two distinct policy-oriented scenarios for the introduction of CCs were evaluated, covering the European cropping systems where surface erosion rates or nitrate susceptibility are critical. The evaluation focused on the increase in SOC storage and the export of particulate organic carbon (POC) to the oceans, compiling a continental-scale carbon budget. The results indicated that Europe exported 1.95 TgC/year of POC to the oceans in the last decade, and that CCs can contribute to reducing this amount while increasing SOC storage. Compared to the simulation without CCs, the additional rate of SOC storage induced by CCs peaked after 10 years of their adoption, followed by a decrease, and the cumulative POC export reduction stabilized after around 13 years. The findings indicate that the impacts of CCs on SOC and reduced POC export are persistent regardless of their spatial allocation adopted in the scenarios. Together, the results highlight the importance of taking the temporal aspect of CC adoption into account and indicate that CCs alone are not sufficient to meet the targets of the 4‰ initiative. Despite some known model limitations, which include the lack of feedback of erosion on the net primary productivity and the representation of carbon fluxes with an emulator, the current work constitutes the first approach to successfully couple a distributed routing scheme of eroded carbon to a land carbon model emulator at a reasonably high resolution and continental scale. SHORT ABSTRACT: A spatially distributed model coupling erosion, transport, and deposition to the carbon cycle was developed. Then, it was used to simulate the impact of cover crops on both erosion and carbon, to show that cover crops can simultaneously increase organic carbon storage and reduce particulate organic carbon export to the oceans. The results seemed persistent regardless of the spatial distribution of cover crops., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Challenges of accounting nitrous oxide emissions from agricultural crop residues.
- Author
-
Olesen JE, Rees RM, Recous S, Bleken MA, Abalos D, Ahuja I, Butterbach-Bahl K, Carozzi M, De Notaris C, Ernfors M, Haas E, Hansen S, Janz B, Lashermes G, Massad RS, Petersen SO, Rittl TF, Scheer C, Smith KE, Thiébeau P, Taghizadeh-Toosi A, Thorman RE, and Topp CFE
- Subjects
- Soil chemistry, Poaceae, Biomass, Nitrogen analysis, Agriculture, Fertilizers, Crops, Agricultural, Nitrous Oxide analysis
- Abstract
Crop residues are important inputs of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) to soils and thus directly and indirectly affect nitrous oxide (N
2 O) emissions. As the current inventory methodology considers N inputs by crop residues as the sole determining factor for N2 O emissions, it fails to consider other underlying factors and processes. There is compelling evidence that emissions vary greatly between residues with different biochemical and physical characteristics, with the concentrations of mineralizable N and decomposable C in the residue biomass both enhancing the soil N2 O production potential. High concentrations of these components are associated with immature residues (e.g., cover crops, grass, legumes, and vegetables) as opposed to mature residues (e.g., straw). A more accurate estimation of the short-term (months) effects of the crop residues on N2 O could involve distinguishing mature and immature crop residues with distinctly different emission factors. The medium-term (years) and long-term (decades) effects relate to the effects of residue management on soil N fertility and soil physical and chemical properties, considering that these are affected by local climatic and soil conditions as well as land use and management. More targeted mitigation efforts for N2 O emissions, after addition of crop residues to the soil, are urgently needed and require an improved methodology for emission accounting. This work needs to be underpinned by research to (1) develop and validate N2 O emission factors for mature and immature crop residues, (2) assess emissions from belowground residues of terminated crops, (3) improve activity data on management of different residue types, in particular immature residues, and (4) evaluate long-term effects of residue addition on N2 O emissions., (© 2023 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. From regional to parcel scale: A high-resolution map of cover crops across Europe combining satellite data with statistical surveys.
- Author
-
Fendrich AN, Matthews F, Van Eynde E, Carozzi M, Li Z, d'Andrimont R, Lugato E, Martin P, Ciais P, and Panagos P
- Abstract
The reformed Common Agricultural Policy of 2023-2027 aims to promote a more sustainable and fair agricultural system in the European Union. Among the proposed measures, the incentivized adoption of cover crops to cover the soil during winter provides numerous benefits such as improved soil structure and reduced nutrient leaching and erosion. Despite this recognized importance, the availability of spatial data on cover crops is scarce. The increasing availability of field parcel declarations in the European Union has not yet filled this data gap due to its insufficient information content, limited public availability and a lack of standardization at continental scale. At present, the best information available is regionally aggregated survey data, which although indicative, hinders the development of spatially accurate studies. In this work, we propose a statistical model relating Sentinel-1 data to the existence of cover crops at the 100-m spatial resolution over the entirety of the European Union and United Kingdom and estimate its parameters using the spatially aggregated survey data. To validate the method in a spatially-explicit way, predictions were compared against farmers' registered declarations in France, where the adoption of cover crops is widespread. The results indicate a good agreement between predictions and parcel-level data. When interpreted as a binary classifier, the model yielded an Area Under the Curve (AUC) of 0.74 for the whole country. When the country was divided into five regions for the evaluation of regional biases, the AUC values were 0.77, 0.75, 0.74, 0.70, and 0.65 for the North, Center, West, East, and South regions respectively. Despite limitations such as the lack of data for validation outside France, and the non-standardized nomenclature for cover crops among Member States, this work constitutes the first effort to obtain a relevant cover crop map at a European scale for researchers and practitioners., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. How Modelers Model: the Overlooked Social and Human Dimensions in Model Intercomparison Studies.
- Author
-
Albanito F, McBey D, Harrison M, Smith P, Ehrhardt F, Bhatia A, Bellocchi G, Brilli L, Carozzi M, Christie K, Doltra J, Dorich C, Doro L, Grace P, Grant B, Léonard J, Liebig M, Ludemann C, Martin R, Meier E, Meyer R, De Antoni Migliorati M, Myrgiotis V, Recous S, Sándor R, Snow V, Soussana JF, Smith WN, and Fitton N
- Subjects
- Ecosystem, Humans, Nitrogen, Uncertainty, Carbon, Soil
- Abstract
There is a growing realization that the complexity of model ensemble studies depends not only on the models used but also on the experience and approach used by modelers to calibrate and validate results, which remain a source of uncertainty. Here, we applied a multi-criteria decision-making method to investigate the rationale applied by modelers in a model ensemble study where 12 process-based different biogeochemical model types were compared across five successive calibration stages. The modelers shared a common level of agreement about the importance of the variables used to initialize their models for calibration. However, we found inconsistency among modelers when judging the importance of input variables across different calibration stages. The level of subjective weighting attributed by modelers to calibration data decreased sequentially as the extent and number of variables provided increased. In this context, the perceived importance attributed to variables such as the fertilization rate, irrigation regime, soil texture, pH, and initial levels of soil organic carbon and nitrogen stocks was statistically different when classified according to model types. The importance attributed to input variables such as experimental duration, gross primary production, and net ecosystem exchange varied significantly according to the length of the modeler's experience. We argue that the gradual access to input data across the five calibration stages negatively influenced the consistency of the interpretations made by the modelers, with cognitive bias in "trial-and-error" calibration routines. Our study highlights that overlooking human and social attributes is critical in the outcomes of modeling and model intercomparison studies. While complexity of the processes captured in the model algorithms and parameterization is important, we contend that (1) the modeler's assumptions on the extent to which parameters should be altered and (2) modeler perceptions of the importance of model parameters are just as critical in obtaining a quality model calibration as numerical or analytical details.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Long term impact of residue management on soil organic carbon stocks and nitrous oxide emissions from European croplands.
- Author
-
Haas E, Carozzi M, Massad RS, Butterbach-Bahl K, and Scheer C
- Subjects
- Agriculture methods, Carbon, Crops, Agricultural, Fertilizers analysis, Nitrous Oxide analysis, Soil chemistry
- Abstract
Application of crop residues to agricultural fields is a significant source of the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N
2 O) and an essential factor affecting the soil organic carbon (SOC) balance. Here we present a biogeochemical modelling study assessing the impact of crop residue management on soil C stocks and N2 O fluxes for EU-27 using available information on soils, management and climate and by testing various scenarios of residue management. Three biogeochemical models, i.e. CERES-EGC, LandscapeDNDC and LandscapeDNDC-MeTrx, were used in an ensemble approach on a grid of 0.25° × 0.25° spatial resolution for calculating EU-27 wide inventories of changes in SOC stocks and N2 O emissions due to residue management for the years 2000-2100 using different climate change projections (RCP4.5 and RCP8.5). Our results show, that climate change poses a threat to cropping systems in Europe, resulting in potential yield declines, increased N2 O emissions and loss of SOC. This highlights the need for adapting crop management to mitigate climate change impacts, e.g. by improved residue management. For a scenario with 100% residues retention and reduced tillage we calculated that in average SOC stocks may increase over 50-100 years by 19-23% under RCP8.5 and RCP4.5. However, complete retention of crop residues also resulted in an increase of soil N2 O emissions by 17-30%, so that climate benefits due to increases in SOC stocks were eventually compensated by increased N2 O emissions. The long-term EFN2O for residue N incorporation was 1.18% and, thus slightly higher as the 1% value used by IPCC. We conclude that residue management can be an important strategy for mitigating climate change impacts on SOC stocks, though it requires as well improvements in N management for N2 O mitigation., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The use of biogeochemical models to evaluate mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions from managed grasslands.
- Author
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Sándor R, Ehrhardt F, Brilli L, Carozzi M, Recous S, Smith P, Snow V, Soussana JF, Dorich CD, Fuchs K, Fitton N, Gongadze K, Klumpp K, Liebig M, Martin R, Merbold L, Newton PCD, Rees RM, Rolinski S, and Bellocchi G
- Abstract
Simulation models quantify the impacts on carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycling in grassland systems caused by changes in management practices. To support agricultural policies, it is however important to contrast the responses of alternative models, which can differ greatly in their treatment of key processes and in their response to management. We applied eight biogeochemical models at five grassland sites (in France, New Zealand, Switzerland, United Kingdom and United States) to compare the sensitivity of modelled C and N fluxes to changes in the density of grazing animals (from 100% to 50% of the original livestock densities), also in combination with decreasing N fertilization levels (reduced to zero from the initial levels). Simulated multi-model median values indicated that input reduction would lead to an increase in the C sink strength (negative net ecosystem C exchange) in intensive grazing systems: -64 ± 74 g C m
-2 yr-1 (animal density reduction) and -81 ± 74 g C m-2 yr-1 (N and animal density reduction), against the baseline of -30.5 ± 69.5 g C m-2 yr-1 (LSU [livestock units] ≥ 0.76 ha-1 yr-1 ). Simulations also indicated a strong effect of N fertilizer reduction on N fluxes, e.g. N2 O-N emissions decreased from 0.34 ± 0.22 (baseline) to 0.1 ± 0.05 g N m-2 yr-1 (no N fertilization). Simulated decline in grazing intensity had only limited impact on the N balance. The simulated pattern of enteric methane emissions was dominated by high model-to-model variability. The reduction in simulated offtake (animal intake + cut biomass) led to a doubling in net primary production per animal (increased by 11.6 ± 8.1 t C LSU-1 yr-1 across sites). The highest N2 O-N intensities (N2 O-N/offtake) were simulated at mown and extensively grazed arid sites. We show the possibility of using grassland models to determine sound mitigation practices while quantifying the uncertainties associated with the simulated outputs., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Review and analysis of strengths and weaknesses of agro-ecosystem models for simulating C and N fluxes.
- Author
-
Brilli L, Bechini L, Bindi M, Carozzi M, Cavalli D, Conant R, Dorich CD, Doro L, Ehrhardt F, Farina R, Ferrise R, Fitton N, Francaviglia R, Grace P, Iocola I, Klumpp K, Léonard J, Martin R, Massad RS, Recous S, Seddaiu G, Sharp J, Smith P, Smith WN, Soussana JF, and Bellocchi G
- Abstract
Biogeochemical simulation models are important tools for describing and quantifying the contribution of agricultural systems to C sequestration and GHG source/sink status. The abundance of simulation tools developed over recent decades, however, creates a difficulty because predictions from different models show large variability. Discrepancies between the conclusions of different modelling studies are often ascribed to differences in the physical and biogeochemical processes incorporated in equations of C and N cycles and their interactions. Here we review the literature to determine the state-of-the-art in modelling agricultural (crop and grassland) systems. In order to carry out this study, we selected the range of biogeochemical models used by the CN-MIP consortium of FACCE-JPI (http://www.faccejpi.com): APSIM, CERES-EGC, DayCent, DNDC, DSSAT, EPIC, PaSim, RothC and STICS. In our analysis, these models were assessed for the quality and comprehensiveness of underlying processes related to pedo-climatic conditions and management practices, but also with respect to time and space of application, and for their accuracy in multiple contexts. Overall, it emerged that there is a possible impact of ill-defined pedo-climatic conditions in the unsatisfactory performance of the models (46.2%), followed by limitations in the algorithms simulating the effects of management practices (33.1%). The multiplicity of scales in both time and space is a fundamental feature, which explains the remaining weaknesses (i.e. 20.7%). Innovative aspects have been identified for future development of C and N models. They include the explicit representation of soil microbial biomass to drive soil organic matter turnover, the effect of N shortage on SOM decomposition, the improvements related to the production and consumption of gases and an adequate simulations of gas transport in soil. On these bases, the assessment of trends and gaps in the modelling approaches currently employed to represent biogeochemical cycles in crop and grassland systems appears an essential step for future research., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. [Acute inflammatory polyradiculoneuritis during bone marrow transplantation. A report of 2 cases].
- Author
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Carozzi M, De Manzini A, Giorgi A, and Osbich A
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Antibody Formation, Autoimmune Diseases immunology, Autoimmune Diseases therapy, Bone Marrow Transplantation immunology, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Immunity, Cellular, Immunoglobulins, Intravenous administration & dosage, Polyradiculoneuropathy immunology, Polyradiculoneuropathy therapy, Autoimmune Diseases etiology, Bone Marrow Transplantation adverse effects, Polyradiculoneuropathy etiology
- Abstract
Acute polyradiculoneuritis (AP) is a self-immunity based disease of the peripheral nerve caused by macrophages, usually activated by T-lymphocytes. Recent clinical and experimental evidence show that early high dose treatment with Ig slows disease progression. In this study, two cases of AP with different onset in two patients showing definitely compromised cellular and/or humoral immunity, are reported. The hypothesis that the different temporal profiles may be related to a distinct involvement of the immunity system and the effectiveness of high dose Ig treatment in blocking the disease's evolution are discussed.
- Published
- 1994
37. [National investigation of the therapeutic use of rifamycin SV with the help of the Argentine medical profession].
- Author
-
Gindin LR and Carozzi MR
- Subjects
- Argentina, Infections therapy, Rifampin therapeutic use
- Published
- 1965
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