14 results on '"Cerino F."'
Search Results
2. A comparative study of the risk profile of hemodialysis patients in a for profit network and in two regional registries of the Italian Society of Nephrology
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Postorino M., Amato C., Mancini E., Carioni P., D'Arrigo G., Di Benedetto A., Cerino F., Marino C., Vilasi A., Tripepi G., Stuard S., Capasso G., Santoro A., Zoccali C., Andreoli D., Ascoli G., Barreca E., Bovino M., Bruzzese V., Candela V., Caruso F., Chiarella S., Cianfrone P., D'Agostino F., D'Anello E., Ferrari L., Figoli D., Fornaciari C., Franco C., Galati D., Grandinetti F., Gullo M., Lo Gozzo D., Lucisano S., Mancuso F., Mannino M. L., Marsico M. L., Martire V., Mazza G., Mazza B., Mellace A., Messina A., Pisani A., Plutino D., Policastro M., Pugliese A., Reina A., Santangelo M., Sapio C., Scicchitano R., Sellaro A., Tramontana D., Varde C., Zingone F., Dalmastri V., Rapana R., Giovannone C., Giudicissi A., Russo G., Zambianchi L., Lucchi L., David S., Gerra D., Ballocchi S., Isola E., Stefani A., Flachi M., Mencarelli F., Postorino, M., Amato, C., Mancini, E., Carioni, P., D'Arrigo, G., Di Benedetto, A., Cerino, F., Marino, C., Vilasi, A., Tripepi, G., Stuard, S., Capasso, G., Santoro, A., Zoccali, C., Andreoli, D., Ascoli, G., Barreca, E., Bovino, M., Bruzzese, V., Candela, V., Caruso, F., Chiarella, S., Cianfrone, P., D'Agostino, F., D'Anello, E., Ferrari, L., Figoli, D., Fornaciari, C., Franco, C., Galati, D., Grandinetti, F., Gullo, M., Lo Gozzo, D., Lucisano, S., Mancuso, F., Mannino, M. L., Marsico, M. L., Martire, V., Mazza, G., Mazza, B., Mellace, A., Messina, A., Pisani, A., Plutino, D., Policastro, M., Pugliese, A., Reina, A., Santangelo, M., Sapio, C., Scicchitano, R., Sellaro, A., Tramontana, D., Varde, C., Zingone, F., Dalmastri, V., Rapana, R., Giovannone, C., Giudicissi, A., Russo, G., Zambianchi, L., Lucchi, L., David, S., Gerra, D., Ballocchi, S., Isola, E., Stefani, A., Flachi, M., and Mencarelli, F.
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Male ,Registrie ,Pediatrics ,Time Factors ,Kidney Disease ,Databases, Factual ,Health Status ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Comorbidity ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Health Statu ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Renal Dialysi ,Prevalence ,Registries ,education.field_of_study ,For-profit ,Incidence ,Hazard ratio ,valvular heart disease ,Process Assessment, Health Care ,Public ,Middle Aged ,For-Profit Insurance Plans ,Treatment Outcome ,Italy ,Nephrology ,Cohort ,Kidney Diseases ,Female ,Hemodialysi ,Health Services Research ,Human ,Risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factor ,For-Profit Insurance Plan ,Population ,Lower risk ,03 medical and health sciences ,Renal Dialysis ,medicine ,Humans ,Mortality ,education ,Survival analysis ,Aged ,business.industry ,Risk Factor ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Observational study ,business - Abstract
In 2013, the Italian Society of Nephrology joined forces with Nephrocare-Italy to create a clinical research cohort of patients on file in the data-rich clinical management system (EUCLID) of this organization for the performance of observational studies in the hemodialysis (HD) population. To see whether patients in EUCLID are representative of the HD population in Italy, we set out to compare the whole EUCLID population with patients included in the regional HD registries in Emilia-Romagna (Northern Italy) and in Calabria (Southern Italy), the sole regions in Italy which have systematically collected an enlarged clinical data set allowing comparison with the data-rich EUCLID system. An analysis of prevalent and incident patients in 2010 and 2011 showed that EUCLID patients had a lower prevalence of coronary heart disease, peripheral vascular disease, heart failure, valvular heart disease, liver disease, peptic ulcer and other comorbidities and risk factors and a higher fractional urea clearance (Kt/V) than those in the Emilia Romagna and Calabria registries. Accordingly, survival analysis showed a lower mortality risk in the EUCLID 2010 and 2011 cohorts than in the combined two regional registries in the corresponding years: for 2010, hazard ratio (HR) EUCLID vs. Regional registries: 0.80 [95% confidence interval: 0.71–0.90]; for 2011, HR: 0.76 [0.65–0.90]. However, this difference was nullified by statistical adjustment for the difference in comorbidities and risk factors, indicating that the longer survival in the EUCLID database was attributable to the lower risk profile of patients included in that database. This preliminary analysis sets the stage for future observational studies and indicates that appropriate adjustment for difference in comorbidities and risk factors is needed to generalize to the Italian HD population analyses based on the data-rich EUCLID database.
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- 2018
3. Silicoflagellates in the eastern mediterranean and Black Seas: Seasonality, distribution and sedimentary record
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Malinverno, E. Cerino, F. Karatsolis, B.T. Ravani, A. Dimiza, M. Psarra, S. Gogou, A. Triantaphyllou, M.V.
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Silicoflagellate populations and fluxes were analyzed from water samples and sediment traps in several basins of the eastern Mediterranean and Black Sea, to show species distribution in response to ecological factors and compared with the Quaternary records of the region. In the eastern Mediterranean, Dictyocha stapedia was the most abundant species, represented by two varieties: var. stapedia, smaller and with an apex spine, that dominated in the pelagic settings, and var. aspinosa, larger and lacking an apex spine, that dominated in the north Adriatic Sea. Dictyocha aculeata was the second most abundant species, Octactis pulchra was seasonally dominant in the Adriatic Sea. Stephanocha speculum occurred sporadically in the Adriatic Sea with 6-sided normal-sized specimens, but was nearly absent from pelagic assemblages. In the Black Sea, assemblages and fluxes were characterized by larger 7-sided skeletons of D. speculum with apex spines and a lower abundance of O. pulchra. © 2019 Elsevier Ltd
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- 2019
4. Coccolithophore diversity and seasonal distribution in a coastal site of the Gulf of Trieste
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Cerino, F, Fornasaro, D, Ingrosso, G, Giani, M, Cabrini, M, Ziveri, P., MALINVERNO, ELISA, Young, JR, Gallagher, LT, Cerino, F, Malinverno, E, Fornasaro, D, Ingrosso, G, Giani, M, Cabrini, M, and Ziveri, P
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GEO/01 - PALEONTOLOGIA E PALEOECOLOGIA ,Coccolithophores, Gulf of Trieste - Abstract
Recent studies on ocean acidification due to the increase of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere have provided evidence on a possible impact on coccolithophore calcification. In the framework of the MedSeA (Mediterranean Sea Acidification in a changing climate, EU-FP7) project, we collected data from May 2011 to February 2013 to deepen knowledge on coccolithophore associations at a coastal site in the Gulf of Trieste, for which a long-term time series of plankton data is available (C1-LTER 1986-present). The main aims of this study were to assess the contribution of coccolithophores to the phytoplankton community, also in relation with the available time series for the site, to identify the seasonal distribution of different species, to evaluate the relationships with high quality measurements of the carbonate system and other environmental parameters, and to compare the results of the coccolithophore analyses obtained by different methods (phase contrast versus polarized light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy). Coccolithophores showed a high interannual variability and a typical seasonal pattern, with maxima in the autumn-winter and minima in summer. The seasonal pattern was mainly linked to [HCO3 -], which is the preferential form used by coccolithophores for calcification. During the analysed period, the coccolithophore community was characterized by species adapted to a variety of environmental conditions: in autumn-winter, Emiliania huxleyi dominated, followed by Acanthoica quattrospina, Syracosphaera pulchra and some minor species (only present in autumn, e.g. Ophiaster hydroideus, Calciopappus rigidus, Michaelsarsia adriaticus); in spring, the association was dominated by holococcolithophores and minor E. huxleyi; in summer, low overall abundances coincide with low E. huxleyi concentration and the dominance of small Syracosphaera species, Rhabdosphaera clavigera and holococcolithophores. The comparison between the total coccolithophore abundances obtained by phase contrast microscope with the Utermöhl method and those obtained by polarized light microscope revealed good correspondence in winter and autumn, and less in spring. In fact, the polarized light microscope counting, coupled with scanning electron microscope observations on selected samples, allowed us to recognize species with very small and/or less calcified coccoliths, that would be probably lumped with other flagellates with the Utermöhl method, improving the assessment of coccolithophore species diversity and their contribution to the total phytoplankton.
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- 2014
5. Seasonal patterns of coccolithophores, silicoflagellates, and ebridians from a coastal time series in the Gulf of Trieste (North adriatic Sea)
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MALINVERNO, ELISA, Cerino, F, Fornasaro, D, Cabrini, M., Malinverno, E, Cerino, F, Fornasaro, D, and Cabrini, M
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Coccolithophores, silicoflagellates, ebridians, Gulf of Trieste ,GEO/01 - PALEONTOLOGIA E PALEOECOLOGIA - Abstract
Since March 1986, there has been a monthly time series collected through water sampling in the Gulf of Trieste. The sampling station (C1-LTER, 45º42'30"N 13º42'36"E) is located 200 m from the coastline with a water depth of 18 m. Water-column samples (0.5, 5, 10, and 15 m) were analyzed from the 1986-2010 time series (Cabrini et al., 2012) in order to identify phytoplankton seasonal evolution and community structure. The analysis of total phytoplankton composition showed a clear seasonal cycle with peak concentration values in late winter to early spring due to monospecific diatom blooms, and low values in late spring to summer when the phytoplankton is dominated by small flagellates. There is a second smaller peak in the fall that is dominated by diatoms, and low values occur in early winter, when nanoflagellates dominate. In addition, Cabrini et al. (2012) detected an important regime shift within the analyzed time series: a period from 1986 to 1994 that is characterized by high phytoplankton abundance values and dominated by phytoflagellates, and a second period from 1995 to 2007 with low cell concentrations that is dominated by diatoms. In this work, we analyzed the time series from August 2011 to July 2012, specifically addressing the vertical and seasonal distribution of selected phytoplankton groups – those possessing a mineralized skeleton and thus potentially preserved in the sediments and able to leave a fossil record. Coccolithophores are a major group in the oligotrophic eastern Mediterranean, and Cabrini et al. (2012) showed that they also can be seasonally important in the shallow areas of the Gulf of Trieste. In the present dataset, coccolithophores showed a primary abundance peak (up to 3.2x105 coccospheres/liter) from November to February and a second smaller peak (up to 1x105 coccospheres/ liter) in May to June. Emiliania huxleyi was the most abundant species throughout the analyzed time series, but Acanthoica quattrospina also made an important contribution in January, while holococcolithophores (A. quattrospina HOL, Corisphaera gracilis, C. strigilis, and C. mediterranea HOL) and small Syracosphaera species were the most important group within the May to June peak. In addition, there was a widespread occurrence, especially in the subsurface layer, of species inhabiting the intermediate photic zone during the late summer to fall period (Algirosphaera robusta, Calciopappus rigidus, Ophiaster hydroideus, and Calciosolenia spp.), while Rhabdosphaera clavigera and Syracosphaera pulchra were most important during the summer months. Among the flagellate groups, Cabrini et al. (2012) reported silicoflagellates and ebridians from the Gulf of Trieste. Worldwide, these silicifying groups make a minor contribution to phytoplankton, and little is known about their specific vertical and seasonal distribution because only a few studies have dealt with their occurrence in water samples. An improved knowledge of their ecological characteristics would be of great value, considering their potential use in paleoecological reconstructions. In the present dataset, the occurrence of silicoflagellates was restricted to the fall-winter-spring period. Octactis pulchra was the dominant species, occurring throughout the water column from September to March, with peak values (8x104 cells/liter) in January. Dictyocha species were present from September to January, primarily in the subsurface layers, while Distephanus speculum occurred only sporadically at different times and depths. Ebridians also showed a very clear seasonality, with Ebria tripartita occurring from January to March in the sub-surface layers and Hermesinum adriaticum occurring throughout the water column from June to August.
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- 2013
6. I coccolitoforidi in un sito costiero del Golfo di Trieste
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Cerino, F, Fornasaro, D, Cabrini, M., MALINVERNO, ELISA, Cerino, F, Malinverno, E, Fornasaro, D, and Cabrini, M
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Coccolitoforidi, Golfo di Trieste ,GEO/01 - PALEONTOLOGIA E PALEOECOLOGIA - Abstract
I coccolitoforidi sono microalghe nanoplanctoniche che producono uno scheletro esterno di minute placche carbonatiche. Sono presenti in tutti gli oceani, dalle zone equatoriali a quelle sub-polari, e in condizioni favorevoli possono proliferare in dense ed estese fioriture. Sono considerati tra i principali produttori primari marini, rappresentando circa il 15% della biomassa totale del fitoplancton. Inoltre, rivestono un ruolo importante nel controllo delle variazioni climatiche, giocando un ruolo fondamentale nel ciclo dello zolfo per la produzione di dimetilsolfuro e in quello del carbonio grazie ai processi di fotosintesi e calcificazione. Studi recenti sull’acidificazione degli oceani, dovuta all’aumento di anidride carbonica in atmosfera, hanno messo in evidenza un possibile impatto sulla calcificazione dei coccolitoforidi. Nell’ambito del progetto MedSea (Mediterranean Sea Acidification in a changing climate, EU-FP7, 2011-in corso), si è proposto di approfondire le conoscenze sulle associazioni a coccolitoforidi in un sito costiero del golfo di Trieste, dove esiste una serie temporale (C1-LTER, 1986-2013) di dati sul plancton. Scopi principali del lavoro sono valutare il contributo dei coccolitoforidi all’interno della comunità fitoplanctonica, anche in relazione alla serie storica disponibile per il sito, identificare la distribuzione stagionale delle diverse specie durante un anno di campionamento (agosto 2011-agosto 2012) e confrontare i risultati dell’analisi dei coccolitoforidi ottenuti attraverso diverse metodologie (microscopia ottica a contrasto di fase e a luce polarizzata e microscopia elettronica a scansione). I coccolitoforidi mostrano un’alta variabilità interannuale e un tipico andamento stagionale, con concentrazioni massime in autunno-inverno e minime in estate. Nell’intervallo analizzato, l’associazione a coccolitoforidi è dominata in autunno-inverno da Emiliania huxleyi, seguita da Acanthoica quattrospina, Syracosphaera pulchra e alcune specie minori (presenti solo in autunno, e.g. Ophiaster hydroideus, Calciosolenia brasiliensis, C. murrayi, Michaelsarsia adriaticus); in primavera l’associazione è dominata da olo-coccolitoforidi e subordinata E. huxleyi; in estate sono presenti principalmente E. huxleyi, Syracosphaera spp., Rhabdosphaera clavigera e olo-coccolitoforidi.
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- 2013
7. Comunità fitoplantoniche e sistema carbonato nell'Adriatico meridionale
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Socal G., Boldrin A., Luchetta A, Bernardi-Aubry F., Cantoni C., Cerino F., langone L., Miserocchi S., Totti C., and Turchetto M.
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pH ,Southern Adriatic Sea ,phytoplankton ,sediment traps ,ocean acidification impact - Abstract
In the framework of the VECTOR Project, biogeochemical properties and phytoplankton communities of the upper water column have been measured in three seasonal conditions at the centre of Southern Adriatic (SA). Our results, although based on few seasonal samplings, suggest a correlation between the seasonal cycles of phytoplankton and the carbonate system in SA. In consequence it confirms that shifts of carbonate system due to CO2 invasion (ocean acidification) might have great impact on the C-budget in the area.
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- 2012
8. TRANSMED: un approccio integrato alla valutazione dei flussi di carbonio nel mar Mediterraneo
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Saggiomo V., Azzaro M., Brunet C., Casotti R., Cerino F., Conversano F., Cozzi S., Kova?evi? V., La Ferla R., Margiotta F., Russo A., Saggiomo M., Santarpia I., Socal G., Totti C., and Turchetto M.
- Abstract
Il programma nazionale VECTOR ha come obiettivo principale lo studio degli impatti dei cambiamenti climatici sull'ambiente marino mediterraneo e il ruolo di questo bacino nel ciclo planetario della CO2. In tale ambito, nel periodo maggio-giugno 2007, è stata effettuata una campagna oceanografica lungo un gradiente latitudinale (dall'Atlantico al Mediterraneo Orientale), durante la quale è stato acquisito un data-set di parametri chimici, fisici e biologici e sono state effettuate misure concomitanti di produzione primaria e di respirazione. L'analisi dei dati riguardanti i comparti microbici, autotrofo ed eterotrofo, che svolgono un ruolo chiave nel determinare il flusso di carbonio nelle reti trofiche pelagiche nella zona fotica, ha evidenziato: o pressoché totale rimozione di nutrienti inorganici fino alla profondità del DCM con prevalenza, in questo strato, di DON e DOP; o modeste concentrazioni di biomassa fitoplanctonica in tutto il bacino e la presenza di un DCM più profondo nel bacino orientale (90 - 110 m); o la dominanza nel popolamento fitoplanctonico, in termini di biomassa, di dinoflagellati e di fitoflagellati; o la presenza di un gradiente trofico longitudinale in termini di produzione e respirazione; o la dominanza (70%) della frazione pico-fitoplanctonica nei processi di produzione primaria; o l'alta diversità chemotassonomica delle comunità fitoplanctonica e, principalmente, picoplanctonica; o la prevalenza, nei DCM di alcune stazioni, della frazione dimensionale micro- e nano-fitoplanctonica, caratterizzata soprattutto da diatomee (es. Chaetoceros); o elevati tassi di produzione primaria nel Mar Ligure non compensati dai processi di respirazione (rapporto P/R = 4,9). Sulla base dei risultati ottenuti sarà discusso il trofismo delle aree investigate in relazione ai processi di avvezione orizzontale e di mescolamento verticale delle differenti masse d'acqua, al fine di valutarne, in maniera preliminare, il ruolo nel ciclo del carbonio.
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- 2009
9. Cisti di Fibrocapsa japonica (Raphidophyceae) nell’Adriatico settentrionale
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Cucchiari, E, Pistocchi, R, Guerrini, F, Pezzolesi, L, Penna, Antonella, Battocchi, C, Cerino, F, Romagnoli, T, and Totti, C.
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- 2009
10. Coccolithophore combination coccospheres from the NE Mediterranean Sea: New evidence and taxonomic revisions
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Triantaphyllou, M. V., Karatsolis, B. -T, Dimiza, M. D., Malinverno, E., Cerino, F., Psarra, S., Jordan, R. W., Jeremy Young, Triantaphyllou, M, Karatsolis, B, Dimiza, M, Malinverno, E, Cerino, F, Psarra, S, Jordan, R, and Young, J
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Living coccolithophore ,Combination coccosphere ,Mediterranean Sea ,Paleontology ,GEO/01 - PALEONTOLOGIA E PALEOECOLOGIA - Abstract
Numerous specimens of coccolithophore combination coccospheres in water samples collected from the North Aegean and Tyrrhenian (Mediterranean Sea) have been photographed using the scanning electron microscope.As a consequence a series of taxonomic revisions are proposed, in which the names of the heterococcolithophores and holococcolithophores involved in the same life-cycle are synonymized. This has resulted in synonymizing the genus Coronosphaera with Syracosphaera and establishing one new combination; Syracosphaera arethusae (Kamptner 1941) comb. nov.
11. Haplo-diplontic life cycle expands coccolithophore niche
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J. de Vries, F. Monteiro, G. Wheeler, A. Poulton, J. Godrijan, F. Cerino, E. Malinverno, G. Langer, C. Brownlee, De Vries, J, Monteiro, F, Wheeler, G, Poulton, A, Godrijan, J, Cerino, F, Malinverno, E, Langer, G, and Brownlee, C
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0106 biological sciences ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Range (biology) ,Coccolithophore ,Niche ,lcsh:Life ,01 natural sciences ,haplo-diplontic ,Mediterranean sea ,Abundance (ecology) ,lcsh:QH540-549.5 ,Phytoplankton ,Marine Science ,14. Life underwater ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Ecological niche ,biology ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,lcsh:QE1-996.5 ,life cycle ,coccolithophores ,ecological niche ,biology.organism_classification ,lcsh:Geology ,lcsh:QH501-531 ,lcsh:Ecology - Abstract
Coccolithophores are globally important marine calcifying phytoplankton that utilize a haplo-diplontic life cycle. The haplo-diplontic life cycle allows coccolithophores to divide in both life cycle phases and potentially expands coccolithophore niche volume. Research has, however, to date largely overlooked the life cycle of coccolithophores and has instead focused on the diploid life cycle phase of coccolithophores. Through the synthesis and analysis of global scanning electron microscopy (SEM) coccolithophore abundance data (n=2534), we find that calcified haploid coccolithophores generally constitute a minor component of the total coccolithophore abundance (≈ 2 %–15 % depending on season). However, using case studies in the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea, we show that, depending on environmental conditions, calcifying haploid coccolithophores can be significant contributors to the coccolithophore standing stock (up to ≈30 %). Furthermore, using hypervolumes to quantify the niche of coccolithophores, we illustrate that the haploid and diploid life cycle phases inhabit contrasting niches and that on average this allows coccolithophores to expand their niche by ≈18.8 %, with a range of 3 %–76 % for individual species. Our results highlight that future coccolithophore research should consider both life cycle stages, as omission of the haploid life cycle phase in current research limits our understanding of coccolithophore ecology. Our results furthermore suggest a different response to nutrient limitation and stratification, which may be of relevance for further climate scenarios. Our compilation highlights the spatial and temporal sparsity of SEM measurements and the need for new molecular techniques to identify uncalcified haploid coccolithophores. Our work also emphasizes the need for further work on the carbonate chemistry niche of the coccolithophore life cycle.
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- 2021
- Full Text
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12. Coccolithophore diversity and dynamics at a coastal site in the Gulf of Trieste (northern Adriatic Sea)
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Federica Cerino, Marina Cabrini, Martina Kralj, Daniela Fornasaro, Elisa Malinverno, Cerino, F, Malinverno, E, Fornasaro, D, Kralj, M, and Cabrini, M
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0106 biological sciences ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,biology ,North Adriatic ,Coccolithophore ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Species diversity ,Sampling (statistics) ,Seasonality ,Aquatic Science ,GEO/01 - PALEONTOLOGIA E PALEOECOLOGIA ,Oceanography ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Environmental forcing ,Phytoplankton ,medicine ,Environmental science ,Long-term ecological research time-serie ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Two years-data (May 2011–February 2013) obtained from a monthly sampling carried out at the coastal long term Ecological Research station C1-LTER in the Gulf of Trieste (northern Adriatic Sea) were analysed to describe the seasonal dynamics and diversity of coccolithophore assemblages and to assess their relationship with environmental forcing. Coccolithophores represented 10.7% of the total Utermöhl phytoplankton that were mainly dominated by small (
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Silicoflagellates in the eastern mediterranean and Black Seas: Seasonality, distribution and sedimentary record
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Margarita D. Dimiza, Elisa Malinverno, Boris Theofanis Karatsolis, Stella Psarra, Maria Triantaphyllou, Federica Cerino, Alexandra Gogou, Alexandra Ravani, Malinverno, E, Cerino, F, Karatsolis, B, Ravani, A, Dimiza, M, Psarra, S, Gogou, A, and Triantaphyllou, M
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010506 paleontology ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Eastern Mediterranean ,Species distribution ,Pelagic zone ,Seasonality ,Oceanography ,medicine.disease ,GEO/01 - PALEONTOLOGIA E PALEOECOLOGIA ,01 natural sciences ,Spine (zoology) ,Octactis pulchra ,Apex (mollusc) ,Black Sea ,Abundance (ecology) ,Stephanocha speculum ,medicine ,Dictyocha stapedia ,Sedimentary rock ,Dictyocha aculeata ,Quaternary ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Silicoflagellate - Abstract
Silicoflagellate populations and fluxes were analyzed from water samples and sediment traps in several basins of the eastern Mediterranean and Black Sea, to show species distribution in response to ecological factors and compared with the Quaternary records of the region. In the eastern Mediterranean, Dictyocha stapedia was the most abundant species, represented by two varieties: var. stapedia, smaller and with an apex spine, that dominated in the pelagic settings, and var. aspinosa, larger and lacking an apex spine, that dominated in the north Adriatic Sea. Dictyocha aculeata was the second most abundant species, Octactis pulchra was seasonally dominant in the Adriatic Sea. Stephanocha speculum occurred sporadically in the Adriatic Sea with 6-sided normal-sized specimens, but was nearly absent from pelagic assemblages. In the Black Sea, assemblages and fluxes were characterized by larger 7-sided skeletons of D. speculum with apex spines and a lower abundance of O. pulchra.
- Published
- 2019
14. Resting cysts of Fibrocapsa japonica (Raphidophyceae) from coastal sediments of the northern Adriatic Sea (Mediterranean Sea)
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E. Cucchiari, Antonella Penna, Rossella Pistocchi, Laura Pezzolesi, Cecilia Battocchi, Federica Cerino, Cecilia Totti, Cucchiari E., Pistocchi R., Pezzolesi L., Penna A., Battocchi T., Cerino F., and Totti C.
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biology ,FIBROCAPSA JAPONICA ,RESTING STAGE ,Sediment ,Zoology ,Plant Science ,Aquatic Science ,Raphidophyte ,biology.organism_classification ,Japonica ,Salinity ,CYST ,Mediterranean sea ,Algae ,Aquatic plant ,Botany ,parasitic diseases ,Transect ,ITS-5.8S RDNA ,ADRIATIC SEA - Abstract
Fibrocapsa japonica resting cysts were detected in coastal sediments of the Marche region (northern Adriatic Sea, Italy), where summer blooms regularly occur. Sampling was carried out along 18 transects (2 stations each) during May–June 2007. The identification and counting of raphidophyte cysts were carried out under the inverted microscope and molecular analyses were applied to sediment samples to confirm species-specific identification. Raphidophyte cysts were recorded in almost all stations with maximum abundance of 9 ± 5 and 12 ± 3 cysts g−1 dw for cysts of F. japonica and undetermined Raphidophyceae, respectively. Cyst formation was induced in F. japonica monoclonal cultures under different conditions: shadow-optimal temperature and dark-low temperature treatment; both experiments were performed at two salinity values (30 and 35). Cyst formation (preliminary cysts) was observed in both experiments, although with different encystment rates. However, only a further permanence in the dark at 15 °C in microplates led to the formation of mature cysts, probably supported by the possibility to adhere to solid surfaces. Before pre-cyst formation, vegetative cells showed a cytoplasmatic “brown body”.
- Published
- 2010
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