244 results on '"Airoldi, L."'
Search Results
2. Complexity-functioning relationships differ across different environmental conditions.
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Mayer-Pinto, M, Caley, A, Knights, AM, Airoldi, L, Bishop, MJ, Brooks, P, Coutinho, R, Crowe, T, Mancuso, P, Naval-Xavier, LPD, Firth, LB, Menezes, R, de Messano, LVR, Morris, R, Ross, DJ, Wong, JXW, Steinberg, P, Strain, EMA, Mayer-Pinto, M, Caley, A, Knights, AM, Airoldi, L, Bishop, MJ, Brooks, P, Coutinho, R, Crowe, T, Mancuso, P, Naval-Xavier, LPD, Firth, LB, Menezes, R, de Messano, LVR, Morris, R, Ross, DJ, Wong, JXW, Steinberg, P, and Strain, EMA
- Abstract
Habitat complexity is widely considered an important determinant of biodiversity, and enhancing complexity can play a key role in restoring degraded habitats. However, the effects of habitat complexity on ecosystem functioning - as opposed to biodiversity and community structure - are relatively poorly understood for artificial habitats, which dominate many coastlines. With Greening of Grey Infrastructure (GGI) approaches, or eco-engineering, increasingly being applied around the globe, it is important to understand the effects that modifying habitat complexity has on both biodiversity and ecological functioning in these highly modified habitats. We assessed how manipulating physical (primary substrate) and/or biogenic habitat (bivalves) complexity on intertidal artificial substrata affected filtration rates, net and gross primary productivity (NPP and GPP, respectively) and community respiration (CR) - as well as abundance of filter feeders and macro-algae and habitat use by cryptobenthic fish across six locations in three continents. We manipulated both physical and biogenic complexity using 1) flat or ridged (2.5 cm or 5 cm) settlement tiles that were either 2) unseeded or seeded with oysters or mussels. Across all locations, increasing physical and biogenic complexity (5 cm seeded tiles) had a significant effect on most ecological functioning variables, increasing overall filtration rates and community respiration of the assemblages on tiles but decreasing productivity (both GPP and NPP) across all locations. There were no overall effects of increasing either type of habitat complexity on cryptobenthic fish MaxN, total time in frame or macro-algal cover. Within each location, there were marked differences in the effects of habitat complexity. In Hobart, we found higher filtration, filter feeder biomass and community respiration on 5 cm tiles compared to flat tiles. However, at this location, both macro-algae cover and GPP decreased with increasing physical compl
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- 2024
3. Between a rock and a hard place: Environmental and engineering considerations when designing coastal defence structures
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Firth, L.B., Thompson, R.C., Bohn, K., Abbiati, M., Airoldi, L., Bouma, T.J., Bozzeda, F., Ceccherelli, V.U., Colangelo, M.A., Evans, A., Ferrario, F., Hanley, M.E., Hinz, H., Hoggart, S.P.G., Jackson, J.E., Moore, P., Morgan, E.H., Perkol-Finkel, S., Skov, M.W., Strain, E.M., van Belzen, J., and Hawkins, S.J.
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- 2014
- Full Text
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4. What are algal turfs? : Towards a better description of turfs
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Connell, S. D., Foster, M. S., and Airoldi, L.
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- 2014
5. Mediterranean rocky reefs in the Anthropocene: Present status and future concerns
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Bevilacqua, S., Airoldi, L., Ballesteros, E., Benedetti-Cecchi, L., Boero, F., Bulleri, F., Cebrian, E., Cerrano, C., Claudet, J., Colloca, F., Coppari, M., Di Franco, A., Fraschetti, S., Garrabou, J., Guarnieri, G., Guerranti, C., Guidetti, P., Halpern, B. S., Katsanevakis, S., Mangano, M. C., Micheli, F., Milazzo, M., Pusceddu, A., Renzi, M., Rilov, G., Sara, G., Terlizzi, A., Bevilacqua, S., Airoldi, L., Ballesteros, E., Benedetti-Cecchi, L., Boero, F., Bulleri, F., Cebrian, E., Cerrano, C., Claudet, J., Colloca, F., Coppari, M., Di Franco, A., Fraschetti, S., Garrabou, J., Guarnieri, G., Guerranti, C., Guidetti, P., Halpern, B. S., Katsanevakis, S., Mangano, M. C., Micheli, F., Milazzo, M., Pusceddu, A., Renzi, M., Rilov, G., Sara, G., Terlizzi, A., Bevilacqua S., Airoldi L., Ballesteros E., Benedetti-Cecchi L., Boero F., Bulleri F., Cebrian E., Cerrano C., Claudet J., Colloca F., Coppari M., Di Franco A., Fraschetti S., Garrabou J., Guarnieri G., Guerranti C., Guidetti P., Halpern B.S., Katsanevakis S., Mangano M.C., Micheli F., Milazzo M., Pusceddu A., Renzi M., Rilov G., Sara G., and Terlizzi A.
- Subjects
Conservation of Natural Resources ,Bioconstruction ,Fish assemblage ,Coral Reefs ,Algal forests ,Bioconstructions ,Coastal ecosystems ,Conservation ,Fish assemblages ,Global change ,Marine biodiversity ,Climate Change ,Biodiversity ,Algal forest ,Mediterranean Sea ,Humans ,Coastal ecosystem ,Ecosystem - Abstract
Global change is striking harder and faster in the Mediterranean Sea than elsewhere, where high levels of human pressure and proneness to climate change interact in modifying the structure and disrupting regulative mechanisms of marine ecosystems. Rocky reefs are particularly exposed to such environmental changes with ongoing trends of degradation being impressive. Due to the variety of habitat types and associated marine biodiversity, rocky reefs are critical for the functioning of marine ecosystems, and their decline could profoundly affect the provision of essential goods and services which human populations in coastal areas rely upon. Here, we provide an up-to-date overview of the status of rocky reefs, trends in human-driven changes undermining their integrity, and current and upcoming management and conservation strategies, attempting a projection on what could be the future of this essential component of Mediterranean marine ecosystems.
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- 2021
6. Lithiation Mechanism in High-Entropy Oxides as Anode Materials for Li-Ion Batteries: An Operando XAS Study
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Ghigna, P, Airoldi, L, Fracchia, M, Callegari, D, Anselmi-Tamburini, U, D'Angelo, P, Pianta, N, Ruffo, R, Cibin, G, De Souza, D, Quartarone, E, Ghigna P., Airoldi L., Fracchia M., Callegari D., Anselmi-Tamburini U., D'angelo P., Pianta N., Ruffo R., Cibin G., De Souza D. O., Quartarone E., Ghigna, P, Airoldi, L, Fracchia, M, Callegari, D, Anselmi-Tamburini, U, D'Angelo, P, Pianta, N, Ruffo, R, Cibin, G, De Souza, D, Quartarone, E, Ghigna P., Airoldi L., Fracchia M., Callegari D., Anselmi-Tamburini U., D'angelo P., Pianta N., Ruffo R., Cibin G., De Souza D. O., and Quartarone E.
- Abstract
High-entropy oxides based on transition metals, such as Mg0.2Co0.2Ni0.2Cu0.2Zn0.2O (TM-HEO), have recently drawn special attention as potential anodes in lithium-ion batteries due to high specific capacity and cycling reversibility. However, the lithiation/delithiation mechanism of such systems is still controversial and not clearly addressed. Here, we report on an operando XAS investigation into TM-HEO-based anodes for lithium-ion cells during the first lithiation/delithiation cycle. This material showed a high specific capacity exceeding 600 mAh g-1 at 0.1 C and Coulombic efficiency very close to unity. The combination of functional and advanced spectroscopic studies revealed complex charging mechanisms, developing through the reduction of transition-metal (TM) cations, which triggers the conversion reaction below 1.0 V. The conversion is irreversible and incomplete, leading to the final collapse of the HEO rock-salt structure. Other redox processes are therefore discussed and called to account for the observed cycling behavior of the TM-HEO-based anode. Despite the irreversible phenomena, the HEO cubic structure remains intact for ∼60% of lithiation capacity, so proving the beneficial role of the configuration entropy in enhancing the stability of the HEO rock-salt structure during the redox phenomena.
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- 2020
7. Editorial: Marine Pollution - Emerging Issues and Challenges
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Strain, EMA, Lai, RWS, White, CA, Piarulli, S, Leung, KMY, Airoldi, L, O’Brien, A, Strain, EMA, Lai, RWS, White, CA, Piarulli, S, Leung, KMY, Airoldi, L, and O’Brien, A
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- 2022
8. Predicting the consequences of anthropogenic disturbance : large-scale effects of loss of canopy algae on rocky shores
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Benedetti-Cecchi, L., Pannacciulli, F., Bulleri, F., Moschella, P. S., Airoldi, L., Relini, G., and Cinelli, F.
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- 2001
9. A spatially explicit food web model for supporting the management of a marine Natura 2000 site: ongoing efforts at the Tegnùe di Chioggia
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Donati, E., Fabbri, F., Russo, E., Pranovi, F., Ponti, M., Turicchia, E., Airoldi, L., and Brigolin, D.
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- 2021
10. A global analysis of complexity-biodiversity relationships on marine artificial structures
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Webb, T, Strain, EMA, Steinberg, PD, Vozzo, M, Johnston, EL, Abbiati, M, Aguilera, MA, Airoldi, L, Aguirre, JD, Ashton, G, Bernardi, M, Brooks, P, Chan, BKK, Cheah, CB, Chee, SY, Coutinho, R, Crowe, T, Davey, A, Firth, LB, Fraser, C, Hanley, ME, Hawkins, SJ, Knick, KE, Lau, ETC, Leung, KMY, McKenzie, C, Macleod, C, Mafanya, S, Mancuso, FP, Messano, LVR, Naval-Xavier, LPD, Ng, TPT, O'Shaughnessy, KA, Pattrick, P, Perkins, MJ, Perkol-Finkel, S, Porri, F, Ross, DJ, Ruiz, G, Sella, I, Seitz, R, Shirazi, R, Thiel, M, Thompson, RC, Yee, JC, Zabin, C, Bishop, MJ, Webb, T, Strain, EMA, Steinberg, PD, Vozzo, M, Johnston, EL, Abbiati, M, Aguilera, MA, Airoldi, L, Aguirre, JD, Ashton, G, Bernardi, M, Brooks, P, Chan, BKK, Cheah, CB, Chee, SY, Coutinho, R, Crowe, T, Davey, A, Firth, LB, Fraser, C, Hanley, ME, Hawkins, SJ, Knick, KE, Lau, ETC, Leung, KMY, McKenzie, C, Macleod, C, Mafanya, S, Mancuso, FP, Messano, LVR, Naval-Xavier, LPD, Ng, TPT, O'Shaughnessy, KA, Pattrick, P, Perkins, MJ, Perkol-Finkel, S, Porri, F, Ross, DJ, Ruiz, G, Sella, I, Seitz, R, Shirazi, R, Thiel, M, Thompson, RC, Yee, JC, Zabin, C, and Bishop, MJ
- Abstract
Aim Topographic complexity is widely accepted as a key driver of biodiversity, but at the patch‐scale, complexity–biodiversity relationships may vary spatially and temporally according to the environmental stressors complexity mitigates, and the species richness and identity of potential colonists. Using a manipulative experiment, we assessed spatial variation in patch‐scale effects of complexity on intertidal biodiversity. Location 27 sites within 14 estuaries/bays distributed globally. Time period 2015–2017. Major taxa studied Functional groups of algae, sessile and mobile invertebrates. Methods Concrete tiles of differing complexity (flat; 2.5‐cm or 5‐cm complex) were affixed at low–high intertidal elevation on coastal defence structures, and the richness and abundance of the colonizing taxa were quantified after 12 months. Results The patch‐scale effects of complexity varied spatially and among functional groups. Complexity had neutral to positive effects on total, invertebrate and algal taxa richness, and invertebrate abundances. However, effects on the abundance of algae ranged from positive to negative, depending on location and functional group. The tidal elevation at which tiles were placed accounted for some variation. The total and invertebrate richness were greater at low or mid than at high intertidal elevations. Latitude was also an important source of spatial variation, with the effects of complexity on total richness and mobile mollusc abundance greatest at lower latitudes, whilst the cover of sessile invertebrates and sessile molluscs responded most strongly to complexity at higher latitudes. Conclusions After 12 months, patch‐scale relationships between biodiversity and habitat complexity were not universally positive. Instead, the relationship varied among functional groups and according to local abiotic and biotic conditions. This result challenges the assumption that effects of complexity on biodiversity are universally positive. The va
- Published
- 2021
11. Sediment metal enrichment and ecological risk assessment of ten ports and estuaries in the World Harbours Project
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Birch, G.F, Lee, J.H., Tanner, E., Fortune, J., Munksgaard, N., Whitehead, J., Coughanowr, C, Agius, J., Chrispijn, J., Taylor, U., Wells, F, Bellas, Juan, Besada, Victoria, Viñas, Lucía, Soares-Gomes, A, Cordeiro, R.C., Machado, W., Santelli, R.E., Vaughan, M., Cameron, M., Brooks, P., Crowe, T., Ponti, M., Airoldi, L., Guerra, R., Puente, A., Gómez, A.G., Zhou, G..J, Leung, K.M.Y., Steinberg, P., Birch, G.F, Lee, J.H., Tanner, E., Fortune, J., Munksgaard, N., Whitehead, J., Coughanowr, C, Agius, J., Chrispijn, J., Taylor, U., Wells, F, Bellas, Juan, Besada, Victoria, Viñas, Lucía, Soares-Gomes, A, Cordeiro, R.C., Machado, W., Santelli, R.E., Vaughan, M., Cameron, M., Brooks, P., Crowe, T., Ponti, M., Airoldi, L., Guerra, R., Puente, A., Gómez, A.G., Zhou, G..J, Leung, K.M.Y., and Steinberg, P.
- Abstract
Ten global harbours were assessed for sediment quality by quantifying the magnitude of anthropogenic change and ecological risk. Anthropogenic change (enrichment) was high for Derwent River and Sydney estuary, moderate for Santander Harbour, Rio de Janeiro and Dublin Port, slight for Hong Kong, minimal for Darwin. All 10 enrichment indices used showed similar results. Derwent River sediment was rated at high ecological risk, followed by Sydney and Santander estuaries with moderate risk. Auckland and Darwin sediments exhibited minimal ecological risk and sediment in the remaining harbours (Dublin, Hong Kong, Ravenna, Ria de Vigo and Rio de Janeiro) were assessed at slight ecological risk. The extraordinary variety of environments and types/quantities/qualities of data investigated resulted in as much a critique and development of methodology, as an assessment of human impact, including unique techniques for elemental normalisation and contaminant classification. Recommendations for an improved technical framework for sediment quality assessment are provided.
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- 2020
12. An ecological perspective on the deployment and design of low-crested and other hard coastal defence structures
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Airoldi, L., Abbiati, M., Beck, M.W., Hawkins, S.J., Jonsson, P.R., Martin, D., Moschella, P.S., Sundelöf, A., Thompson, R.C., and Åberg, P.
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- 2005
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13. Low-crested coastal defence structures as artificial habitats for marine life: Using ecological criteria in design
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Moschella, P.S., Abbiati, M., Åberg, P., Airoldi, L., Anderson, J.M., Bacchiocchi, F., Bulleri, F., Dinesen, G.E., Frost, M., Gacia, E., Granhag, L., Jonsson, P.R., Satta, M.P., Sundelöf, A., Thompson, R.C., and Hawkins, S.J.
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- 2005
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14. Genetic susceptibility according to three metabolic pathways in cancers of the lung and bladder and in myeloid leukemias in nonsmokers
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Vineis, P., Veglia, F., Garte, S., Malaveille, C., Matullo, G., Dunning, A., Peluso, M., Airoldi, L., Overvad, K., Raaschou-Nielsen, O., Clavel-Chapelon, F., Linseisen, J. P., Kaaks, R., Boeing, H., Trichopoulou, A., Palli, D., Crosignani, P., Tumino, R., Panico, S., Bueno-De-Mesquita, H. B., Peeters, P. H., Lund, E., Gonzalez, C. A., Martinez, C., Dorronsoro, M., Barricarte, A., Navarro, C., Quiros, J. R., Berglund, G., Jarvholm, B., Day, N. E., Key, T. J., Saracci, R., Riboli, E., and Autrup, H.
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- 2007
15. Multi-factor dimensionality reduction applied to a large prospective investigation on gene–gene and gene–environment interactions
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Manuguerra, M., Matullo, G., Veglia, F., Autrup, H., Dunning, A.M., Garte, S., Gormally, E., Malaveille, C., Guarrera, S., Polidoro, S., Saletta, F., Peluso, M., Airoldi, L., Overvad, K., Raaschou-Nielsen, O., Clavel-Chapelon, F., Linseisen, J., Boeing, H., Trichopoulos, D., Kalandidi, A., Palli, D., Krogh, V., Tumino, R., Panico, S., Bueno-De-Mesquita, H.B., Peeters, P.H., Lund, E., Pera, G., Martinez, C., Amiano, P., Barricarte, A., Tormo, M.J., Quiros, J.R., Berglund, G., Janzon, L., Jarvholm, B., Day, N.E., Allen, N.E., Saracci, R., Kaaks, R., Ferrari, P., Riboli, E., and Vineis, P.
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- 2007
16. DNA repair polymorphisms and cancer risk in non-smokers in a cohort study
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Matullo, G., Dunning, A.M., Guarrera, S., Baynes, C., Polidoro, S., Garte, S., Autrup, H., Malaveille, C., Peluso, M., Airoldi, L., Veglia, F., Gormally, E., Hoek, G., Krzyzanowski, M., Overvad, K., Raaschou-Nielsen, O., Clavel-Chapelon, F., Linseisen, J., Boeing, H., Trichopoulou, A., Palli, D., Krogh, V., Tumino, R., Panico, S., Bueno-De-Mesquita, H.B., Peeters, P.H., Lund, E., Pera, G., Martinez, C., Dorronsoro, M., Barricarte, A., Tormo, M.J., Quiros, J.R., Day, N.E., Key, T.J., Saracci, R., Kaaks, R., Riboli, E., and Vineis, P.
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- 2006
17. Environmental tobacco smoke and risk of respiratory cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in former smokers and never smokers in the EPIC prospective study
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Vineis, P, Airoldi, L, Veglia, P, Olgiati, L, Pastorelli, R, Autrup, H, Dunning, A, Garte, S, Gormally, E, Hainaut, P, Malaveille, C, Matullo, G, Peluso, M, Overvad, K, Tjonneland, A, Clavel-Chapelon, F, Boeing, H, Krogh, V, Palli, D, Panico, S, Tumino, R, Bueno-De-Mesquita, B, Peeters, P, Berglund, G, Hallmans, G, Saracci, R, and Riboli, E
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- 2005
18. Building ‘blue’: An eco-engineering framework for foreshore developments
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Mayer-Pinto, M., Johnston, E.L., Bugnot, A.B., Glasby, T.M., Airoldi, L., Mitchell, A., and Dafforn, K.A.
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- 2017
- Full Text
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19. Functional and structural responses to marine urbanisation
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Mayer-Pinto, M, Cole, VJ, Johnston, EL, Bugnot, A, Hurst, H, Airoldi, L, Glasby, TM, Dafforn, KA, Mayer-Pinto, M, Cole, VJ, Johnston, EL, Bugnot, A, Hurst, H, Airoldi, L, Glasby, TM, and Dafforn, KA
- Abstract
Urban areas have broad ecological footprints with complex impacts on natural systems. In coastal areas, growing populations are advancing their urban footprint into the ocean through the construction of seawalls and other built infrastructure. While we have some understanding of how urbanisation might drive functional change in terrestrial ecosystems, coastal systems have been largely overlooked. This study is one of the first to directly assess how changes in diversity relate to changes in ecosystem properties and functions (e.g. productivity, filtration rates) of artificial and natural habitats in one of the largest urbanised estuaries in the world, Sydney Harbour. We complemented our surveys with an extensive literature search. We found large and important differences in the community structure and function between artificial and natural coastal habitats. However, differences in diversity and abundance of organisms do not necessarily match observed functional changes. The abundance and composition of important functional groups differed among habitats with rocky shores having 40% and 70% more grazers than seawalls or pilings, respectively. In contrast, scavengers were approximately 8 times more abundant on seawalls than on pilings or rocky shores and algae were more diverse on natural rocky shores and seawalls than on pilings. Our results confirm previous findings in the literature. Oysters were more abundant on pilings than on rocky shores, but were also smaller. Interestingly, these differences in oyster populations did not affect in situ filtration rates between habitats. Seawalls were the most invaded habitats while pilings supported greater secondary productivity than other habitats. This study highlights the complexity of the diversity-function relationship and responses to ocean sprawl in coastal systems. Importantly, we showed that functional properties should be considered independently from structural change if we are to design and manage artificial hab
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- 2018
20. Harnessing positive species interactions as a tool against climate-driven loss of coastal biodiversity
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Bulleri, F., Eriksson, B.K., Queirós, A., Airoldi, L., Arenas, F., Arvanitidis, C., Bouma, T.J., Crowe, T.P., Davoult, D., Guizien, K., Ivesa, L., Jenkins, S.R., Michalet, R., Olabarria, C., Procaccini, G., Serrão, E.A., Wahl, M., Benedetti-Cecchi, L., Bulleri, F., Eriksson, B.K., Queirós, A., Airoldi, L., Arenas, F., Arvanitidis, C., Bouma, T.J., Crowe, T.P., Davoult, D., Guizien, K., Ivesa, L., Jenkins, S.R., Michalet, R., Olabarria, C., Procaccini, G., Serrão, E.A., Wahl, M., and Benedetti-Cecchi, L.
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Habitat-forming species sustain biodiversity and ecosystem functioning in harsh environments through the amelioration of physical stress. Nonetheless, their role in shaping patterns of species distribution under future climate scenarios is generally overlooked. Focusing on coastal systems, we assess how habitat-forming species can influence the ability of stress-sensitive species to exhibit plastic responses, adapt to novel environmental conditions, or track suitable climates. Here, we argue that habitat-former populations could be managed as a nature-based solution against climate-driven loss of biodiversity. Drawing from different ecological and biological disciplines, we identify a series of actions to sustain the resilience of marine habitat-forming species to climate change, as well as their effectiveness and reliability in rescuing stress-sensitive species from increasingly adverse environmental conditions.
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- 2018
21. Marine forests of the Mediterranean-Atlantic Cystoseira tamariscifolia complex show a southern Iberian genetic hotspot and no reproductive isolation in parapatry
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Bermejo, R, Chefaoui, RM, Engelen, AH, Buonomo, R, Neiva, J, Ferreira-Costa, J, Pearson, GA, Marba, N, Duarte, CM, Airoldi, L, Hernandez, I, Guiry, MD, Serrao, EA, Bermejo, R, Chefaoui, RM, Engelen, AH, Buonomo, R, Neiva, J, Ferreira-Costa, J, Pearson, GA, Marba, N, Duarte, CM, Airoldi, L, Hernandez, I, Guiry, MD, and Serrao, EA
- Abstract
Climate-driven range-shifts create evolutionary opportunities for allopatric divergence and subsequent contact, leading to genetic structuration and hybrid zones. We investigate how these processes influenced the evolution of a complex of three closely related Cystoseira spp., which are a key component of the Mediterranean-Atlantic seaweed forests that are undergoing population declines. The C. tamariscifolia complex, composed of C. tamariscifolia s.s., C. amentacea and C. mediterranea, have indistinct boundaries and natural hybridization is suspected. Our aims are to (1) infer the genetic structure and diversity of these species throughout their distribution ranges using microsatellite markers to identify ancient versus recent geographical populations, contact zones and reproductive barriers, and (2) hindcast past distributions using niche models to investigate the influence of past range shifts on genetic divergence at multiple spatial scales. Results supported a single, morphologically plastic species the genetic structure of which was incongruent with a priori species assignments. The low diversity and low singularity in northern European populations suggest recent colonization after the LGM. The southern Iberian genetic hotspot most likely results from the role of this area as a climatic refugium or a secondary contact zone between differentiated populations or both. We hypothesize that life-history traits (selfing, low dispersal) and prior colonization effects, rather than reproductive barriers, might explain the observed genetic discontinuities.
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- 2018
22. Functional and structural responses to marine urbanisation
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Mayer-Pinto, M, primary, Cole, V J, additional, Johnston, E L, additional, Bugnot, A, additional, Hurst, H, additional, Airoldi, L, additional, Glasby, T M, additional, and Dafforn, K A, additional
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- 2018
- Full Text
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23. Building ‘blue’: An eco-engineering framework for foreshore developments
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Mayer-Pinto, M, Johnston, EL, Bugnot, AB, Glasby, TM, Airoldi, L, Mitchell, A, Dafforn, KA, Mayer-Pinto, M, Johnston, EL, Bugnot, AB, Glasby, TM, Airoldi, L, Mitchell, A, and Dafforn, KA
- Abstract
Urbanisation in terrestrial systems has driven architects, planners, ecologists and engineers to collaborate on the design and creation of more sustainable structures. Examples include the development of ‘green infrastructure’ and the introduction of wildlife corridors that mitigate urban stressors and provide positive ecological outcomes. In contrast, efforts to minimise the impacts of urban developments in marine environments have been far more restricted in their extent and scope, and have often overlooked the ecological role of the built environment as potential habitat. Urban foreshore developments, i.e. those built on the interface of intertidal and/or subtidal zones, have the potential to incorporate clear multi-functional outcomes, by supporting novel ecosystems. We present a step-by-step eco-engineering framework for ‘building blue’ that will allow coastal managers to facilitate planning and construction of sustainable foreshore developments. Adopting such an approach will incorporate ecological principles, thereby mitigating some of the environmental impacts, creating more resilient urban infrastructure and environments, and maximising benefits to the multiple stakeholders and users of marine urban waterfronts.
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- 2017
24. Interactive effects of vegetation and sediment properties on erosion of salt marshes in the Northern Adriatic Sea
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Lo, V.B., Bouma, T.J., van Belzen, J., Van Colen, C., Airoldi, L., Lo, V.B., Bouma, T.J., van Belzen, J., Van Colen, C., and Airoldi, L.
- Abstract
We investigated how lateral erosion control, measured by novel photogrammetry techniques, is modified by the presence of Spartina spp. vegetation, sediment grain size, and the nutrient status of salt marshes across 230 km of the Italian Northern Adriatic coastline. Spartina spp. vegetation reduced erosion across our study sites. The effect was more pronounced in sandy soils, where erosion was reduced by 80% compared to 17% in silty soils. Erosion resistance was also enhanced by Spartina spp. root biomass. In the absence of vegetation, erosion resistance was enhanced by silt content, with mean erosion 72% lower in silty vs. sandy soils. We found no relevant relationships with nutrient status, likely due to overall high nutrient concentrations and low C:N ratios across all sites. Our results contribute to quantifying coastal protection ecosystem services provided by salt marshes in both sandy and silty sediments.
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- 2017
25. The role of changing climate in driving the shift from perennial grasses to annual succulents in a Mediterranean saltmarsh
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Strain, E.M.A., van Belzen, J., Comandini, P., Wong, J., Bouma, T.J., Airoldi, L., Strain, E.M.A., van Belzen, J., Comandini, P., Wong, J., Bouma, T.J., and Airoldi, L.
- Abstract
Changing climate threatens the structure and function of saltmarshes, which are often severely degraded by other human perturbations. Along the Mediterranean coastline, increasing temperature and decreasing rainfall have been hypothesised to trigger habitat shifts from perennial grasses to annual succulents in fragile saltmarsh ecosystems, such as those fringing the North Adriatic coastline. We used manipulative field experiments to investigate the effects of increased temperature, decreased precipitation and increased inundation period associated with rising sea levels on the dominant species in the lower marsh, the perennial grass Spartina spp. and the annual succulent Salicornia veneta. At ambient inundation, the combined effects of increased temperature and decreased precipitation enhanced soil temperature and decreased soil moisture, resulting in an increased number of plants, height and live biomass of S. veneta, as well as greater dead biomass of Spartina spp. compared with current conditions. Increased inundation reduced the soil redox potential, and resulted in losses of both Spartina spp. and S. veneta, but these negative effects were much more pronounced for S. veneta. An inundation tolerance test confirmed that S. veneta is significantly more vulnerable to rapid increases in inundation than Spartina spp. We conclude that at current inundation, the increasing drought conditions in the North Adriatic Sea are favouring the spread of the annual succulent S. veneta. The increasing spread of these succulents could reduce the future capability of the system to respond to projected increasing sea levels, as S. veneta is highly vulnerable to increased inundation. Synthesis. Our results highlight the complex interactions between different components of changing climate. Management strategies for saltmarshes in the Mediterranean and other microtidal locations facing similar changes in climate should focus on maintaining the freshwater and coastal channels free from
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- 2017
26. The role of changing climate in driving the shift from perennial grasses to annual succulents in a Mediterranean saltmarsh
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Hughes, AR, Strain, EMA, van Belzen, J, Comandini, P, Wong, J, Bouma, TJ, Airoldi, L, Hughes, AR, Strain, EMA, van Belzen, J, Comandini, P, Wong, J, Bouma, TJ, and Airoldi, L
- Abstract
Summary Changing climate threatens the structure and function of saltmarshes, which are often severely degraded by other human perturbations. Along the Mediterranean coastline, increasing temperature and decreasing rainfall have been hypothesised to trigger habitat shifts from perennial grasses to annual succulents in fragile saltmarsh ecosystems, such as those fringing the North Adriatic coastline. We used manipulative field experiments to investigate the effects of increased temperature, decreased precipitation and increased inundation period associated with rising sea levels on the dominant species in the lower marsh, the perennial grass Spartina spp. and the annual succulent Salicornia veneta. At ambient inundation, the combined effects of increased temperature and decreased precipitation enhanced soil temperature and decreased soil moisture, resulting in an increased number of plants, height and live biomass of S. veneta, as well as greater dead biomass of Spartina spp. compared with current conditions. Increased inundation reduced the soil redox potential, and resulted in losses of both Spartina spp. and S. veneta, but these negative effects were much more pronounced for S. veneta. An inundation tolerance test confirmed that S. veneta is significantly more vulnerable to rapid increases in inundation than Spartina spp. We conclude that at current inundation, the increasing drought conditions in the North Adriatic Sea are favouring the spread of the annual succulent S. veneta. The increasing spread of these succulents could reduce the future capability of the system to respond to projected increasing sea levels, as S. veneta is highly vulnerable to increased inundation. Synthesis. Our results highlight the complex interactions between different components of changing climate. Management strategies for saltmarshes in the Mediterranean and other microtidal locations facing similar changes in climate should focus on maintaining the freshwater and coastal channels f
- Published
- 2017
27. Whole-blood global DNA methylation is increased in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis independently of age of onset
- Author
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Tremolizzo, L., Messina, P., Conti, E., Sala, G., Cecchi, M., Airoldi, L., Pastorelli, R., Pupillo, E., Bandettini Di Poggio, M., Filosto, M., Lunetta, C., Agliardi, C., Guerini, F., Mandrioli, J., Calvo, A., Beghi, E., Ferrarese, C., Cotelli, M. S., Corbo, M., Maestri, E., Georgoulopoulou, E., Marzorati, L., Susani, E., Arosio, A., Chio, A., Fuda, G., Pisa, F., Tremolizzo, L, Messina, P, Conti, E, Sala, G, Cecchi, M, Airoldi, L, Pastorelli, R, Pupillo, E, Bandettini di Poggio, M, Filosto, M, Lunetta, C, Agliardi, C, Guerini, F, Mandrioli, J, Calvo, A, Beghi, E, Ferrarese, C, and Eurals, C
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Homocysteine ,DNA methylation, ALS, whole-blood ,HpaII ,Biology ,Tritium ,Age of onset ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,Blood ,DNA methylation ,Epigenetics ,Methionine ,Peripheral marker ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,age of onset ,peripheral marker ,blood ,Internal medicine ,epigenetics ,methionine ,homocysteine ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Whole blood ,Aged, 80 and over ,Genetics ,MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA ,Analysis of Variance ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,ROC Curve ,Neurology ,chemistry ,Deoxycytosine Nucleotides ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
ALS is a heterogeneous disease that is not well understood. Epigenetic rearrangements are important in complex disorders including motor neuron diseases. The aim of this study was to determine whether whole-blood DNA methylation (DNA MET %) is a potential modifier of age at onset in ALS. DNA MET % was measured as incorporation of [(3)H]dCTP following HpaII cut in 96 ALS patients and 87 controls, comprising: early-onset (< 55 years of age) and late-onset (> 74 years of age). Methionine (Met) and homocysteine (Hcy) plasma levels were assessed by liquid chromatography selected reaction monitoring coupled with isotope-dilution mass spectrometry. Results showed that DNA MET % was increased in ALS patients independently of age of onset. Compared to the other three groups, Hcy plasma levels were reduced in early-onset ALS patients but Met levels were similar. ROC analysis reported Met levels and DNA MET %, respectively, with a slight and moderate discriminative power. In conclusion, increased DNA MET % is a possible marker of epigenetic dysfunction in ALS independently of age of onset. Further studies dissecting biological determinants of phenotypic complexity in ALS may help in developing successful therapeutic strategies.
- Published
- 2014
28. Quantifying resistance to erosion in salt marshes of the Northern Adriatic Sea
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Lo, V., Bouma, T.J., Van Colen, C., and Airoldi, L.
- Subjects
Erosion ,Eutrophication - Published
- 2016
29. Interactive effects of vegetation and grain size on erosion rates in salt marshes of the Northern Adriatic Sea
- Author
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Lo, V., Bouma, T., Van Colen, C., and Airoldi, L.
- Published
- 2016
30. Diversity and temporal dynamics of the epiphytic bacterial communities associated with the canopy-forming seaweed Cystoseira cornpressa (Esper) Gerloff and Nizamuddin
- Author
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Mancuso, F.P., D'Hondt, S., Willems, A., Airoldi, L., and De Clerck, O.
- Subjects
Cystoseira compressa ,Fucales - Abstract
Canopy-forming seaweed species of the genus Cystoseira form diverse and productive habitats along temperate rocky coasts of the Mediterranean Sea. Despite numerous studies on the rich macrofauna and flora associated with Cystoseira spp., there is little knowledge about the epiphytic bacteria. We analyzed bacterial populations associated with canopies of Cystoseira compressa, over an annual vegetative cycle (May-October), and their relationships with the bacterial populations in the surrounding seawater, at intertidal rocky shores in Vasto (Chieti—Italy). The bacterial diversity was assessed using Illumina Miseq sequences of V1-V3 hypervariable regions of 16S rRNA gene. C. compressa bacterial community was dominated by sequences of Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes, Verrucomicrobia, Actinobacteria, and Cyanobacteria especially of the Rhodobacteriaceae, Flavobacteriaceae, Sapropiraceae, Verrucomicrobiaceae, and Phyllobacteriaceae families. Seawater libraries were also dominated by Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes sequences, especially of the Candidatus Pelagibacter (SAR11) and Rhodobacteriaceae families, but were shown to be clearly distinct from C. compressa libraries with only few species in common between the two habitats. We observed a clear successional pattern in the epiphytic bacteria of C. compressa over time. These variations were characterized by gradual addition of OTUs (Verrucomicrobia, Actinobacteria and SR1) to the community over a growing season, indicative of a temporal gradient, rather than a radical reorganization of the bacterial community. Moreover, we also found an increase in abundance over time of Rhodobacteraceae, comprising six potential pathogenic genera, Ruegeria, Nautella, Aquimarina, Loktanella, Saprospira, and Phaeobacter which seemed to be associated to aged thalli of C. compressa. These bacteria could have the potential to affect the health and ecology of the algae, suggesting the hypothesis of a possible, but still unexplored, role of the microbial communities in contributing to the extensive ongoing declines of populations of Cystoseira spp. in the Mediterranean Sea.
- Published
- 2016
31. Batteri e alghe
- Author
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Ponti, M, Airoldi, L, Bressan, Guido, PONTI M., MESCALCHIN P. EDS, Ponti, M, Airoldi, L, Bressan, Guido, PONTI M., MESCALCHIN P., Ponti M., Airoldi L., and Bressan G.
- Abstract
La casa Editrice LaMandragola rappresenta una realtà editoriale con molteplice e forte esperienza su tutto il territorio nazionale e con una connotazione culturale consolidata da una lunga collaborazione con diversi istituti di ricerca. Questo volume è stato realizzato in collaborazione tra ricercatori di varie università italiane e l'Associazione Tegnue di Chioggia con il finanziamento della regione veneto e la collaborazione del comune di Chioggia. Le Tegnue di Chioggia rappresentano uno degli habitat di maggior valore ma allo stesso tempo meno conosciuti del mare Adriatico. Il testo offre una visione completa dell'ecologia e della biologia di questi ambienti unici, ed è rivolto soprattutto ad operatori del settore al fine di indirizzare gli sforzi di protezione di questi ambienti marini. Nell'ambito del volume ho collaborato alla stesura del capitolo sulle alghe ed i batteri
- Published
- 2008
32. Psychiatric events in epilepsy
- Author
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Cornaggia, Cesare Maria, Beghi, Massimiliano, Beghi, Ettore, Cornaggia, C. M., Airoldi, L., Beghi, M., Bogliun, G., Brambilla, E., Fiordelli, E., Mascarini, A., Moltrasio, L., Primati, C., Hauser, W. A., Loeber, J. N., De Boer, H., Thorbecke, R., Steuernagel, E., Wolf, P., Sonnen, A. E. H., Severi, S., Zolo, P., Specchio, L. M., Specchio, N., Pasolini, M. P., Antonini, L., Aguglia, U., Russo, C., Gambardella, A., Giubergia, S., Zagnoni, P. G., Cosottini, Mirco, Zaccara, G., Trio, R., Pisani, F., Russo, M., Oteri, G., Cavestro, C. E., Tonini, C., Avanzini, G., Arienti, F., Defanti, C. A., Tartara, A., Manni, R., Castelnuovo, G., Murelli, R., Galimberti, C. A., Zanotta, N., Di Viesti, P., Zarrelli, M., Apollo, F., Runge, U., de Krom, M. C. T. F. M., van Heijden, C., Griet, J., Brown, S. W., Coyle, H., Lopez Lima, J. M., Beleza, P., Ferreira, E., Talvik, T., Beilmann, A., Belousova, E., Levart, T., Zupancic, N., Gromov, S., Lipatova, L. V., Mikhailov, V., Cornaggia, C, Beghi, M, Beghi, E, and Rest, 1
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Adolescent ,Referral ,Population ,Clinical Neurology ,Comorbidity ,Anxiety ,Epilepsy ,medicine ,Humans ,epilepsy, psychiatry ,Occupations ,Psychiatry ,Prospective cohort study ,education ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,education.field_of_study ,Depression ,business.industry ,Mental Disorders ,Case-control study ,General Medicine ,Case-control ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatric ,Case-Control Studies ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Hospitalization ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Neurology (clinical) ,MED/25 - PSICHIATRIA ,Case–control ,business - Abstract
Psychiatric events are thought to be more frequent in people with epileptic seizures than in the general population. However, inter-ictal psychiatric events attributable to epilepsy remain controversial. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the occurrence of psychiatric events in a population of fairly unselected patients with epilepsy and in the general population, and the correlation between psychiatric complaints and selected demographic and disease characteristics. The survey was part of a multicentre prospective cohort study of everyday life risks conducted in eight European countries and comparing referral children and adults with epilepsy referred to secondary/tertiary centers to age- and sex-matched non-epileptic controls. Nine hundred and fifty-one patients with epilepsy and 909 controls were studied. Each patient and his/her control received a diary to record any accident or illness, with severity, circumstances, causes, consequences, and (for the cases) the possible relation to a seizure. The follow-up period ranged between 1 and 2 years. Fifty-eight psychiatric events occurred in 25 patients (2.6%) and 88 in 19 controls (2.1%). Housewives (9.3%) and unemployed persons (4.1%) were mostly affected. No correlation was found between psychiatric events, demographic and disease characteristics. Our results suggest that people with epilepsy if unselected are not at higher risk for psychiatric disorders than the general population. © 2007 British Epilepsy Association.
- Published
- 2007
33. Bacterial diversity changes to simulated local and global stressors on the canopy-forming alga Cystoseira compressa
- Author
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Mancuso, F., De Clerck, O., and Airoldi, L.
- Published
- 2015
34. Multi-use platform solutions in the North Sea, Baltic Sea, Atlantic and Adriatic Sea : MERMAID
- Author
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Rockmann, C., Stuiver, M., van den Burg, S.W.K., Zanuttigh, B., Zagonari, Fabio, Airoldi, L., Angelelli, E., Suffredini, R., Franceschi, G., Belloti, G., Schouten, Jan Joost, Soderqvist, T., Garcao, R., Garcia, R.G., Martinez, J., Petersen, O.S., and Ahrensberg, N.A.
- Subjects
ruimte ,offshore ,design ,Regional Development and Spatial Use ,space ,Regionale Ontwikkeling en Ruimtegebruik ,oceanen ,ontwerp ,stakeholders ,Groene Economie en Ruimte ,milieubeleid ,environmental policy ,oceans ,Green Economy and Landuse ,Maritiem - Published
- 2015
35. European Red List of habitats Part 1. Marine habitats
- Author
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Gubbay, S, Sanders, N, Haynes, T, Janssen, JAM, Rodwell, JR, Nieto, A, García Criado, M, Beal, S, Borg, J, Kennedy, M, Micu, D, Otero, M, Saunders, G, Calix, M, Airoldi, L, Alexandrov, VV, Alcázar, E, de Andalucia, J, Babbini, L, Bakran-Petricioli, T, Ballesteros, E, Bañares España, E, Bariche, M, Bastos, E, Basso, D, Bat, L, Battelli, C, Bazairi, H, Bianchi, CN, Bitar, G, Bo, M, Brazier, P, Bush, L, Canese, S, Catrense, SP, Cefalì, ME, Cerrano, C, Chemello, R, Chernysheva, EB, Connor, D, Cook, R, Dankers, N, Darr, A, Davis, AR, Dolenc-Orbanić, N, Dubois, S, Espino, F, Flores Moya, A, Ford, J, Foulquie, M, Fowler, S, Fourt, M, Fraschetti, S, Fuller, I, Fürhaupter, K, Galil, B, Gerovasileiou, V, Giangrande, A, Giuseppe, C, Goriup, P, Grall, J, Gravina, MF, Guelmami, A, Güreşen, A, Hadjioannou, L, Haldin, JM, Hall-Spencer, J, Harmelin, JG, Haroun-Tabrae, R, Harries, D, Herkül, K, Hetman, T, Hiscock, K, Hiscock, S, Holt, R, Yssaris, Y, Jackson, E, Jeudy, A, Jimenez, C, Karamita, C, Karlsson, A, Kersting, D, Keskinen, E, Klinge, F, Klissurov, L, Knittweis-Mifsud, L, Kopiy, V, Korolesova, D, Kružić, P, Komakhidze, G, La Porta, B, Leinikki, J, Lehtonen, P, Linares, C, Lipej, L, Mačić, V, Mangialajo, L, Mariani, S, Melih, C, Metalpa, R, Mielke, E, Mihneva, V, Milchakova, N, Milonakis, K, Minguell, C, Mironova, NV, Näslund, J, Numa, C, Nyström, J, Ocaña, O, Otero, NF, Peña Freire, V, Pergent, C, Perkol-Finkel, S, Pibot, A, Pinedo, S, Poursanidis, D, Ramos, A, Revkov, NK, Roininen, J-T, Rosso, A, Ruiz, J, Salomidi, M, Schembri, P, Shiganov, T, Simboura, N, Sini, M, Smith, C, Soldo, A, Somerfield, P, Templado, J, Terentyev, A, Thibaut, T, Topçu, NE, Trigg, C, Turk, R, Tyler-Walters, H, Tunesi, L, Vera, K, Viera , M, Warzocha, J, Wells, S, Westerbom, M, Wikström, S, Wood, C, Yokes B, Zibrowius, H, BASSO, DANIELA MARIA, Gubbay, S, Sanders, N, Haynes, T, Janssen, JAM, Rodwell, JR, Nieto, A, García Criado, M, Beal, S, Borg, J, Kennedy, M, Micu, D, Otero, M, Saunders, G, Calix, M, Airoldi, L, Alexandrov, VV, Alcázar, E, de Andalucia, J, Babbini, L, Bakran-Petricioli, T, Ballesteros, E, Bañares España, E, Bariche, M, Bastos, E, Basso, D, Bat, L, Battelli, C, Bazairi, H, Bianchi, CN, Bitar, G, Bo, M, Brazier, P, Bush, L, Canese, S, Catrense, SP, Cefalì, ME, Cerrano, C, Chemello, R, Chernysheva, EB, Connor, D, Cook, R, Dankers, N, Darr, A, Davis, AR, Dolenc-Orbanić, N, Dubois, S, Espino, F, Flores Moya, A, Ford, J, Foulquie, M, Fowler, S, Fourt, M, Fraschetti, S, Fuller, I, Fürhaupter, K, Galil, B, Gerovasileiou, V, Giangrande, A, Giuseppe, C, Goriup, P, Grall, J, Gravina, MF, Guelmami, A, Güreşen, A, Hadjioannou, L, Haldin, JM, Hall-Spencer, J, Harmelin, JG, Haroun-Tabrae, R, Harries, D, Herkül, K, Hetman, T, Hiscock, K, Hiscock, S, Holt, R, Yssaris, Y, Jackson, E, Jeudy, A, Jimenez, C, Karamita, C, Karlsson, A, Kersting, D, Keskinen, E, Klinge, F, Klissurov, L, Knittweis-Mifsud, L, Kopiy, V, Korolesova, D, Kružić, P, Komakhidze, G, La Porta, B, Leinikki, J, Lehtonen, P, Linares, C, Lipej, L, Mačić, V, Mangialajo, L, Mariani, S, Melih, C, Metalpa, R, Mielke, E, Mihneva, V, Milchakova, N, Milonakis, K, Minguell, C, Mironova, NV, Näslund, J, Numa, C, Nyström, J, Ocaña, O, Otero, NF, Peña Freire, V, Pergent, C, Perkol-Finkel, S, Pibot, A, Pinedo, S, Poursanidis, D, Ramos, A, Revkov, NK, Roininen, J-T, Rosso, A, Ruiz, J, Salomidi, M, Schembri, P, Shiganov, T, Simboura, N, Sini, M, Smith, C, Soldo, A, Somerfield, P, Templado, J, Terentyev, A, Thibaut, T, Topçu, NE, Trigg, C, Turk, R, Tyler-Walters, H, Tunesi, L, Vera, K, Viera , M, Warzocha, J, Wells, S, Westerbom, M, Wikström, S, Wood, C, Yokes B, Zibrowius, H, and BASSO, DANIELA MARIA
- Abstract
The European Red List of Habitats provides an overview of the risk of collapse (degree of endangerment) of marine, terrestrial and freshwater habitats in the European Union (EU28) and adjacent regions (EU28+), based on a consistent set of categories and criteria, and detailed data and expert knowledge from involved countries. A total of 257 benthic marine habitat types were assessed. In total, 19% (EU28) and 18% (EU28+) of the evaluated habitats were assessed as threatened in categories Critically Endangered, Endangered and Vulnerable. An additional 12% were Near Threatened in the EU28 and 11% in the EU28+. These figures are approximately doubled if Data Deficient habitats are excluded. The percentage of threatened habitat types differs across the regional seas. The highest proportion of threatened habitats in the EU28 was found in the Mediterranean Sea (32%), followed by the North-East Atlantic (23%), the Black Sea (13%) and then the Baltic Sea (8%). There was a similar pattern in the EU28+. The most frequently cited pressures and threats were similar across the four regional seas: pollution (eutrophication), biological resource use other than agriculture or forestry (mainly fishing but also aquaculture), natural system modifications (e.g. dredging and sea defence works), urbanisation and climate change. Even for habitats where the assessment outcome was Data Deficient, the Red List assessment process has resulted in the compilation of a substantial body of useful information to support the conservation of marine habitats.
- Published
- 2016
36. Status, trends and drivers of kelp forests in Europe: an expert assessment.
- Author
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Araujo, R. M., Assis, J., Aguillar, R., Airoldi, L., Bárbara, I., Bartsch, Inka, Bekkby, T., Christie, H., Davoult, D., Derrien-Courtel, S., Fernandez, C., Fredriksen, S., Gevaert, F., Gundersen, H., Le Gal, A., Léveque, L., Mieszkowska, N., Norderhaug, K. M., Oliveira, P., Puente, A., Rico, J. M., Rinde, E., Schubert, H., Strain, E. M., Valero, M., Viard, F., Sousa-Pinto, I., Araujo, R. M., Assis, J., Aguillar, R., Airoldi, L., Bárbara, I., Bartsch, Inka, Bekkby, T., Christie, H., Davoult, D., Derrien-Courtel, S., Fernandez, C., Fredriksen, S., Gevaert, F., Gundersen, H., Le Gal, A., Léveque, L., Mieszkowska, N., Norderhaug, K. M., Oliveira, P., Puente, A., Rico, J. M., Rinde, E., Schubert, H., Strain, E. M., Valero, M., Viard, F., and Sousa-Pinto, I.
- Abstract
A comprehensive expert consultation was conducted in order to assess the status, trends and the most important drivers of change in the abundance and geographical distribution of kelp forests in European waters. This consultation included an on-line questionnaire, results from a workshop and data provided by a selected group of experts working on kelp forest mapping and eco-evolutionary research. Differences in status and trends according to geographical areas, species identity and small-scale variations within the same habitat where shown by assembling and mapping kelp distribution and trend data. Significant data gaps for some geographical regions, like the Mediterranean and the southern Iberian Peninsula, were also identified. The data used for this study confirmed a general trend with decreasing abundance of some native kelp species at their southern distributional range limits and increasing abundance in other parts of their distribution (Saccharina latissima and Saccorhiza polyschides). The expansion of the introduced species Undaria pinnatifida was also registered. Drivers of observed changes in kelp forests distribution and abundance were assessed using experts’ opinions. Multiple possible drivers were identified, including global warming, sea urchin grazing, harvesting, pollution and fishing pressure, and their impact varied between geographical areas. Overall, the results highlight major threats for these ecosystems but also opportunities for conservation. Major requirements to ensure adequate protection of coastal kelp ecosystems along European coastlines are discussed, based on the local to regional gaps detected in the study.
- Published
- 2016
37. What is the impact on fish recruitment of anthropogenic physical and structural habitat change in shallow nearshore areas in temperate systems? A systematic review protocol
- Author
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MacUra, B., Lönnstedt, O.M., Byström, P., Airoldi, L., Eriksson, B.K., Rudstam, L., Støttrup, Josianne Gatt, MacUra, B., Lönnstedt, O.M., Byström, P., Airoldi, L., Eriksson, B.K., Rudstam, L., and Støttrup, Josianne Gatt
- Abstract
Background: Shallow nearshore marine ecosystems are changing at an increasing rate due to a range of human activities such as urbanisation and commercial development. The growing numbers of constructions and other physical and structural alterations of the shoreline often take place in nursery and spawning habitats of many fish and other aquatic species. Several coastal fish populations have seen marked declines in abundance and diversity during the past two decades. A systematic review on the topic would clarify if anthropogenic physical and structural changes of near-shore areas have effects on fish recruitment and which these effects are. Methods: The review will examine how various physical and structural anthropogenic changes of nearshore fish habitats affect fish recruitment. Relevant studies include small- and large-scale field studies in marine and brackish systems or large lakes in temperate regions of the Northern and Southern hemispheres. Relevant studies may be based on comparisons between undisturbed and disturbed areas, before and after disturbance, or both. Relevant outcomes include measures of recruitment defined as abundance of juveniles of nearshore fish communities. Searches will be made for peer-reviewed and grey literature in English, Dutch, Danish, Finnish, German, Swedish and Spanish. All fish species and species groups will be considered in this review. Included relevant studies will be subject to a critical appraisal that will assess study validity. From relevant included studies, we will extract information on study characteristics, measured outcomes, exposure, comparators, effect modifiers and critical appraisal. Data synthesis will contain narrative and summary findings of each included study of sufficient quality. Meta-analysis may be possible in cases where studies report similar types of outcomes
- Published
- 2016
38. Accidents in Patients with Epilepsy: Types, Circumstances, and Complications: A European Cohort Study
- Author
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van den Broek, Mariska, Beghi, Ettore, Cornaggia, C. M., Beghi, M., Bogliun, G., Fiordelli, E., Airoldi, L., Frigeni, B., Mascarini, A., Mapelli, L., Moltrasio, L., Biagi, E., Hauser, W. A., Loeber, J. N., Thorbecke, R., Di Viesti, P., Zarrelli, M., Apollo, F., Giovanni Rotondo, S., Steuernagel, E., Wolf, P., Sonnen, A. E. H., Specchio, L. M., Specchio, N., Boati, E., Defanti, C. A., Pinto, P., Breviario, E., Pasolini, M. P., Antonini, L., Aguglia, U., Russo, C., Gambardella, A., Giubergia, S., Zagnoni, P., Cosottini, Mirco, Zaccara, G., Pisani, F., Oteri, G., Cavestro, C. E., David, A., Tonini, C., Avanzini, G., Arienti, F., Tartara, A., Manni, R., Castelnovo, G., Murelli, R., Galimberti, C. A., Zanotta, N., Runge, U., Dekrom, M. C. T. F. M., Vanheijden, C., Griet, J., van denBroek, M. W. C., Brown, S. W., Coyle, H., Edge, Nr Alderley, Lopes Lima, J. M., Beleza, P., Ferreira, E., Talvik, T., Beilmann, A., Belousova, E., Nikanorowa, M., Ravnik, I. M., Levart, T., Zupancic, N., Gromov, S., Lipatova, L. V., Mikhailov, V., Van den Broek, M, Beghi, E, and Cornaggia, C
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Poison control ,Cohort Studies ,Epilepsy ,Risk Factors ,Injury prevention ,Accidents, Occupational ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Preschool ,Child ,Prospective cohort study ,Injuries ,business.industry ,epilepsy, complications, types, circumstances ,Accidents ,Accidents, Home ,Child, Preschool ,Europe ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Hospitalization ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Wounds and Injuries ,Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.disease ,Occupational ,Relative risk ,Cohort ,Home ,business ,Risk assessment ,Cohort study - Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the risk of accidents in a cohort of patients with epilepsy and in matched nonepilepsy controls. by type, circumstances, and complications. Methods: A total of 95 1 children and adults with idiopathic, cryptogenic, or remote symptomatic epilepsy and 904 matched controls seen in secondary and tertiary centers in eight European Countries (England. Estonia, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal. Russia. and Slovenia) were followed Lip prospectively for 17,484 and 17.206 person-months and asked to report any accident requiring medical attention. its site, and complications. Risk assessment was done by using actuarial methods, relative risks (RRs). and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Results: During the study period, 199 (21%) patients and 123 (14%) controls reported all accident (p < 0.0001); 24% were seizure related. The Cumulative probability of accidents at 12 and 24 months was 17 and 27% in the cases and 12 and 17% in the controls. The risk was highest for concussions (RR, 2.6; 95% Cl, 1.2-5.8), abrasions (RR, 2.1; 95% Cl, 1.1-4.0), and Wounds (RR, 1.9; Cl, 1.2-3.1). Domestic accidents prevailed in both groups, followed by street and work accidents, and were more common among cases. Compared with controls, patients with epilepsy reported more hospitalization, complications, and medical action. Disease characteristics associated with an increased risk of accidents included generalized epilepsy (conclusions), active epilepsy, and at least monthly seizures (abrasions). Most risks decreased, becoming nonsignificant after excluding, seizure-related events. Conclusions: Patients with epilepsy are at higher risk of accidents and their complications. However, the risk was substantially lower after exclusion of seizure-related events
- Published
- 2004
39. Morbidity and Accidents in Patients with Epilepsy: Results of a European Cohort Study
- Author
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Beghi, E, Cornaggia, C, Specchio, Lm, Specchio, N, Boati, E, Defanti, Ca, Pinto, P, Breviario, E, Pasolini, Mp, Antonini, L, Tiberti, A, Valseriati, D, Aguglia, U, Russo, C, Gambardella, A, Giubergia, S, Zagnoni, P, Cosottini, Mirco, Zaccara, G, Pisani, F, Oteri, G, Cavestro, Ce, David, A, Tonini, C, Avanzini, G, Arienti, F, Beghi, M, Bogliun, G, Fiordelli, E, Airoldi, L, Mascarini, A, Mapelli, L, Moltrasio, L, Tartara, A, Manni, R, Castelnovo, G, Murelli, R, Galimberti, Ca, Zanotta, N, Di Viesti, P, Zarrelli, M, Apollo, F, Steuernagel, E, Wolf, P, Runge, U, De Krom MCTFM, Van Heijden, C, Griet, J, Van Den Broek MWC, Brown, Sw, Coyle, H, Lopes Lima JM, Beleza, P, Ferreira, E, Talvik, T, Beilmann, A, Belousova, E, Nikanorowa, M, Gromov, S, Lipatova, Lv, Mikhailov, V, Ravnik, Im, Levart, T, Zupancic, N, Hauser, Wa, Loeber, Jn, Thorbecke, R, Sonnen, Aeh, Beghi, E, and Cornaggia, C
- Subjects
Adult ,Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Adolescent ,Referral ,Health Status ,Population ,morbidity ,Disease ,Medical Records ,Cohort Studies ,Epilepsy ,Risk Factors ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,illnesses ,Prospective cohort study ,education ,Probability ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Case-control study ,accident ,medicine.disease ,Europe ,Neurology ,Accidents ,Case-Control Studies ,injurie ,epilepsy ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,Cohort study - Abstract
Summary: Purpose: To assess the risk of illnesses and accidents in patients with epilepsy and to evaluate the proportion of those risks attributable to epilepsy. Methods: Nine hundred fifty-one referral patients with idiopathic, cryptogenic, or remote symptomatic epilepsy and 909 matched controls (relatives or friends) were followed up prospectively for 1–2 years in eight European countries (Italy, Germany, Holland, England, Portugal, Russia, Estonia, and Slovenia). Each patient and control received a diary to keep notes regarding any illness or accident. Patients with epilepsy specifically recorded relations with seizures. Results: Six hundred forty-four patients recorded 2,491 illnesses compared with 1,665 illnesses in 508 controls. The cumulative probability of illness in patients was 49% by 12 months and 86% by 24 months (controls, 39 and 75%; p < 0.0001). One hundred ninety-nine patients and 124 controls had 270 and 140 accidents, respectively. The cumulative probability of accident in the cases was 17 and 27% by 12 and 24 months (controls, 12 and 17%; p < 0.0001). The chance of two or more illnesses or accidents was modestly but significantly greater in the patients. Illnesses and accidents were mostly trivial. Thirty percent of illnesses and 24% of accidents were seizure related. When illnesses and accidents related to seizures were excluded, the chance of illnesses and accidents was fairly similar in the two groups. Conclusions: Patients with idiopathic, cryptogenic, or remote symptomatic epilepsy have a moderately higher risk of illnesses and accidents than do the general population. With few exceptions, the events are trivial. When seizure-related events are excluded, patients with epilepsy are not at any significantly higher risk of illnesses and accidents.
- Published
- 2002
40. Quantitative analysis of DNA methylation after whole bisulfitome amplification of a minute amount of DNA from body fluids
- Author
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Thomas Vaissière, Cyrille Cuenin, Anupam Paliwal, Paolo Vineis, Hoek, G., Krzyzanowski, M., Airoldi, L., Dunning, A., Garte, S., Hainaut, P., Malaveille, C., Kim Overvad, Clavel-Chapelon, F., Linseisen, J., Boeing, H., Trichopoulou, A., Trichopoulos, D., Kaladidi, A., Palli, D., Krogh, V., Tumino, R., Panico, S., Hb Bueno-De-Mesquita, Ph Peeters, Kumle, M., Ca Gonzalez, Martinez, C., Dorronsoro, M., Barricarte, A., Navarro, C., Jr Quiros, Berglund, G., Janzon, L., Jarvholm, B., Ne Day, Tj Key, Saracci, R., Kaaks, R., Riboli, E., Pierre Hainaut, Zdenko Herceg, Vaissière, T, Cuenin, C, Paliwal, A, Vineis, P, Hoek, G, Krzyzanowski, M, Airoldi, L, Dunning, A, Garte, S, Hainaut, P, Malaveille, C, Overvad, K, Clavel Chapelon, F, Linseisen, J, Boeing, H, Trichopoulou, A, Trichopoulos, D, Kaladidi, A, Palli, D, Krogh, V, Tumino, R, Panico, Salvatore, Bueno De Mesquita, Hb, Peeters, Ph, Kumle, M, Gonzalez, Ca, Martinez, C, Dorronsoro, M, Barricarte, A, Navarro, C, Quiros, Jr, Berglund, G, Janzon, L, Jarvholm, B, Day, Ne, Key, Tj, Saracci, R, Kaaks, R, Riboli, E, Herceg, Z., Risk Assessment of Toxic and Immunomodulatory Agents, and Dep IRAS
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Lung Neoplasms ,Computational biology ,Biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Humans ,Methylated DNA immunoprecipitation ,Biomarker discovery ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Molecular Biology ,Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase (NADPH2) ,Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing ,Genome, Human ,Genes, p16 ,Tumor Suppressor Proteins ,Multiple displacement amplification ,Nuclear Proteins ,Methylation ,DNA Methylation ,Molecular biology ,Body Fluids ,Long Interspersed Nucleotide Elements ,chemistry ,DNA methylation ,Pyrosequencing ,Illumina Methylation Assay ,CpG Islands ,MutL Protein Homolog 1 ,Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques ,DNA - Abstract
Udgivelsesdato: 2009-May-24 Cell-free circulating DNA isolated from the plasma of individuals with cancer has been shown to harbor cancer-associated changes in DNA methylation, and thus it represents an attractive target for biomarker discovery. However, the reliable detection of DNA methylation changes in body fluids has proven to be technically challenging. Here we describe a novel combination of methods that allows quantitative and sensitive detection of DNA methylation in minute amounts of DNA present in body fluids (quantitative Methylation Analysis of Minute DNA amounts after whole Bisulfitome Amplification, qMAMBA). This method involves genome-wide amplification of bisulphite-modified DNA template followed by quantitative methylation detection using pyrosequencing and allows analysis of multiple genes from a small amount of starting DNA. To validate our method we used qMAMBA assays for four genes and LINE1 repetitive sequences combined with plasma DNA samples as a model system. qMAMBA offered high efficacy in the analysis of methylation levels and patterns in plasma samples with extremely small amounts of DNA and low concentrations of methylated alleles. Therefore, qMAMBA will facilitate methylation studies aiming to discover epigenetic biomarkers, and should prove particularly valuable in profiling a large sample series of body fluids from molecular epidemiology studies as well as in tracking disease in early diagnostics.
- Published
- 2009
41. Plasma amino acids patterns and age of onset of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
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Cecchi, M., Messina, P., Airoldi, L., Pupillo, E., Bandettini Di Poggio, M., Calvo, A., Filosto, M., Lunetta, C., Mandrioli, J., Pisa, F., Pastorelli, R., Beghi, E., Cotelli, M. S., Corbo, M., Maestri, E., Georgoulopoulou, E., Fini, N., Chio, A., and Fuda, G.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biological correlates ,Large population ,Mass Spectrometry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Age of Onset ,Amino Acids ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,Pathological ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Analysis of Variance ,Age at onset ,Plasma amino acids ,Spectrometry ,business.industry ,Glutamate receptor ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Amino acid ,Endocrinology ,Italy ,Neurology ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Area Under Curve ,Case-Control Studies ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Age of onset ,Leucine ,business - Abstract
The aim of this study was to verify whether abnormalities in plasma amino acid (AA) levels could be biological correlates of the age of onset in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). We undertook plasma AA profiling in a large population comprising 117 newly diagnosed ALS patients and 117 matched controls. ALS patients were stratified in early (58 patients aged55 years) versus late onset (59 patients aged74 years). We applied a rapid and reproducible method for the analysis of AA using amine reactive isotope coded tags in conjunction with liquid chromatography coupled to Multiple Reaction Monitoring-Mass Spectrometry. Results showed that values of only three AA were significantly different in ALS patients and controls. We found lower levels of leucine and higher levels of glutamate and leucine in early-onset ALS compared to their matched controls. In conclusion, different AA patterns related to the ALS age of onset were found, providing insight into possibly aberrant biochemical pathways that might unlock key pathological pathways.
- Published
- 2014
42. Accidents in patients with epilepsy: types, circumstances, and complications: a European cohort study
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van den Broek, M, Beghi, E, Cornaggia, C, Beghi, M, Bogliun, G, Fiordelli, E, Airoldi, L, Frigeni, B, Mascarini, A, Mapelli, L, Moltrasio, L, Biagi, E, Hauser, W, Loeber, J, Thorbecke, R, Di Viesti, P, Zarrelli, M, Apollo, F, Giovanni Rotondo, S, Steuernagel, E, Wolf, P, Sonnen, A, Specchio, L, Specchio, N, Boati, E, Defanti, C, Pinto, P, Breviario, E, Pasolini, M, Antonini, L, Aguglia, U, Russo, C, Gambardella, A, Giubergia, S, Zagnoni, P, Cosottini, M, Zaccara, G, Pisani, F, Oteri, G, Cavestro, C, David, A, Tonini, C, Avanzini, G, Arienti, F, Tartara, A, Manni, R, Castelnovo, G, Murelli, R, Galimberti, C, Zanotta, N, Runge, U, Dekrom, M, Vanheijden, C, Griet, J, van denBroek, M, Brown, S, Coyle, H, Edge, N, Lopes-Lima, J, Beleza, P, Ferreira, E, Talvik, T, Beilmann, A, Belousova, E, Nikanorowa, M, Ravnik, I, Levart, T, Zupancic, N, Gromov, S, Lipatova, L, Mikhailov, V, van den Broek M., Beghi E., Cornaggia C. M., Beghi M., Bogliun G., Fiordelli E., Airoldi L., Frigeni B., Mascarini A., Mapelli L., Moltrasio L., Biagi E., Hauser W. A., Loeber J. N., Thorbecke R., Di Viesti P., Zarrelli M., Apollo F., Giovanni Rotondo S., Steuernagel E., Wolf P., Sonnen A. E. H., Specchio L. M., Specchio N., Boati E., Defanti C. A., Pinto P., Breviario E., Pasolini M. P., Antonini L., Aguglia U., Russo C., Gambardella A., Giubergia S., Zagnoni P., Cosottini M., Zaccara G., Pisani F., Oteri G., Cavestro C. E., David A., Tonini C., Avanzini G., Arienti F., Tartara A., Manni R., Castelnovo G., Murelli R., Galimberti C. A., Zanotta N., Runge U., deKrom M. C. T. F. M., vanHeijden C., Griet J., van denBroek M. W. C., Brown S. W., Coyle H., Edge N. A., Lopes-Lima J. M., Beleza P., Ferreira E., Talvik T., Beilmann A., Belousova E., Nikanorowa M., Ravnik I. M., Levart T., Zupancic N., Gromov S., Lipatova L. V., Mikhailov V., van den Broek, M, Beghi, E, Cornaggia, C, Beghi, M, Bogliun, G, Fiordelli, E, Airoldi, L, Frigeni, B, Mascarini, A, Mapelli, L, Moltrasio, L, Biagi, E, Hauser, W, Loeber, J, Thorbecke, R, Di Viesti, P, Zarrelli, M, Apollo, F, Giovanni Rotondo, S, Steuernagel, E, Wolf, P, Sonnen, A, Specchio, L, Specchio, N, Boati, E, Defanti, C, Pinto, P, Breviario, E, Pasolini, M, Antonini, L, Aguglia, U, Russo, C, Gambardella, A, Giubergia, S, Zagnoni, P, Cosottini, M, Zaccara, G, Pisani, F, Oteri, G, Cavestro, C, David, A, Tonini, C, Avanzini, G, Arienti, F, Tartara, A, Manni, R, Castelnovo, G, Murelli, R, Galimberti, C, Zanotta, N, Runge, U, Dekrom, M, Vanheijden, C, Griet, J, van denBroek, M, Brown, S, Coyle, H, Edge, N, Lopes-Lima, J, Beleza, P, Ferreira, E, Talvik, T, Beilmann, A, Belousova, E, Nikanorowa, M, Ravnik, I, Levart, T, Zupancic, N, Gromov, S, Lipatova, L, Mikhailov, V, van den Broek M., Beghi E., Cornaggia C. M., Beghi M., Bogliun G., Fiordelli E., Airoldi L., Frigeni B., Mascarini A., Mapelli L., Moltrasio L., Biagi E., Hauser W. A., Loeber J. N., Thorbecke R., Di Viesti P., Zarrelli M., Apollo F., Giovanni Rotondo S., Steuernagel E., Wolf P., Sonnen A. E. H., Specchio L. M., Specchio N., Boati E., Defanti C. A., Pinto P., Breviario E., Pasolini M. P., Antonini L., Aguglia U., Russo C., Gambardella A., Giubergia S., Zagnoni P., Cosottini M., Zaccara G., Pisani F., Oteri G., Cavestro C. E., David A., Tonini C., Avanzini G., Arienti F., Tartara A., Manni R., Castelnovo G., Murelli R., Galimberti C. A., Zanotta N., Runge U., deKrom M. C. T. F. M., vanHeijden C., Griet J., van denBroek M. W. C., Brown S. W., Coyle H., Edge N. A., Lopes-Lima J. M., Beleza P., Ferreira E., Talvik T., Beilmann A., Belousova E., Nikanorowa M., Ravnik I. M., Levart T., Zupancic N., Gromov S., Lipatova L. V., and Mikhailov V.
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the risk of accidents in a cohort of patients with epilepsy and in matched nonepilepsy controls, by type, circumstances, and complications. Methods: A total of 951 children and adults with idiopathic, cryptogenic, or remote symptomatic epilepsy and 904 matched controls seen in secondary and tertiary centers in eight European countries (England, Estonia, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, and Slovenia) were followed up prospectively for 17,484 and 17,206 person-months and asked to report any accident requiring medical attention, its site, and complications. Risk assessment was done by using actuarial methods, relative risks (RRs), and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Results: During the study period, 199 (21%) patients and 123 (14%) controls reported an accident (p < 0.0001); 24% were seizure related. The cumulative probability of accidents at 12 and 24 months was 17 and 27% in the cases and 12 and 17% in the controls. The risk was highest for concussions (RR, 2.6; 9.5% CI, 1.2-5.8), abrasions (RR, 2.1; 95% CI, 1.1-4.0), and wounds (RR, 1.9; CI, 1.2-3.1). Domestic accidents prevailed in both groups, followed by street and work accidents, and were more common among cases. Compared with controls, patients with epilepsy reported more hospitalization, complications, and medical action. Disease characteristics associated with an increased risk of accidents included generalized epilepsy (concussions), active epilepsy, and at least monthly seizures (abrasions). Most risks decreased, becoming nonsignificant after excluding seizure-related events. Conclusions: Patients with epilepsy are at higher risk of accidents and their complications. However, the risk was substantially lower after exclusion of seizure-related events.
- Published
- 2004
43. Marine urbanization: An ecological framework for designing multifunctional artificial structures
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Dafforn, KA, Glasby, TM, Airoldi, L, Rivero, NK, Mayer-Pinto, M, Johnston, EL, Dafforn, KA, Glasby, TM, Airoldi, L, Rivero, NK, Mayer-Pinto, M, and Johnston, EL
- Abstract
Underwater cities have long been the subject of science fiction novels and movies, but the "urban sprawl" of artificial structures being developed in marine environments has widespread ecological consequences. The practice of combining ecological principles with the planning, design, and operation of marine artificial structures is gaining in popularity, and examples of successful engineering applications are accumulating. Here we use case studies to explore marine ecological engineering in practice, and introduce a conceptual framework for designing artificial structures with multiple functions. The rate of marine urbanization will almost certainly escalate as "aquatourism" drives the development of underwater accommodations. We show that current and future marine developments could be designed to reduce negative ecological impacts while promoting ecosystem services.
- Published
- 2015
44. Management of Local Stressors Can Improve the Resilience of Marine Canopy Algae toGlobal Stressors
- Author
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Strain, E.M.A., van Belzen, J., van Dalen, J., Bouma, T.J., Airoldi, L., Strain, E.M.A., van Belzen, J., van Dalen, J., Bouma, T.J., and Airoldi, L.
- Abstract
Coastal systems are increasingly threatened by multiple local anthropogenic and global climatic stressors. With the difficulties in remediating global stressors, management requires alternative approaches that focus on local scales. We used manipulative experiments to test whether reducing local stressors (sediment load and nutrient concentrations) can improve the resilience of foundation species (canopy algae along temperate rocky coastlines) to future projected global climate stressors (high wave exposure, increasing sea surface temperature), which are less amenable to management actions. We focused on Fucoids (Cystoseira barbata) along the north-western Adriatic coast in the Mediterranean Sea because of their ecological relevance, sensitivity to a variety of human impacts, and declared conservation priority. At current levels of sediment and nutrients, C. barbata showed negative responses to the simulated future scenarios of high wave exposure and increased sea surface temperature. However, reducing the sediment load increased the survival of C. barbata recruits by 90.24% at high wave exposure while reducing nutrient concentrations resulted in a 20.14% increase in the survival and enhanced the growth of recruited juveniles at high temperature. We conclude that improving water quality by reducing nutrient concentrations, and particularly the sediment load, would significantly increase the resilience of C. barbata populations to projected increases in climate stressors. Developing and applying appropriate targets for specific local anthropogenic stressors could be an effective management action to halt the severe and ongoing loss of key marine habitats
- Published
- 2015
45. Management of Local Stressors Can Improve the Resilience of Marine Canopy Algae to Global Stressors
- Author
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Bianchi, CN, Strain, EMA, van Belzen, J, van Dalen, J, Bouma, TJ, Airoldi, L, Bianchi, CN, Strain, EMA, van Belzen, J, van Dalen, J, Bouma, TJ, and Airoldi, L
- Abstract
Coastal systems are increasingly threatened by multiple local anthropogenic and global climatic stressors. With the difficulties in remediating global stressors, management requires alternative approaches that focus on local scales. We used manipulative experiments to test whether reducing local stressors (sediment load and nutrient concentrations) can improve the resilience of foundation species (canopy algae along temperate rocky coastlines) to future projected global climate stressors (high wave exposure, increasing sea surface temperature), which are less amenable to management actions. We focused on Fucoids (Cystoseira barbata) along the north-western Adriatic coast in the Mediterranean Sea because of their ecological relevance, sensitivity to a variety of human impacts, and declared conservation priority. At current levels of sediment and nutrients, C. barbata showed negative responses to the simulated future scenarios of high wave exposure and increased sea surface temperature. However, reducing the sediment load increased the survival of C. barbata recruits by 90.24% at high wave exposure while reducing nutrient concentrations resulted in a 20.14% increase in the survival and enhanced the growth of recruited juveniles at high temperature. We conclude that improving water quality by reducing nutrient concentrations, and particularly the sediment load, would significantly increase the resilience of C. barbata populations to projected increases in climate stressors. Developing and applying appropriate targets for specific local anthropogenic stressors could be an effective management action to halt the severe and ongoing loss of key marine habitats.
- Published
- 2015
46. Corridors for aliens but not for natives: effects of marine urban sprawl at a regional scale
- Author
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Airoldi, L., Turon, Xavier, Perkol-Finkel, Shimrit, Rius, Marc, Airoldi, L., Turon, Xavier, Perkol-Finkel, Shimrit, and Rius, Marc
- Abstract
Aim The global sprawl of marine hard infrastructure (e.g. breakwaters, sea walls and jetties) can extensively modify coastal seascapes, but the knowledge of such impacts remains limited to local scales. We examined the regional-scale effects of marine artificial habitats on the distribution and abundance of assemblages of ascidians, a key group of ecosystem engineer species in benthic fouling systems. Location Five hundred kilometers of coastline in the North Adriatic Sea. Methods We sampled a variety of natural reefs, marine infrastructures and marinas, and tested hypotheses about the role of habitat type and location in influencing the relative distribution and abundance of both native and nonindigenous species. Results Assemblages differed significantly between natural and artificial habitats and among different types of artificial habitats. Non-indigenous species were 2–3 times more abundant on infrastructures built along sedimentary coastlines than on natural rocky reefs or infrastructures built close to rocky coastlines. Conversely, native species were twice as abundant on natural reefs than on nearby infrastructures and were scarce to virtually absent on infrastructures built along sedimentary coasts. The species composition of assemblages in artificial habitats was more similar to that of marinas than of natural reefs, independently of their location. Main conclusions Our results show that marine infrastructures along sandy shores disproportionally favour non-indigenous over native hard bottom species, affecting their spread at regional scales. This is particularly concerning for coastal areas that have low natural densities of rocky reef habitats. We discuss design and management options to improve the quality as habitat of marine infrastructures and to favour their preferential use by native species over nonindigenous ones.
- Published
- 2015
47. Experimental methods for the assessment of anthropogenic impact on assemblages and coastal marine environments
- Author
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BENEDETTI CECCHI L, AIROLDI L, FRASCHETTI, Simonetta, TERLIZZI, Antonio, GAMBI M.C., DAPPIANO M., BENEDETTI CECCHI, L, Airoldi, L, Fraschetti, Simonetta, and Terlizzi, Antonio
- Subjects
Monitoring ,Human impact ,Experimental design ,BACI ,Marine Protected Area - Published
- 2004
48. METODI SPERIMENTALI PER LA VALUTAZIONE DI INFLUENZE ANTROPICHE SU POPOLAMENTI ED AMBIENTI MARINI COSTIERI
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BENEDETTI CECCHI L, AIROLDI L, FRASCHETTI, Simonetta, TERLIZZI, Antonio, GAMBI MC, DAPPIANO Mm EDS, BENEDETTI CECCHI, L, Airoldi, L, Fraschetti, Simonetta, and Terlizzi, Antonio
- Published
- 2003
49. A continuum damage mechanics model for pit-to-crack transition in AA2024-T3
- Author
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Amiri, M., primary, Arcari, A., additional, Airoldi, L., additional, Naderi, M., additional, and Iyyer, N., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Identifying knowledge gaps hampering application of intertidal habitats in coastal protection: Opportunities & steps to take
- Author
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Bouma, T.J., van Belzen, J., Balke, T., Zhu, Z., Airoldi, L., Blight, A.J., Davies, A.J., Galván, C., Hawkins, S.J., Hoggart, S.P.G., Lara, J.L., Losada, I.J., Maza, M., Ondiviela, B., Skov, M.W., Strain, E.M., Thompson, R.C., Yang, S.L., Zanuttigh, B., Zhang, L., Herman, P.M.J., Bouma, T.J., van Belzen, J., Balke, T., Zhu, Z., Airoldi, L., Blight, A.J., Davies, A.J., Galván, C., Hawkins, S.J., Hoggart, S.P.G., Lara, J.L., Losada, I.J., Maza, M., Ondiviela, B., Skov, M.W., Strain, E.M., Thompson, R.C., Yang, S.L., Zanuttigh, B., Zhang, L., and Herman, P.M.J.
- Abstract
Over the last decades, population densities in coastal areas have strongly increased. At the same time, many intertidal coastal ecosystems that provide valuable services in terms of coastal protection have greatly degraded. As a result, coastal defense has become increasingly dependent on man-made engineering solutions. Ongoing climate change processes such as sea-level rise and increased storminess, require a rethinking of current coastal defense practices including the development of innovative and cost-effective ways to protect coastlines. Integrating intertidal coastal ecosystems within coastal defense schemes offers a promising way forward. In this perspective, we specifically aim to (1) provide insight in the conditions under which ecosystems may be valuable for coastal protection, (2) discuss which might be the most promising intertidal ecosystems for this task and (3) identify knowledge gaps that currently hamper application and hence need attention from the scientific community. Ecosystems can contribute most to coastal protection by wave attenuation in areas with relatively small tidal amplitudes, and/or where intertidal areas are wide. The main knowledge gap hampering application of intertidal ecosystems within coastal defense schemes is lack in ability to account quantitatively for long-term ecosystem dynamics. Such knowledge is essential, as this will determine both the predictability and reliability of their coastal defense function. Solutions integrating intertidal ecosystems in coastal defense schemes offer promising opportunities in some situations, but require better mechanistic understanding of ecosystem dynamics in space and time to enable successful large-scale application.
- Published
- 2014
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