Back to Search Start Over

IT16-M Laguna di Venezia

Authors :
Camatti, Elisa
Acri, Francesco
Anelli Monti, Marco
Bernardi Aubry, Fabrizio
Bon, Mauro
Buosi, Alessandro
Campostrini, Pierpaolo
Cavraro, Francesco
Curiel, Daniele
Dabal��, Caterina
Facca, Chiara
Finotto, Stefania
Franzoi, Piero
Guarneri, Irene
Juhmani, Abdul-Salam
Keppel, Erica
Morgantin, Matteo
Pansera, Marco
Pranovi, Fabio
Pugnetti, Alessandra
Redolfi Bristol, Simone
Sarretta, Alessandro
Scapin, Luca
Schroeder, Anna
Sigovini, Marco
Sfriso, Adriano
Sfriso, Andrea Augusto
Tagliapietra, Davide
Tomio, Yari
Wolf, Marion Adelheid
Zucchetta, Matteo
Publisher :
Zenodo

Abstract

The Lagoon of Venice covers a surface area of about 550 km2, roughly 80% of which is covered by water, about 10% by salt marshes and 5% by islands. The mean depth of the water column is about 1.2 m, with only 5% of the lagoon deeper than 5 m. It is connected to the Adriatic Sea through three inlets (Lido, Malamocco, Chioggia), which allow tidal flushing twice a day. The mean tidal range is 61 cm (calculated on 1986-2004), the largest in the Mediterranean. The majority of the lagoon can be classified as mixoeuhaline/mixopolyhaline according to the "Venice System" (Anonymous, 1959), with a mean salinity of about 30, ranging from marine (around 37), to mesohaline (5 ��� 18) near the bay-head river mouths (Zirino et al., 2014). Because of the shallowness of the lagoon, water temperature follows the seasonal trends of air temperature, with very low values during winter, although seldom freezing, to above 30��C during summer. From the biological point of view, the benthic communities of this meso/eutrophic ecosystem, mainly belong to the "Lagunaire Euryhaline et Eurytherme (L.E.E.)" biocenosis as defined by Peres and Picard (1964). These benthic communities are characterized by seagrass meadows (Zostera noltei, Zostera marina, Cymodocea nodosa), over than 300 species of macroalgae and over 800 species of macroinvertebrates. The phytoplankton communities are dominated by diatoms and phytoflagellates, while the zooplankton communities are characterized by the predominance of copepods and different larval forms of e.g. bivalves, echinoderms or benthic crustaceans. The nektonic communities are made both by resident species and by species that spend only a part of their life cycle in the lagoon (migratory and occasional visitors). The avifauna is characterized by ornithic communities nesting in salty grasslands and wintering throughout the whole lagoon basin. The research activities in the Venice Lagoon, that include analyses of environmental parameters and the study of biodiversity and ecology of phyto- and zooplankton, phyto- and zoobenthos and ichthyo- and avifauna, are aimed at understanding the long-term variability of the structure and the relationships between the components of this ecosystem and the resulting processes

Details

Language :
Italian
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........986d517412be7aa93bd7703fb3a5284c