0000000000075829

AUTHOR

Riccardo Scalenghe

showing 79 related works from this author

Proposal of a Citrus translational genomic approach for early and infield detection of Flavescence dorée in Vitis

2014

Flavescence dore´e (FD) is one of the most widely known grapevine yellows disease and one of the most unabated worldwide in the viticulture sector. In this paper, we outline a strategy for developing an integrated system of technologies to enable rapid, early disease FD detection and diagnosis. We propose the deployment of a newly developed sensor device, the differential mobility spectrometer (DMS), which has shown positive results with a similar vector-borne disease in Citrus. We have previously demonstrated that the gas chromatograph DMS (GC/DMS) can distinguish various citrus diseases, and the system may also allow detection of volatile organic compound (VOC) signals from a tree of othe…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinePlant ScienceComputational biologyBiology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesSettore AGR/07 - Genetica AgrariaBotanyProfile analysisPlant systemEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDifferential mobility spectrometer early detection Flavescence dore´e phytoplasma qRT-PCR ELISA VitisfungiEarly diseasefood and beveragesSettore AGR/12 - Patologia VegetaleGrapevine yellowsSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni ErbaceeSettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni Arboree030104 developmental biologySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaFlavescence doréeGas chromatographyGas chromatography–mass spectrometryDisease transmission010606 plant biology & botany
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Pedogenesis in disturbed alpine soils (NW Italy)

2002

In alpine environments, natural or man-induced disturbances are fairly common and acknowledged as determining factors in pedogenesis and soil distribution. We have selected a representative alpine valley in the Italian Northwestern Alps to evaluate the effects of perturbations of different intensity and frequency on soil development and weathering during the last few centuries. In order of decreasing disturbances, we selected: (i) an active avalanche shoot; (ii) a man-built terrace; (iii) a park-like forest; and (iv) a coniferous forest. In the two most disturbed sites, independently of the intensity and frequency of the disturbances, the active pedogenic processes are restricted to the top…

chemistry.chemical_classificationTopsoilSoil ScienceSoil scienceWeatheringVegetationengineering.materialPodzolPedogenesischemistryIlliteengineeringSoil horizonOrganic matterGeologyGeoderma
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An Early Beginning of Citizen Science: Adolescents Experiencing Urban Energy Usages and Air Pollution

2021

Here, we report on the process and development of high school science projects, which were inspired by a citizen science program focused on urban monitoring. We gathered and discussed two 1980s projects’ data, involving 2600 students, 80 teachers, 15 scientists and 20 stakeholders. We added recent survey data from speaking with the former participants. Our analysis revealed key findings: (1) the process of a student-driven science investigation engages students in the scientific practices; (2) it is important to bring together scientists, teachers and students, reflecting the importance of multi-dimensional learning; and (3) citizen science was born before the 1990s, when the term came into…

Process (engineering)Energy (esotericism)RC435-571010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesPediatricsRJ1-5701980’sCitizen scienceComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATIONPsychologySociology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesPsychiatrySettore ICAR/03 - Ingegneria Sanitaria-Ambientalebusiness.industry05 social sciences050301 educationGeneral MedicinePublic relations1980’STEMscience enthusiastsBF1-990ItalySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaSustainabilitySurvey data collectionbusinessSettore M-GGR/01 - Geografia0503 educationAdolescents
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A rapid method of screening ceramic artefacts to reject unlikely hypotheses of provenance

2019

This study was aimed at testing a cost‐effective method based on comparing the rare earth element patterns in artefacts of known origin with patterns of potential raw materials, thus allowing the restriction/exclusion of working hypotheses on provenance, and consequently a better focus of research funding. The method targets ceramics/materials of terrigenous origin. Lanthanoids and yttrium patterns were determined in 26 wine amphorae that had a well‐established geographical origin from the Nuovo Mercato Testaccio in Rome, and these patterns were compared to plausible terrigenous materials from various ancient Roman regions. The point was not to pinpoint the origins of the material, but rath…

ArcheologyProvenanceDressel 2–4visual_artEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)visual_art.visual_art_mediumREYCeramicREEData scienceDressel 6AGeologyGeoarchaeology
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The contamination legacy of a decommissioned iron smelter in the Italian Alps

2018

The economically important activity of metal processing can tend to contribute to the degradation of the environment. Smelting is an important source of contaminants, dispersing large quantities of potentially toxic elements (PTE) and coproducts into the environment. Soils in the vicinity of smelters frequently contain high concentrations of PTE. In terms of the quantities processed, the major PTE are iron (Fe), aluminium (Al), copper (Cu), lead (Pb), manganese (Mn), and zinc (Zn); of these Cu, Pb and Zn are, potentially, highly hazardous elements. The general problem addressed by this study is to determine if the PTE concentration in the soils of an area downwind from a decommissioned iron…

Pollutionmedia_common.quotation_subjectSettore AGR/13 - Chimica Agrariachemistry.chemical_elementManganese010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesSettore CHIM/12 - Chimica Dell'Ambiente E Dei Beni Culturalichemistry.chemical_compoundLand reclamationGeochemistry and PetrologyAqua regiaSteel-making industryMountain0105 earth and related environmental sciencesmedia_commonTopsoil04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesContaminationMountain; PTE; Remediation options; Steel-making industry; Geochemistry and Petrology; Economic GeologyRemediation optionchemistrySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterSmelting040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceEconomic GeologyPTE
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A view of extraterrestrial soils

2009

International audience; The nature of soils on celestial bodies other than Earth is a growing area of research in planetary geology. However, disagreement over the significance of these deposits arises in part due to the lack of a unified concept and definition of soil in the literature. The pragmatic definition “medium for plant growth” is taken by some to imply the necessity of biota for soil to exist, and has been commonly adopted in the planetary science community. In contrast, a more complex and informative definition bases on scientific theory: soil is the (bio)geochemically/physically altered material at the surface of a planetary body that encompasses surficial extraterrestrial tell…

Planetary bodySolar SystemPedogenesisextraterrestrial soilsEarth scienceSoil ScienceMars Exploration ProgramPlanetary geologyAstrosolMilky WayPlanetary scienceTelluric BodieAsteroidPlanetSettore AGR/14 - Pedologia[SHS.ENVIR]Humanities and Social Sciences/Environmental studiesExtraterrestrial lifePhysical geographyGeology
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The anthropogenic sealing of soils in urban areas

2009

The sealing of soils by impervious materials is, normally, detrimental to its ecological functions. Exchanges of energy, water and gases are restricted or hampered and an increasing pressure is being exerted on adjacent, non sealed areas. The negative effects span from loss of plant production and natural habitats to increased floods, pollution, and health risks and consequently higher social costs. Environmental Agencies produce periodical reports where the phenomenon of soil consumption by urban infrastructures is monitored with extremely sophisticated geographical tools but little specific research is available that describes the effects of soil sealing. This paper reviews some recent co…

gas transferwater cycleManagement Monitoring Policy and LawUrban areacomplex mixturesEnvironmental protectionSoil functionsconsumoImpervious surfacesuoli urbani; impermeabilizzazione; consumoEnvironmental degradationNature and Landscape Conservationgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyEcologySoil classificationimpermeabilizzazionesuoli urbaniSoil contaminationEnvironmental soil scienceEuropeUrban Studiesurban sprawlSettore AGR/14 - Pedologiaurban soilSoil waterimpactEnvironmental science
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Soil is brown gold in the Emilia-Romagna region, Italy

2014

Soil is a natural resource essential to human welfare by virtue of its numerous crucial functions. In the past, soil has been taken for granted because of its widespread, albeit finite, availability. However, now that world's population is projected to exceed ten billion before the end of this century, soil is increasingly perceived as a precious commodity. Consequently, soil is increasingly under pressure by rich private investors and governments within the poorest countries to satisfy appetites for food production and biofuel. A case study is used to explore the plausibility of soil being considered as ‘brown gold’. Based on the comparison of land use maps, we estimated the value in terms…

education.field_of_studyFood securityLand useNatural resource economicsGeography Planning and DevelopmentPopulationForestryfood securityManagement Monitoring Policy and LawNatural resourcesoil sealingSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaEnvironmental protectionAgricultural landSustainabilitySoil governanceEconomicsLand use land-use change and forestryland takeSettore M-GGR/01 - GeografiaeducationNature and Landscape ConservationLand Use Policy
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Influence of 150 Years of Land Use on Anthropogenic and Natural Carbon Stocks in Emilia-Romagna Region (Italy)

2011

Changes in land use/cover that are commonly associated with urbanization can dramatically influence the amount, chemical form, and spatial distribution of carbon (C) stocks. Measured values and relative literature for composition of natural and anthropogenic materials have been compiled. These data are used in conjunction with land cover statistics and expert assessment of building design to calculate C stocks associated with 150 years of land use change and development for an area of the Po River Valley, Northern Italy. Using 4 time periods (1853, 1954, 1976, and 2003), we demonstrate that the C stocks within this densely populated area have undergone considerable modification. A 52% incre…

Conservation of Natural ResourcesLand coverSpatial distributionSettore ICAR/21 - UrbanisticaPopulation densityNatural (archaeology)soilcarbon sinkUrbanizationPer capitaEnvironmental ChemistryHumansLand use land-use change and forestryHuman ActivitiesOrganic ChemicalsMineralsLand useGeneral ChemistryCarbon DioxideCarbonItalySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaEnvironmental sciencePhysical geographyplanningSettore M-GGR/01 - Geografia
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The cork oak in the Mountains of Palermo (Italy): ecological insights from the south-eastern edge of its distribution range

2020

Abstract: The uneven presence of the cork oak (Quercus suber L.) within its distribution range is not only determined by its climatic requirements but also by specific edaphic needs. Although most of the natural populations thrive in acidic soils deriving from metamorphic or volcanic rock outcrops, some cork oak populations are found growing in soils deriving from calcareous bedrock, which are considered less suitable. We carried out a multidisciplinary investigation at the south eastern edge of the Q. suber distribution range (Mountains of Palermo, NW Sicily), including soil, floristic, and vegetation surveys, aimed at: (i) assessing the native or introduced origin of some peculiar cork oa…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaMediterranean climatesoil chemistrySettore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E SelvicolturaRange (biology)Quercus suberCorkengineering.materialwildfiremediterranean evergreen foresttree speciesquercus suberlcsh:ForestryNature and Landscape Conservationgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiologyEcologyMediterranean Evergreen Forest Soil Chemistry Vegetation Science Wildfire Landscape Tree Species Quercus suberBedrockForestryPlant communityEdaphicVegetationlandscapebiology.organism_classificationvegetation scienceSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E Applicataengineeringlcsh:SD1-669.5iForest - Biogeosciences and Forestry
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Water need of Energy Crops – one of the environmental problems of Poland

2010

The government policy updates of Poland are presented, showing legal and financial instruments for governing bioenergy developments. The strategy for renewable energy must be co-ordinated with the strategy of water management in the country. The water needs are given for cool climate and extensive agriculture of Central and Eastern Europe which are few times lower than for hotter condition of Southern Europe. Despite this the rain would be not enough for water supply of most of the energy crops.

Energy cropsubsidiebiomassReference yieldSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaEnvironmental protectionSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-ForestaliBusinessEnvironmental planningSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni Erbacee
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Mountain dairy wastewater treatment with the use of a 'irregularly shaped' constructed wetland (Aosta Valley, Italy)

2014

Abstract In mountain areas, economical activities related to milk processing represent both a key source of income and job opportunities. One of the main characteristics of cheese production is the seasonal variability in the volume of milk processed and wastewater production that tend to limit the capacity of ecosystems to absorb their inputs. In alpine environment, the scarcity of plain surfaces and the climatic conditions results in the need for high CW performances of variable nutrient inputs in different seasons. By evaluating a CW seasonal efficiency for dairy wastewaters in a mountain region (Aosta Valley-NW Italy), this research was aimed to understand how performances of nutrient r…

HydrologyEnvironmental Engineeringcheese makingEnvironmental engineeringManagement Monitoring Policy and LawSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni Erbaceechemistry.chemical_compoundNutrientWastewaterNitratechemistryVolume (thermodynamics)Settore AGR/14 - PedologiaBOD5Constructed wetlandEnvironmental scienceSewage treatmentEcosystemOverall performancewastewaterSettore AGR/16 - Microbiologia AgrariaNature and Landscape Conservation
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Describing urban soils through a faceted system ensures more informed decision-making

2016

Urban areas are increasing worldwide at a dramatic rate and their soils definitely deserve more attention than they have received in the past. In urban environments, soils potentially provide the same ecosystem services as in rural and wild environments, although in some cases they are depleted of their basic functions, such as when they lose their productive and filtering capacities because of sealing, and become mere supports for infrastructures. In other cases, soils of urban areas acquire new functions that are unique to these environments. Current soil classifications fail to effectively account for the complexity of urban soils and the information that is required for their management…

EngineeringUrban soilEcosystem serviceSettore AGR/13 - Chimica AgrariaGeography Planning and DevelopmentContext (language use)ECOSYSTEM SERVICESGeostatisticsSoil information transfer010501 environmental sciencesManagement Monitoring Policy and Law01 natural sciencesEcosystem servicesMarket fragmentationHEAVY-METALSknowledge organizationSoil functionsUrban planningFacetEUROPEAN CITIESurban soilsLand use land-use change and forestryEnvironmental planningurban soils knowledge organization faceted system0105 earth and related environmental sciencesNature and Landscape ConservationFlexibility (engineering)HEALTH-RISKfaceted systemLAND-USEbusiness.industryEnvironmental engineeringForestry04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesGREEN SPACESSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaSoil function040103 agronomy & agricultureCLASSIFICATION-SYSTEM0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesSPATIAL-DISTRIBUTIONCONTAMINATED LANDCARBON STOCKSSettore M-GGR/01 - GeografiabusinessLand Use Policy
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An anthropic soil transformation fingerprinted by REY patterns

2009

Abstract This Focus article deals intentionally with modern soil disturbance in situ . This is of interest to archaeologists as after disturbances, both short- and long-term, pedogenesis (re-)starts obliterating previous signs. Soil modifications induced by human activity may be linked to pedogenetic evidence for disturbance with archaeological evidence for the cultural activities. We contrasted two 750-m 3 soil pedons, an Anthrosol and a Kastanozem, from which the Anthrosol is derived, using 77 descriptors of soil properties which have been utilized in archaeological studies (pedo-morphological, routine laboratory, biochemical, metals and rare earth elements plus yttrium, REY) with the aim…

ArcheologyDisturbance (geology)PedogenesisCultural activitiesEarth scienceRare earthBulk soilSpatial ecologyRoutine laboratorySoil scienceAnthrosolAnthrosols Anthropocene Ploughing LanthanidesGeology
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Disambiguating the soils of Mars

2020

Abstract Anticipated human missions to Mars require a methodical understanding of the unconsolidated bulk sediment that mantles its surface, given its role as an accessible resource for water and as a probable substrate for food production. However, classifying martian sediment as soil has been pursued in an ad hoc fashion, despite emerging evidence from in situ missions for current and paleo-pedological processes. Here we find that in situ sediment at Gusev, Meridiani and Gale are consistent with pedogenesis related to comminuted basalts mixing with older phyllosilicates – perhaps of pluvial origin – and sulfates. Furthermore, a notable presence of hydrated amorphous phases indicates signi…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSettore GEO/04 - Geografia Fisica E GeomorfologiaEarth scienceWeatheringMartian soilRegolith01 natural sciences0103 physical sciencesWorld Reference Base for Soil ResourcesCryosol010303 astronomy & astrophysics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesUSDA soil taxonomyMartianSoil TaxonomyGelisolAstronomy and AstrophysicsSoil classificationMineral weatheringPedogenesisSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaSpace and Planetary ScienceSoil waterEnvironmental scienceWRBSettore M-GGR/01 - GeografiaPlanetary and Space Science
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Are agricultural soils under a continental temperate climate susceptible to episodic reducing conditions and increased leaching of phosphorus?

2012

International audience; Soil science research has probably underestimated the significance that short-term, episodic cycles of reduction and oxidation has had on phosphorus (P) reactivity. Here, the effects of eleven pulsed reduction-oxidation (including wet-dry) cycles on soil P dynamics are compared for 12 soils having contrasting properties and all overfertilised with respect to P. The laboratory based incubation conditions attempted to simulate transient waterlogging of the soil profile and involved repeated sampling and analysis of both the solution and solid phase P forms. An initial increase in P concentration in solution that occurred up to and including the fourth full cycle was fo…

Environmental EngineeringClimateSettore AGR/13 - Chimica AgrariaClimate change010501 environmental sciencesManagement Monitoring Policy and Law01 natural sciencesSoilOverfertilised soilTemperate climateLeaching (agriculture)fosforoFertilizersWaste Management and DisposalIncubationsuolo0105 earth and related environmental sciencesReduction2. Zero hungerHydrologyRedox chemistryMoistureChemistry[CHIM.ORGA]Chemical Sciences/Organic chemistryAgriculturePhosphorus04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesGeneral Medicine[CHIM.CATA]Chemical Sciences/Catalysis15. Life on landOlsen POrganic Psuolo; fosforo; Redox chemistry.Settore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni Erbacee13. Climate actionSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaEnvironmental chemistrySoil water040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesSoil horizonCycling[CHIM.OTHE]Chemical Sciences/OtherOxidation-Reduction
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Some effects of a buried electricity transmission cable on bulk soil.

2007

A case study in NW Italy investigating an underground electric line (1 m depth triple cable at operative voltages 220-380 kV) measured electric fields in the surrounding soil virtually close to zero but magnetic fields (microTs) 20 times the background level. After 6 months, the influence radius around the cable on microbial activity (estimated by soil ATP), organic carbon, and total nitrogen follows exactly the inverse trend of the MF, shifting the biological activity with a lag distance of 5 m from the 220 kV cable.

Electromagnetic fieldNitrogenPhysiologyBiophysicsBulk soilSoil scienceRadiation DosageSoilElectromagnetic FieldsElectricityElectric fieldIron oxideRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingRadiometryOrganic carbonSoil Microbiologybusiness.industryDose-Response Relationship RadiationGeneral MedicineRadiusMagnetic fieldElectric power transmissionSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaAlfisolEnvironmental scienceElectricitybusinessVoltageBioelectromagnetics
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Water needs of production of biomass for energy in Poland

2009

The paper presents the updates of Polish government policy , showing legal and financial instruments for governing the bioenergy developments. The strategy for renewable energy must be co-ordinated with the strategy of water management in a country. The water needs are given for cool climate and extensive agriculture of Central and Eastern Europe. They are a few times lower than for hotter condition of Southern Europe. Despite this the rain would be not enough for water supply of most of the energy crops.

BiomaSubsidiesReference yieldCrop-water needEuropean UnionSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni Erbacee
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Strawberry fields forever: That is, how many grams of plastics are used to grow a strawberry?

2020

Abstract In important areas of the agricultural sector, plastic is one of the most important tools for improving the managerial and economic performance of companies. Horticultural production under protected cultivation, in particular, makes abundant use of plastic polymers—polymers that mostly turn into waste. This study aims to identify similar organisational models among farmers operating in the strawberry production sector in relation to their intention to recycle plastic material and which factors characterize these models (attitudes, subjective norms, perceived behavioural control, and socio-demographic characteristics) and to quantify the plastic used in relation to the different typ…

Environmental EngineeringRelation (database)Plastic recyclingPolymers0208 environmental biotechnologyControl (management)02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciencesManagement Monitoring Policy and LawFragaria01 natural sciencesProduction (economics)RecyclingWaste Management and Disposal0105 earth and related environmental sciencesbusiness.industryCircular economyGeneral MedicineEnvironmental economics020801 environmental engineeringItalyOrder (business)AgricultureSustainabilityBusinessPlasticsJournal of Environmental Management
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Do soils exist outside Earth?

2010

Abstract On Earth, soils form thanks to the combined action of at least five factors: parent rock, climate, topography, biota, and time. However, the necessity of biota as unavoidable soil forming factor is debated, as important parts of our planet experiencing extreme climates host virtually life-free soils with advanced horizonation. Now that space exploration has greatly expanded our understanding of the Solar System, providing consistent evidences that the loose, unconsolidated "skin" of some nearby rocky bodies is lifeless, it is time to establish if the latter can be considered to be soil in a pedological sense. Our feeling is that, since the concept of soil chiefly bases on the occur…

Earth scienceSettore ING-IND/05 - Impianti E Sistemi AerospazialiAstronomy and AstrophysicsWeatheringBiotaGeophysicsMars Exploration ProgramRegolithSoil Regolith Solar System Weathering PedologySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaSpace and Planetary ScienceSoil waterEarth (chemistry)PedologyParent rockGeologyPlanetary and Space Science
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THE IMPACT OF WARFARE ON THE SOIL ENVIRONMENT

2013

Abstract One of the most dramatic ways humans can affect soil properties is through the performance of military activities. Warfare-induced disturbances to soil are basically of three types – physical, chemical, and biological – and are aimed at causing direct problems to enemies or, more often, are indirect, undesired ramifications. Physical disturbances to soil include sealing due to building of defensive infrastructures, excavation of trenches or tunnels, compaction by traffic of machinery and troops, or cratering by bombs. Chemical disturbances consist of the input of pollutants such as oil, heavy metals, nitroaromatic explosives, organophosphorus nerve agents, dioxins from herbicides, …

PollutantPedogenesisEnvironmental remediationEcologyPedosphereSoil morphologyHeavy metalsPollutionSoil materialContaminationSoil functionsEnvironmental protectionSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaAnthropogenic disturbanceRadionuclideGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesHigher animalsSettore M-GGR/01 - GeografiaBombturbation
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The role of pedogenic overprinting in the obliteration of parent material in some polygenetic landscapes of Sicily (Italy)

2016

Abstract Many soils older than the Holocene have experienced several changes, and possess properties that may be due to the complex effect of several stages of soil development; these soils are called polygenetic. It is still rather unclear, however, if, as time elapses, pedogenic processes tend to diverge generating different soils, or converge towards increasingly similar soils. We studied five pedons (37°60′N, 13°90′E) exposed to present weathering simultaneously since the Holocene but located on Upper Miocene or Holocene parent material. Their XRD and FTIR clay mineralogy reveal an overall homogeneity; smectites, calcite and gypsum reach the thermodynamic equilibrium, a slight undersatu…

Vertic CambisolGeochemistryMineralogySoil ScienceWeatheringengineering.materialMediterranean010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesGypsic HaploxereptKaoliniteGypsic VertisolMicromorphologyHolocene0105 earth and related environmental sciencesVertic Haploxerept04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesPedogenesisSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaIlliteSoil water040103 agronomy & agricultureengineering0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesSoil horizonClayClay mineralsGeology
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Carbon stocks in a 50‑year‑oldEucalyptus camaldulensisstand in Sicily, Italy

2015

Eucalyptus stands in semi-arid areas may contribute to enhance carbon (C) stocks in both biomass and soil. However, the limited information available is mainly focused on short-rotation plantations. In this study, the above- and below-ground C pools in five 50-year-old Eucalyptus camaldulensis Dehnh. stands planted on Miocenic evaporitic deposits in Sicily, Italy, with a xeric and thermic pedoclimate, were measured. Above-ground biomass was determined by partitioning and weighing branches, stem and leaves. Below-ground C pools included the determination of litter, root biomass, and soil organic and inorganic C. In terms of the above-ground biomass, the E. camaldulensis stand accumulated on …

rootsbelow-ground biomassSettore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E Selvicolturasemi-arid Mediterranean climateSettore AGR/13 - Chimica AgrariaBiomassDeserts and xeric shrublandssoillitterbelow-ground biomaabove-ground biomassTotal organic carbonevaporitic depositsSoil organic matterabove-ground biomass; below-ground biomass; evaporitic deposits; litter; roots; semi-arid Mediterranean climate; soil; ForestryForestrySoil classificationForestryrootEucalyptusevaporitic depositEucalyptus camaldulensisAgronomySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaLitterEnvironmental scienceabove-ground biomaSouthern Forests: a Journal of Forest Science
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Resource or waste? A perspective of plastics degradation in soil with a focus on end-of-life options.

2018

‘Capable-of-being-shaped’ synthetic compounds are prevailing today over horn, bone, leather, wood, stone, metal, glass, or ceramic in products that were previously left to natural materials. Plastic is, in fact, economical, simple, adaptable, and waterproof. Also, it is durable and resilient to natural degradation (although microbial species capable of degrading plastics do exist). In becoming a waste, plastic accumulation adversely affects ecosystems. The majority of plastic debris pollutes waters, accumulating in oceans. And, the behaviour and the quantity of plastic, which has become waste, are rather well documented in the water, in fact. This review collects existing information on pla…

PLA polylactic acidPS polystyreneETS European Emissions Trading schemePOM polyoxymethyleneHMC heat melt compactor technology02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciencesNHV net habitable volumeLDPE low-density polyethylene01 natural sciencesPC polycarbonateResin identification codeLCP liquid crystal polymerslcsh:Social sciences (General)PAC pro-oxidant additive containingPET polyethylene terephthalateEPR Extended Producers ResponsibilityMultidisciplinaryWaste managementNatural materials021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyPU or PUR polyurethaneSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni ErbaceeEPS expandable polystyreneRIC resin identification codeSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaPVDF polydifluoroethylenelcsh:H1-990210 nano-technologyBiogeoscienceGPPS Polystyrene (General Purpose)PVC polyvinyl chlorideResource (biology)Polymethyl methacrylatePA polyamidePBT polybutylene terephthalatePSU polyarylsulfonePTFE polytetrafluoroethylenePMMA polymethyl methacrylatePHA polyhydroxyalkanoateMicrobiologyPEEK polyaryletheretherketoneArticleEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental science Biogeoscience Industry MicrobiologyPPA polyphthalamideTPE thermoplastic polyester elastomerNatural degradationIndustryPPS polyphenylene sulphidelcsh:Science (General)ABS acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene0105 earth and related environmental sciencesbusiness.industryPP polypropyleneHDPE high-density polyethyleneBPA bisphenol AHBCD hexabromocyclododecaneFuture studyAgricultureDOM dissolved organic matterDegradation (geology)Environmental sciencebusinesslcsh:Q1-390Heliyon
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Simulating soil freeze/thaw cycles typical of winter alpine conditions: Implications for N and P availability

2007

Abstract Seasonally snow-covered alpine soils may be subjected to freeze/thaw cycles, particularly during years having little snow and during the late winter and early spring periods. Freeze/thaw cycles can stimulate soil mineralization and could therefore be one factor regulating nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) availability and cycling. In this study laboratory incubation experiments using four soils having contrasting properties have been used to characterize the change in N and P forms (microbial and soluble inorganic/organic) that occur after simulated freeze/thaw cycles. Soil samples were collected from locations representing extreme examples of either direct human management (grazed m…

Organic phosphoruTopsoilEcologySoil testMicrobial biomaSoil ScienceSoil scienceMineralization (soil science)NitrateAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)chemistry.chemical_compoundAnimal scienceNitratechemistrySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaSoil waterAmmoniumOrganic nitrogenCyclingPennines AlpsNitrogen cycleAmmonium
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Consequence of litter removal on pedogenesis: A case study in Bachs and Irchel (Switzerland)

2016

In forests, soils contain at least twice as much carbon than plants that mostly grow in the upper layers. Litter at the interface between soils and the atmosphere regulates a variety of biogeochemical cycles, which are important for both plants and soils and have possible implications for other environmental components. We have compared leachates collected during an incubation experiment on: a) beech and oak leaves; b) organic subhorizons OLn, OLv, OF, and mineral A horizon; c) treated with litter removal (and untreated) plots, to assess the changes in the chemical composition of the litter layers and leachates during weathering and their influence on the underlying horizons. . Two differen…

Biogeochemical cycle010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesChemistryNitrogenSettore AGR/13 - Chimica AgrariaBiomassSoil ScienceLuvisol04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesPlant litter01 natural sciencesPodzol13C CPMAS NMRSUVAPedogenesisSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaEnvironmental chemistryDissolved organic carbonBotanySoil water040103 agronomy & agricultureLitter0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesPodzol0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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Vegetation, soils, and humus forms of Sardinian holm oak forests and approximated cross-harmonization of vegetation types, WRB Soil Groups and humus …

2018

Five plant communities, related to elevation above sea level and geological substrata, are recognized in the holm oak forests of Sardinia (Italy). These forests show a considerable inhomogeneous structure due to present day and past uses. Coppice management prevails, influencing the quantity and quality of organic horizons. Most frequent mineral soils are Cambisols, Leptosols, and Regosols. Regarding the humus forms, Moder and, with less extent, Amphi, are prevailing. Furthermore, the paper presents a synoptic table giving a rough picture of the relationships between vegetation types, WRB Soil Groups and humus forms in selected Mediterranean ecosystems.

Regosol010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSoil biologySoil ScienceSardinia01 natural sciencesHolm oak forestWRB soil groupTable (landform)EcosystemHumus form0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEcologyEcologyPlant community04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesVegetationAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)HumusGeographySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaSoil waterMediterranean ecosystem040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesMineral soil
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Recycling Phosphorus from Agricultural Streams: Grey and Green Solutions

2022

Many intensively farmed soils show high phosphorus (P) contents compared to the thresholds required for agricultural production; 0.084 Mt of P year−1 is leaving the European terrestrial system. This paper focuses mainly on non-point flows of P and provides an overview of the most promising and sustainable solutions for P recycling, centred on waste materials from agriculture. Given the global shortage of the primary resource of P, its management is critical for its efficient use. Nowadays, wastage and loss at every stage of the P cycle raise concerns about future supplies and especially about the resulting environmental problems, such as the eutrophication of surface water bodies and the re…

Settore AGR/14 - PedologiaSettore AGR/13 - Chimica Agrariasoil fertiliser by-product surface water agricultural waste nutrient recoveryAgronomy and Crop ScienceSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni ErbaceeAgronomy
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DRIFTS Sensor: Soil Carbon Validation at Large Scale (Pantelleria, Italy)

2013

A fast and accurate measurement of soil carbon is needed in current scientific issues. Today there are many sensors suitable for these purposes, but choosing the appropriate sensor depends on the spatial scale at which the studies are conducted. There are few detailed studies that validate these types of measures allowing their immediate use. Here it is validated the quick use of a sensor in execution at Pantelleria, chosen for size, use and variability of the parameter measured, to give an operational tool for carbon stocks studies. The DRIFT sensor used here has been validated in the first 60 cm of the soil of the whole island, and it has shown predictivity higher than 90%.

EngineeringSettore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E SelvicolturaSettore AGR/13 - Chimica Agrariaanthropogenic soilsPLSMediterraneancarbon; nitrogen; DRIFT; PLS; Technosols; Mediterranean; anthropogenic soilscomputer.software_genrelcsh:Chemical technologyBiochemistryArticlenitrogenAnalytical ChemistryTechnosollcsh:TP1-1185Electrical and Electronic EngineeringTechnosolsInstrumentationCarbon stockRemote sensingbusiness.industrySoil organic mattercarbonSoil carbonAtomic and Molecular Physics and Opticscarbon; nitrogen; anthropogenic soils; Technosols; PLS; DRIFTDRIFTSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaSpatial ecologyData miningScale (map)businesscomputerSensors
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A new simple approach to evaluate pedogenic clay transformation in a Vertic Calcisol

2006

The aim of this study is to characterize the pedogenic clay minerals by using simple approach: Mixing mineralogical and geochemical findings. The fine clay fractions (< 0.1 μm) of a Vertic Cambisol profile were studied by means of X-ray diffraction (XRD), infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and cation exchange capacity (CEC). Qualitative and quantitative mineralogical compositions of the clay mixture were determined. Moreover, chemical equilibria and thermodynamic stabilities of minerals (calcite, gypsum, kaolinite, smectites and illites) were studied using results of ionic activities obtained from total concentration of various aqueous species in water extracts from soil-saturated pastes. XRD ana…

CalciteWorld Reference BaseGypsumAqueous solutionSaturated paste extractGeochemistryMineralogyCalcisolengineering.materialQ/ K ratioThermodynamic stabilitychemistry.chemical_compoundPedogenesischemistryGeochemistry and PetrologySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaengineeringKaoliniteSoil horizonEconomic GeologyClay minerals
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Plastic end-of-life alternatives, with a focus on the agricultural sector

2021

The end of life (EoL) of plastic polymers depends on when they stop being considered a resource and begin to be considered a waste. Even with dynamic management, plastic pollution will increase in the coming decades. Reduction strategies focus on reducing the quantities of materials used in the construction of individual objects for packaging, support for reuse and recycling, incentives for gathering low-value plastics, awareness, and simplification. The agricultural sector, a sector in which the use of plastic is (apparently) not high, needs to combine environmental, social, and above all economic aspects, which can help entrepreneurs in the sector to optimize the recycling process.

Focus (computing)business.industryProcess (engineering)02 engineering and technologyEnvironmental economicsReusesustainability010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciences0104 chemical sciencesplastics in the environmentenvironment &ampGeneral EnergyResource (project management)IncentiveSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaAgricultureSettore AGR/01 - Economia Ed Estimo RuraleDynamic management0210 nano-technologybusinessPlastic pollutionenergyCurrent Opinion in Chemical Engineering
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Aspects of phosphorus transfer from soils in Europe

2008

Imbalanced nutrient management has caused soil phosphorus (P) to become an environmental rather an agronomic problem in more economically developed countries. This subject has been the topic of numerous journal special issues, conferences, and reviews but we consider yet another review of this subject is necessary with the main target of providing a point of view on non-point transfer from soils and control strategies for an improved environmental management of P. This review considers the causes of the excessive P transfer from soil to surface water in Europe and the scientific knowledge necessary to develop control strategies. There has been an increasing trend towards the P-research inte…

Land useEcologyNatural resource economicsNutrient managementBest practiceSoil ScienceContext (language use)Plant ScienceConceptual frameworkWater Framework Directivemedia_common.cataloged_instanceBusinessEuropean unionNonpoint source pollutionmedia_commonJournal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science
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Unnamed Soils, Lost Opportunities.

2019

Have you ever read a scientific article about brown bear referred to as “an animal with long, thick brown fur and a shoulder height up to 150 cm” instead of using its scientific name, Ursus arctos? Or one where Oryza sativa is defined as “a plant that may grow to 1.8 m and produce pendulous inflorescences 50 cm long with edible caryopses”? Science employs as much as possible simple, stable, and widely accepted international classification systems for naming beings and things. The best known of such systems is the Linnaean system for naming organisms by two Latin terms, which refer to genus and species. Classifications are used in other fields, such as astronomy, chemistry, metallurgy, physi…

World Reference BaseSoilSoil TaxonomySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaAgroforestrySoil waterMEDLINEEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceGeneral ChemistryEnvironmental sciencetechnology
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The crucial interactions between climate and soil

2022

Since the birth of soil science, climate has been recognized as a soil-forming factor, along with parent rock, time, topography, and organisms (from which humans were later kept distinct), often prevalent on the other factors on the very long term. But the climate is in turns affected by soils and their management. This paper describes the interrelationships between climate – and its current change – and soil, focusing on each single factor of its formation. Parent material governs, primarily through the particle size distribution, the capacity of soil to retain water and organic matter, which are two main soil-related drivers of the climate. Time is the only unmanageable soil-forming facto…

SoilEnvironmental EngineeringSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaClimate ChangeHumansWaterEnvironmental ChemistryAgricultureBiodiversityLand surface albedo Emissions trading Greenhouse gases (GHG) Pedodiversity Soil organic matter (SOM) Soil water retentionPollutionWaste Management and Disposal
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Material sources of the Roman brick-making industry in the I and II century A.D. from Regio IX, Regio XI and Alpes Cottiae

2015

International audience; Bricks, fine pottery, ceramic gears and tiles are among the human-made objects routinely recovered in archaeological documentation. Sites associated with early civilizations can provide thousands of samples from a single excavation. They come in endless varieties according to economic and social circumstances and, as debris can last almost forever, provide important clues about the past behaviours in human societies. Any information about the provenance of ceramics is highly valuable in archaeological analysis. In the case of Roman brick-making, the provenance and manufacture of clayey materials are usually interpreted only by studying stamps imprinted on the artefac…

ProvenanceBrickSettore AGR/13 - Chimica AgrariaMagnetismM•A•[H] stamp[SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth SciencesExcavationRaw materialSesquipedalian brickArchaeologySoilIndustriaSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaRare earth elementSettore L-ANT/03 - Storia RomanaPotteryM center dot A center dot[H] stampRare earth elementsCrucial pointGeologyEarth-Surface Processes
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Connecting Existing Cemeteries Saving Good Soils (for Livings)

2019

Background: Urban sprawl consumes and degrades productive soils worldwide. Fast and safe decomposition of corpses requires high-quality functional soils, and land use which competes with both agriculture and buildings. On one hand, cremation does not require much land, but it has a high energy footprint, produces atmospheric pollution, and is unacceptable to some religious communities. On the other hand, as exhumations are not practiced, “green burials” require more surface area than current burial practices, so a new paradigm for managing land use is required. Conclusions: In this paper, we propose a concept for ‘green belt communalities’ (i.e., ecological corridors with multiple, yet flex…

Green beltDisposal practiceUrban agglomerationSettore AGR/13 - Chimica AgrariaGeography Planning and Development0211 other engineering and technologies0507 social and economic geographyTerrain02 engineering and technologyUrban environmentsManagement Monitoring Policy and LawFootprintEnvironmental planningLand useRenewable Energy Sustainability and the Environmentbusiness.industryLand take05 social sciencesUrban sprawlUrban area021107 urban & regional planningReligionUrban ecologyGeographySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaAgricultureSettore M-GGR/01 - Geografiabusiness050703 geographySustainability
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The First Forty Years of a Technosol

2009

Abstract Soil formation is often a very slow process that requires thousands and even millions of years. Human influence, occasionally on a par with the function of climate or geological forces, can accelerate the process and can be viewed as a distinct soil forming factor. This paper describes a soil, Haplic Regosol, in which anthrosolization dominates the soil forming process. Man-made soils, Technosols, were stabilized with techniques of ecological engineering (crib walls). We measured the main soil properties and focused on the movement of water (the reduction of soil weight is the key factor in stabilizing these calcschists). The newly deposited debris, sheltered by anthropic intervent…

RegosolHydrologyecological engineering; speed of pedogenesis; tension infiltrometerecological engineeringspeed of pedogenesiscrib wall ecological engineering speed of pedogenesis tension infiltrometerSoil ScienceVegetationTechnosolDebrisNutrientPedogenesisSettore AGR/14 - Pedologiatension infiltrometerSoil waterEnvironmental scienceColonization
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Soil REE patterns as tracers of the emplacement of metal-rich anthropogenic materials. A case study in Moa (Cuba)

2019

Purpose: Are rare earth element (REE) patterns employable as tracers in human interventions of bulk soil disturbances, when high concentrations of metals are involved in the in situ soil disturbance? In terms of bulk soil disturbance, it is difficult to distinguish between bulk soil disturbances and emplacement of new earthen material. Chemical fingerprinting, in particular REE plus yttrium, is applied across many fields, but predominantlyin tracking the sources of potential environmental contaminants. Materials and methods: The REE normalised patterns (HNO 3 :HF:HCl 3:1:1 digestion, ICP-MS) of two Calcaric Cambisols were compared with those of a Geric Ferralsol (Novic, Technic) originated …

StratigraphySettore AGR/13 - Chimica AgrariaBulk soilchemistry.chemical_elementSoil science010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesMiningSoil disturbance0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesRare-earth elementAnomaly (natural sciences)Continental crust04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesYttriumOverburdenchemistryLanthanoidSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaEarth-Surface ProcesseYLOIDSoil water040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceREYChemical fingerprintingJournal of Soils and Sediments
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Segregated ice and liquefaction effects on compaction of fragipans

2004

The brittleness of fragipans is generally ascribed to the close-packing fabric arrangement acquired at the initial step of pedogenesis thanks to physical processes. However, there is an on-going debate over the agent causing soil densification. In this work, we tested the plausibility that ice segregation or liquefaction could have been the cause of the compaction of four fragipans. Two of them are located in nonseismic areas that have experienced periglacial conditions; one is from a strongly seismic area not affected by periglacial conditions, while the fourth site underwent moderate seismic activity and slight periglacial conditions. After disaggregation in the laboratory, soil specimens…

Consolidation (soil)liquefactionCompactionSoil ScienceLiquefactionSoil scienceBulk densityfragipan; soil ice liquefactionPedogenesisIce segregationSettore AGR/14 - Pedologiaperiglacial procesoil ice liquefactionSoil horizonGeotechnical engineeringcompactionFragipanphysical propertyfragipanGeology
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Multitemporal mapping of peri-urban carbon stocks and soil sealing from satellite data.

2017

Abstract Peri-urbanisation is the expansion of compact urban areas towards low-density settlements. This phenomenon directly challenges the agricultural landscape multifunctionality, including its carbon (C) storage capacity. Using satellite data, we mapped peri-urban C stocks in soil and built-up surfaces over three areas from 1993 to 2014 in the Emilia-Romagna region, Italy: a thinly populated area around Piacenza, an intermediate-density area covering the Reggio Emilia-Modena conurbation and a densely anthropized area developing along the coast of Rimini. Satellite-derived maps enabled the quantitative analysis of spatial and temporal features of urban growth and soil sealing, expressed …

Environmental Engineering0211 other engineering and technologiesSoil protection02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesUrban sprawlPrime farmland soilsSatellite dataUrbanizationHuman settlementEnvironmental ChemistryWaste Management and DisposalStock (geology)0105 earth and related environmental sciencesbusiness.industryEnvironmental engineeringUrban sprawl021107 urban & regional planningPollutionConurbationLandsat; Land cover mapping; Prime farmland soils; Soil protection; Urban sprawl; Urban densificationUrban densificationAgricultureSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaSoil waterPrime farmland soilEnvironmental sciencePhysical geographybusinessLandsatLand cover mappingThe Science of the total environment
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Release of phosphorus under reducing and simulated open drainage conditions from overfertilised soils

2014

Does removal of cations from soil solution during soil reduction stimulate phosphorus (P) release? An ion-exchange resin system was employed to provide a sink during the incubation of twelve soils under fully reducing conditions. This experimental design was considered to better simulate the loss of ions likely to occur under field conditions than more routine batch type closed extraction systems where solutes build-up in the extract solution. The small solute concentrations that remain in the equilibrating solution suggest the mixed resin system acted as an effective sink over the whole experimental period. By maintaining a small P concentration the resin system mimics soil drainage condit…

Environmental EngineeringHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisClimateSettore AGR/13 - Chimica Agrariaphosphorus; soil; REDOX REACTIONSREDOX REACTIONSchemistry.chemical_elementengineering.materialRedoxSink (geography)Settore CHIM/12 - Chimica Dell'Ambiente E Dei Beni CulturaliSoilEnvironmental ChemistrySoil PollutantsDrainageFertilizersIncubationgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryChemistryMagnesiumanoxicPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthEnvironmental engineeringAgriculturePhosphorusGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistryPollutionAnoxic watersSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni ErbaceeresinsEnvironmental chemistryredoxSoil waterengineeringFertilizer
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Soil Heavy Metals Patterns in the Torino Olympic Winter Games Venue (E.U.)

2008

International audience; The city of Torino (45°N, 7°E NW Italy) has a long history of heavy industry. Additional sources of potential pollutants originate from transport such as car emissions. We selected an area potentially at high risk of contamination: it is sandwiched between roads, the circular Turin highway and the motorway which connects to France, and a landfill where special and hazardous solid wastes from industry are disposed of. Our main aim was i) to discriminate between these sources of heavy metals (HM) and ii) to assess a simplified HM transfer scenario. We started with air diffusion models (inputs were meteo and chemistry of the particulate), then we described topsoils (12 …

PollutantmotorwayslandfillHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisParent materialEnvironmental engineeringSoil ScienceParticulatesContaminationFluvisolPollutionItaly[SHS.ENVIR] Humanities and Social Sciences/Environmental studiesHazardous waste[SHS.ENVIR]Humanities and Social Sciences/Environmental studiesFluvisolEnvironmental ChemistrySoil horizonSoil heavy metalsEruca sativa Mill.Soil and Sediment Contamination: An International Journal
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Soil organic carbon stocks under recommended management practices in different soils of semiarid vineyards

2019

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) approach is widely used to estimate the C account through the use of standardized coefficients that are not site specific. For these reasons, the aim of the work was to define specific IPCC coefficient taking into account differences in pedological characteristics that affect soil C steady state. In a vineyard area of Sicily, the effectiveness of 5 years of recommended management practice (RMP) adoption on soil organic carbon (SOC) stock increases was evaluated by considering 100 paired sites distributed over four functional soil groups. Each site consisted of two neighbouring plots. The soil of one plot was managed with cover crops accor…

Agroforestryvineyard soil management2Mediterranean environmentSoil ScienceDevelopmentSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni ErbaceeCOmitigationSoil watercarbon steady stateSoil organic carbon stocksEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceCover cropcover croppingManagement practicesGeneral Environmental ScienceLand Degradation &amp; Development
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The impractical supremacy of the local identity on the worthless soils of Mappano

2016

Introduction Soil is under pressure worldwide. In Italy, in the last two decades, land consumption has reached an average rate of 8 m2, demonstrating the failure of urban planning in controlling these phenomena. Despite the renewed recognition of the central role of soil resources, which has triggered numerous initiatives and actions, soil resources are still seen as a second-tier priority. No governance body exists to coordinate initiatives to ensure that soils are appropriately represented in decision-making processes. Global Soil Partnership draws our attention to the need for coordination to avoid fragmentation of efforts and wastage of resources. Both at a global and at a local level, …

Urban sprinkling Europe sprawl Land development Soil protectionGeography Planning and Development0211 other engineering and technologiesSoil protectionContext (language use)02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciencesSettore ICAR/21 - Urbanistica01 natural sciencesUrban planningArchitectureSoil governanceUrban sprinkling Europe sprawl Land development Soil protectionEnvironmental planningUrban sprinklingsprawl0105 earth and related environmental sciencesSustainable developmentLand useEcologybusiness.industryUrban sprawl021107 urban & regional planningUrban StudiesEuropeUrban ecologySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaLand developmentbusinessLand development
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Phosphorus Loss in Overfertilized Soils: The Selective P Partitioning and Redistribution Between Particle Size Separates

2007

Using 12 well-characterised European soils contrasting in their physical and chemical properties, we demonstrate significant differences in the partitioning of phosphorus (P) between various particle size separates. Samples of each soil were subjected to one of three methods of increasingly aggressive dispersion in the order water (WD), mechanical (MD) or chemical (CD). A general, although not exclusive, inverse relationship existed between the concentration of various attributes (these included organic carbon, oxalate and dithionite iron contents, total P, resin and water extractable P) and particle size. The quantity, composition and physico-chemical properties of individual size separate…

Total organic carbonChemistrySoil texturePrecipitation (chemistry)acqueSoil ScienceSorptionPlant ScienceSuoloAdsorptionEnvironmental chemistrySoil watermedia_common.cataloged_instanceParticle sizefosforoEuropean unionAgronomy and Crop ScienceSuolo; acque; fosforomedia_common
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Holocene as Anthropocene

2015

In their Perspective “Defining the epoch we live in” (3 April, p. [38][1]), W. F. Ruddiman et al. write that in spite of its popularity, the Anthropocene still lacks an official onset. They propose that the term anthropocene be used informally (without the initial capital), which would avoid the

MultidisciplinarySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaEpoch (reference date)AnthropoceneInitial capitalHolocene Anthropocene anthropic impact Earthanthropocene soilGenealogyHolocene
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Anthropogenic carbon stocks analysis in sparsely urbanized areas using remote sensing: a case study

2013

Anthropogenic carbon stocks in urbanized areas is a topic of growing importance at both local and regional scale nowadays, but its assessment is subjects to difficulties due to lack of data and spatial heterogeneity of the target. Remote sensing of urban areas has demonstrated its usefulness in assessing phenomena such as soil sealing and surface imperviousness, which are considered to be effective indicators of urbanization. This work presents a preliminary study of mid resolution satellite data capabilities in providing information about anthropogenic carbon stocks over the area of Emilia-Romagna region in Northern Italy. This has been done through a dual approach consisting of: (1) a dir…

Contextual image classificationcarbonLand coverSoil sealingNorthern italySpatial heterogeneityRemote Sensingsoil sealingItalySettore AGR/14 - Pedologia86-02UrbanizationSatellite dataEnvironmental scienceCarbon stockRemote sensingIMAGE PROCESSING AND COMPUTER VISION
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Soil is the best testifier of the diachronous dawn of the Anthropocene

2021

Humans act at worldwide scale as a growing geomorphic agent since mid‐Holocene (8,200–4,200 y BP) through the pervasive impacts of domestication, deforestation, agriculture, urbanization, and mining. The concept of Anthropocene has been introduced exactly to indicate the timespan in which humans have joined with other natural forces in impacting the outermost shell of the planet and the biosphere. Soils, which are the Earth's skin, are sensitive archives of any major human‐induced local to global change. Especially when buried, soils can permanently preserve the primordial traces of a significant impact of man on the environment, which occurred at different times and rates in different area…

Earth scienceagriculture / diachroneity / Geological Time Scale / golden spike / Great Acceleration / Holocene / Homo sapiensSoil ScienceBiosphereGlobal changePlant ScienceDiachronousNatural (archaeology)GeographyDeforestationAnthropoceneSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaEarly anthropoceneHolocene
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Pedogenic carbonates and carbon pools in gypsiferous soils of a semiarid Mediterranean environment in south Italy

2013

Abstract Soil carbonates are key features in soils of arid and semiarid environment, playing an important role from pedogenetic, landscape history, paleoclimatic and environmental points of view. The objectives of this work were (i) to study pathways of pedogenic carbonate (PC) formation, (ii) to distinguish between lithogenic and pedogenic inorganic C by using the natural C isotope abundance, and (iii) to estimate the soil C pools in a gypsiferous semiarid Mediterranean environment (Sicily, Italy). Five soil pedons developed on calcareous and non-calcareous parent materials from Holocene (10,000 years BP) to Upper Tortonian (7.2–5.3 Ma BP) in age were surveyed. During field soil descriptio…

Mediterranean climateGypsumSettore AGR/13 - Chimica AgrariaSoil ScienceSoil scienceengineering.materialGypsiferous soils Soil carbonates Stable C isotopes Soil C pools Soil–landscape relationshipSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologiachemistry.chemical_compoundPedogenesischemistrySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterengineeringCarbonateCalcareousGeologyHoloceneColluvium
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Labile nitrogen, carbon, and phosphorus pools and nitrogen mineralization and immobilization rates at low temperatures in seasonally snow-covered soi…

2006

Surface mineral horizons from four ecosystems sampled in the northwestern Italian Alps were incubated at −3 and +3°C to simulate subnivial and early thaw period temperatures for a seasonally snow-covered area. The soil profiles at these sites represent extreme examples of management, grazed meadow (site M) and extensive grazing beneath larch (site L) or naturally disturbed by avalanche and colonized by alder (site A) and the expected forest climax vegetation beneath fir (site F). Changes in labile pools of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) were active at all sites at both temperatures during 14 days of laboratory incubation. Ammonium was the dominant inorganic form of total dissolved N (TDN),…

snow covered soilsSoil Sciencechemistry.chemical_elementsnow covered soils; N; C; P poolsMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundLand managementCEcosystemAmmoniumAmmonificationNitrogen cycleP poolsPhosphorusPhosphoruNNitrificationNitrogenAgronomychemistrySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaSub-alpine soilsEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterNitrificationDissolved organic nitrogenN immobilizationClimax communityAgronomy and Crop ScienceBiology and Fertility of Soils
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L’”uomo nero” è cattivo ?

2006

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The scent of Mare Nostrum : medicinal and aromatic plants in Mediterranean soils

2012

In the Mediterranean area, the simultaneous occurrence of pedological, climatic and economic constraints often sets a limit on the profitability of agriculture, and farmers are forced to grow a reduced number of species, dealing with a secure—albeit low—market income. The introduction of medicinal and aromatic plants (MAPs) inside the current farming systems could represent a useful means to meet the multifunctional role of agriculture: producing safe food, in respect of the environment, and contributing to the development of rural areas. The study of the relationships between MAPs and the soils in which they may be grown may have two approaches: (1) the evaluation of yield and qualitative …

Mediterranean climateNutrition and Dieteticsbusiness.industryAgroforestryChemical industryBiologyAgronomyAgricultureSoil waterEcological stoichiometryProfitability indexbusinessAgronomy and Crop ScienceCroppingFood ScienceBiotechnologyGlobal biodiversityJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture
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The influence of pulsed redox conditions on soil phosphorus

2010

Abstract. The effects of eleven pulsed reduction-oxidation cycles (20 and 2 days, respectively) on soil phosphorus (P) dynamics are compared for 12 soils having contrasting properties and overfertilised with respect to P. Incubation conditions simulated transient waterlogging of the soil profile and involved repeated sampling and analysis of both the solution and solid phase P forms. An initial increase in P concentration occurred upto and including the fourth full cycle was followed by a sharp decline in concentration for all but one soil. Accompanying changes in the main extractable forms of P, which appeared to be cumulative, could be summarised as a general decline in the organic P frac…

Soil testChemistryRedoxSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni Erbaceeagriculture European Union fertilisation Olsen Ap horizonsSettore AGR/14 - Pedologiasuolo; fosforo; redox propertiesEnvironmental chemistryredox propertiesSoil waterSoil phosphorusSoil horizonPrecipitationfosforoIncubationsuoloWaterlogging (agriculture)
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Is the Anthropocene really worthy of a formal geologic definition?

2014

Scientists are actively debating whether the Anthropocene, the geologic time span (GTS) we are now living in, should be considered a period, epoch, or age in the geologic timescale. The solution is not easy, because the beginning of this GTS is undefined and the end unknown. In fact, there is no agreement on when the Anthropocene began, the proposed dates ranging from the Second World War, when radioactive fallout branded soils and sediments all over the world, to little after the end of the last glacial period, i.e. 11.7 thousand years ago, therefore coinciding with the onset of the Holocene. We are in favour of a concurrence of the Anthropocene with the Holocene, although a major impact …

Global and Planetary ChangeEcologyPleistoceneEpoch (reference date)Settore GEO/04 - Geografia Fisica E GeomorfologiaGeologyAncient historyArchaeologyPleistoceneGeographyGeologic time scaleAnthropoceneSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaEarly anthropoceneearly-AnthropocenePeriod (geology)NGRIP ice coreGlacial periodNeolithic revolutionHolocenePermian–Triassic transition
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Relief and calcium from gypsum as key factors for net inorganic carbon accumulation in soils of a semiarid Mediterranean environment

2021

Abstract In semiarid environments, the total inorganic carbon (TIC) in soil may contribute to the total carbon (C) pool more than the total organic C pool (TOC), thus playing a key role in storing atmospheric CO2. However, due to the different origin pathways of soil carbonates, not all of the TIC pool can be accounted for CO2 sequestration. Indeed, the inorganic C can be accounted for a net sink of CO2 only when calcium (Ca2+) forming carbonates originate from non-carbonate minerals (atmogenic inorganic C, AIC). The aim of this study carried out in a gypsiferous area is to investigate the dissolution of Ca2+ that comes from gypsum (CaSO4·2H2O) in the formation of soil atmogenic carbonates …

Atmogenic inorganic CGypsumSoil testSoil Sciencechemistry.chemical_element010501 environmental sciencesCarbon sequestrationengineering.material01 natural scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundEucalyptus camaldulensiTotal inorganic carbon0105 earth and related environmental sciencesToposequenceSoil carbonate04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesStrontium isotope ratiochemistryEnvironmental chemistrySoil water040103 agronomy & agricultureengineering0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesCarbonateEnvironmental scienceSink (computing)CarbonGypsiferous soilGeoderma
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Outlook from the soil perspective of urban expansion and food security

2021

The use of soil as support for built-up areas represents only one of its several functions. Farmlands at the fringe of conurbations have more chance of being converted into built-up areas due to the favourable topography and the accessibility to existing infrastructure, being in the vicinity of urban areas. We analysed the global land-take during the period 2000–2014. The data are based on a global dataset describing the spatial evolution of human settlements using the Global Human Settlement Layer, which was derived from Landsat images collected in 1975, 1990, 2000 and 2014. Although the global land-take represents roughly 0.1% of the global terrestrial Earth, it affects 1% of the naturall…

0301 basic medicineBuilt-up areaGlobal human settlement layer03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHuman settlementlcsh:Social sciences (General)lcsh:Science (General)ProductivitySoil productivity indexMultidisciplinaryFood securitybusiness.industrySettlement (structural)Environmental resource managementUrban expansionSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni ErbaceeLand take030104 developmental biologyGeographySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaSoil waterPeriod (geology)lcsh:H1-99Settore M-GGR/01 - GeografiabusinessScale (map)030217 neurology & neurosurgeryResearch Articlelcsh:Q1-390Heliyon
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Anthropogenic soils are the golden spikes for the Anthropocene

2011

We propose that the Anthropocene be defined as the last c. 2000 years of the late Holocene and characterized on the basis of anthropogenic soils. This contrasts with the original definition of the Anthropocene as the last c. 250 years (since the Industrial Revolution) and more recent proposals that the Anthropocene began some 5000 to 8000 years ago in the early to mid Holocene (the early-Anthropocene hypothesis). Anthropogenic soil horizons, of which several types are recognized, provide extensive terrestrial stratigraphic markers for defining the start of the Anthropocene. The pedosphere is regarded as the best indicator of the rise to dominance of human impacts on the total environment b…

ArcheologyGlobal and Planetary ChangeEcologyanthropogenic soil horizonSettore GEO/04 - Geografia Fisica E GeomorfologiaPaleontologyhuman footprintanthropogenic soilGeographyAnthropoceneSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaSoil waterAnthropocenePhysical geographyHuman footprintHoloceneEarth-Surface Processes
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Changes in the seasonal snow cover of alpine regions and its effect on soil processes: A review

2007

Abstract At its maximum annual development, snow can cover more than half the Northern Hemisphere land area with one-third experiencing seasonal snow cover. The precise conditions that develop during the annual pattern of snowpack development formation have implications for: (i) soil microbiological activity and nutrient transformations; (ii) the capacity of the accumulating snowpack to retain atmospheric derived solutes; (iii) preferential elution and rapid runoff of solutes from the snowpack during periods of thaw; and (iv) leaching of solutes. Long-term records of annual snow accumulation suggest that substantial, regional scale shifts in snowpack characteristics have been occurring. The…

HydrologyNutrient cyclesoil ecosystemNorthern Hemispheresnow covernutrient cyclingsoil microorganismSnowpackfreeze-thaw cycleSnowsnow accumulationNutrientSettore AGR/14 - PedologiasnowpackLeaching (pedology)Environmental sciencealpine environmentEcosystemPhysical geographySurface runoffEarth-Surface ProcessesQuaternary International
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Carbon Stocks in Peri-Urban Areas: A Case Study of Remote Sensing Capabilities

2014

Peri-urban areas are the extension of cities into contiguous areas, where households and farms coexist. Carbon stocks (CSs) assessment, a concept here extended to urban features, has not yet been studied in depth over peri-urban areas due to uncertainties in such CSs quantification, level of detail required about construction materials, and the high spatial variability of those stocks. Remote sensing (RS)-based techniques have been successfully utilized in urban areas for assessing phenomena such as soil sealing, sprawl patterns, and dynamics of surface imperviousness, especially focusing on land cover classification at high to medium spatial scales. Over the floodplain study area of Emilia…

Atmospheric Scienceremote sensing (RS)peri-urban areacarbon stockperi-urban areasUrban sprawlLandsat; carbon stocks; peri-urban areasCascading Style SheetsLand coverSettore ICAR/21 - UrbanisticaSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni ErbaceeWeightingSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaCarbon stocks (CSs)Soil waterImpervious surfaceEnvironmental scienceSpatial variabilitySatelliteComputers in Earth SciencesLandsatcomputerRemote sensingcomputer.programming_languageIEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing
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Advanced methods of plant disease detection. A review

2014

International audience; Plant diseases are responsible for major economic losses in the agricultural industry worldwide. Monitoring plant health and detecting pathogen early are essential to reduce disease spread and facilitate effective management practices. DNA-based and serological methods now provide essential tools for accurate plant disease diagnosis, in addition to the traditional visual scouting for symptoms. Although DNA-based and serological methods have revolutionized plant disease detection, they are not very reliable at asymptomatic stage, especially in case of pathogen with systemic diffusion. They need at least 1–2 days for sample harvest, processing, and analysis. Here, we d…

0106 biological sciencesEnvironmental Engineering[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]DiseaseBiology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesCommercial kitsVolatile organic compoundsSpectroscopyPlant disease030304 developmental biology2. Zero hunger0303 health sciencesbusiness.industryDNA-based methods Immunological assays Spectroscopy Biophotonics Plant disease Remote sensing Volatile organic compounds Commercial kitsEffective managementExtremely HelpfulRemote sensingPlant diseaseCrop protectionBiotechnologyRisk analysis (engineering)DNA-based methodsImmunological assaysBiophotonicsbusinessAgronomy and Crop Science010606 plant biology & botany
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You are earth, you feed on earth and you’ll return to earth

2007

anthrosolSettore AGR/14 - Pedologiatechnosolssoilanthropogenic soil
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Interrelazioni quali-quantitative tra descrittori fisici, chimici e biochimici di un pedon, prima e dopo il disturbo antropico

2005

La descrizione dei suoli può iniziare col telerilevamento; proseguire con il riconoscimento dell'elemento territoriale e continuare con la determinazione delle caratteristiche chimico-fisiche del terreno, che sono un insieme di analisi, definite di base, necessarie e (supposte) sufficienti ad identificare le caratteristiche fondamentali del suolo. Con le attuali tecniche analitiche sono oggi disponibili descrittori più fini quali contenuto di metalli in traccia e caratteristiche biochimiche. Nel nostro caso-studio, la sensibilità di risposta al disturbo antropico ordina le classi di descrittori nel senso terre rare < metalli < indicatori chimici < indicatori biochimici. I descrittori pedolo…

Settore AGR/14 - PedologiaSettore AGR/13 - Chimica Agrariaindicatori chimicisuoli antropogeniciindicatori biochimiciindicatori fisici
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Cationi metallici incorporati nei carbonati primari e pedogenici.

2004

Diversi cationi metallici, tra cui alcuni traccianti diagenetici e importanti contaminanti ambientali possono sostituire il calcio nella struttura della calcite o co-precipitare con essa. Scopo di questo lavoro è stato di investigare quali cationi metallici sono associati ai carbonati del suolo e di quantificarli. A tal fine, sono stati scelti cinque pedon evolventi su diversi litotipi e con un contenuto in carbonati piuttosto variabile. I campioni di suolo sono stati trattati con acido acetico 1M per permettere la dissoluzione selettiva dei carbonati e le soluzioni risultanti sono state analizzate per i seguenti cationi metallici: Ca, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Sr, Ba, Pb, U. Dai risultati si evi…

Settore AGR/14 - Pedologiacarbonato di calcio cationi metallici dissoluzione selettivaSettore AGR/13 - Chimica Agraria
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Anthropogenic soils as the marker

2017

This article aims to support the Anthropogenic soils, the ones markedly affected by human activities, as the most meaningful marker for the onset of the Anthropocene. Although diachronous and not uniformly distributed throughout the world, these soils in fact show more prominently and potentially longer in time than other proposed markers for the impact of humans on the Earth surface.

Settore AGR/14 - Pedologiasoil Anthrosols Technosols
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Variazione degli stock di carbonio in seguito ai processi di abbandono dei coltivi: il caso studio dell'isola di Pantelleria (Tp)

2007

The recent abandonment of marginal agricultural areas in the Mediterranean has caused an increase of the surface occupied by pre-forest and forest formations. In order to study the carbon accumulation processes on Pantelleria Island was selected a North-facing area. This area includes 5 stages of succession (sds) that compose a chronosequence (from 0 to 30 years) to understand soil C accumulation processes after abandonment. These are abandoned vineyards or caperbushes, not disturbed (grazing, fire) since agricultural abandonment, and they are situated in thermomediterranean belt and on the same parent material and consequently considered in the same ecological conditions. Samples at 1 cm, …

Carbon Soil Chronosequence Kyoto protocol Revegetation Pantelleria Mediterranean
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Variazione degli stock di carbonio del suolo in seguito ai processi di abbandono dei coltivi: il caso studio dell’isola di Pantelleria (TP)

2007

The recent abandonment of marginal agricultural areas in the Mediterranean has caused an increase of the surface occupied by pre-forest and forest formations. In order to study the carbon accumulation processes on Pantelleria Island was selected a North-facing area. This area includes 5 stages of succession (sds) that compose a chronosequence (from 0 to 30 years) to understand soil C accumulation processes after abandonment. These are abandoned vineyards or caperbushes, not disturbed (grazing, fire) since agricultural abandonment, and they are situated in thermomediterranean belt and on the same parent material and consequently considered in the same ecological conditions. Samples at 1 cm, …

Settore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E SelvicolturaSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaCarbon Soil Chronosequence Kyoto protocol Revegetation Pantelleria Mediterranean
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Soils: Basic Concepts and Future Challenges

2006

This book was born as an international tribute to Fiorenzo C. Ugolini, an outstanding soil scientist who recently retired from university teaching and research. It is a fully up-to-date synthesis of the present knowledge of soils, their genesis, functions and management, and includes contributions from leading soil scientists. It provides the basic concepts as well as the latest data and practical examples from across the discipline. The book also discusses the increasingly important role of soils in enabling the preservation of life and contains a rare attempt to cross-harmonize the Soil Groups of the World Reference Base of Soil Resources with the Orders of the Soil Taxonomy. It also cons…

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Modelling soil carbon fate under erosion process in vineyard

2017

Soil erosion processes in vineyards beyond water runoff and sediment transport have a strong effect on soil organic carbon loss (SOC) and redistribution along the slope. The variation of SOC across the landscape determines a difference in soil fertility and vine productivity. The aim of this research was to study erosion of a Mediterranean vineyard, develop an approach to estimate the SOC loss, correlate the vines vigor with sediment and carbon erosion. The study was carried out in a Sicilian (Italy) vineyard, planted in 2011. Along the slope, six pedons were studied by digging 6 pits up to 60cm depth. Soil was sampled in each pedon every 10cm and SOC was analyzed. Soil erosion, detachment …

Soil erosion water runoff sediment transport soil organic carbon loss vineyard remote sensing
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Attitudine dei suoli alle colture di nicchia. Il ficodindia

2006

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Problematiche di estrazione e quantificazione del Carbonio organico in suoli gessosi con metodologie convenzionali

2005

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The scent of Mare Nostrum: medicinal and aromatic plants in Mediterranean soils

2012

In the Mediterranean area, the simultaneous occurrence of pedological, climatic and economic constraints often sets a limit on the profitability of agriculture, and farmers are forced to grow a reduced number of species, dealing with a secure – albeit low – market income. The introduction of medicinal and aromatic plants (MAPs) inside the current farming systems could represent a useful means to meet the multifunctional role of agriculture: producing safe food, in respect of the environment, and contributing to the development of rural areas. The study of the relationships between MAPs and the soils in which they may be grown may have two approaches: (1) the evaluation of yield and qualitat…

ecological stoichiometryniche marketSettore AGR/14 - Pedologiaagronomic performanceregionalisationSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni Erbacee
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Interrelazioni quali-quantitative tra descrittori fisici, chimici e biochimici di un pedon, prima e dopo un disturbo antropico

2005

La descrizione dei suoli può iniziare col telerilevamento; proseguire con il riconoscimento dell'elemento territoriale e continuare con la determinazione delle caratteristiche chimico-fisiche del terreno, che sono un insieme di analisi, definite di base, necessarie e (supposte) sufficienti ad identificare le caratteristiche fondamentali del suolo. Con le attuali tecniche analitiche sono oggi disponibili descrittori più fini quali contenuto di metalli in traccia e caratteristiche biochimiche. Nel nostro caso-studio, la sensibilità di risposta al disturbo antropico ordina le classi di descrittori nel senso terre rare < metalli < indicatori chimici < indicatori biochimici. I descrittori pedolo…

indicatori chimici fisici biochimici pedologici
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VARIABILITÀ SPAZIALE DELLA CONDUCIBILITÀ ELETTRICA SU SUOLI FORESTALI EVOLVENTI SULLA SERIE GESSOSO-SOLFIFERA

2004

In Sicilia, una superficie di circa 250.000 ettari, è interessata da suoli affetti da salinità. In laboratorio, la salinità del suolo può essere stimata, indirettamente, determinando la conducibilità elettrica (CE) dell’estratto di sospensioni suolo/acqua, mentre per la sua stima diretta in campo si sta diffondendo l’uso dei sensori ad induzione elettromagnetica. Scopo del lavoro è stata la valutazione della variabilità spaziale della conducibilità elettrica di suoli affetti da salinità, con un sensore elettromagnetico. L’area di studio ricade nella Sicilia centrale, nel “Complesso Boscato Mustigarufi” i cui suoli presentano un diverso contenuto di sali. Le misure, effettuate in 329 punti s…

Settore AGR/14 - PedologiaSettore AGR/13 - Chimica AgrariaSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-Forestaliconducibilità elettrica variabilità spaziale dei suoli sensore elettromagnetico
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Anthropogenic soils originated by severe disturbances due to large scale farming

2004

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Ficodindia

2006

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Geo-morphological characterization of the spatial variability of some soil properties

2004

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Variabilità spaziale dell'orizzonte gypsico in un ambiente mediterraneo semiarido della Sicilia centro meridionale

2004

Nell’ambiente semiarido della Sicilia centro meridionale vi sono suoli che pur non evolvendo direttamente su substrati gessosi risultano interessati dall’accumulo di gesso secondario. Scopo di questo lavoro è evidenziare le caratteristiche e la distribuzione spaziale dell’orizzonte gypsico proprio di suoli che evolvono su un substrato privo di gesso ma che sono da classificare come Gypsisuoli. È stata scelta un area costituita da un pendio collinare ad andamento Nord-Ovest Sud-Est in cui sono presenti suoli che evolvono su marne argillose del Pliocene inferiore “trubi” e poste a quota topograficamente più bassa rispetto ad un affioramento gessoso del Messiniano. Lungo la pendice sono stati …

Gypsisuoli orizzonte gypsico DEM variabilità dei suoliSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaSettore AGR/13 - Chimica Agraria
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STIMARE IL RILASCIO POTENZIALE DI FOSFORO DEI SUOLI.UNA PROSPETTIVA STORICA

2005

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Suoli da mangiare

2006

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