0000000000225709

AUTHOR

Davide Iaciofano

showing 5 related works from this author

Seagrass detritus as marine macroinvertebrates attractor

2022

Seagrasses colonise coastal areas worldwide. Despite their high primary production, a considerable proportion becomes detritus that can be used as food, physical habitat and occasional or permanent shelter by several benthic macroinvertebrates. In turn, macroinvertebrates can contribute to regulating seagrass decomposition, and represent an important trophic link between primary producers and higher consumers. Nonetheless, several factors could modify colonizer responses to this habitat. In this study, we tested if colonisation of the seagrass detritus of Zostera noltei Hornemann, 1832 was related to substrate availability rather than food and whether the colonising assemblages were similar…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaMesograzers Transitional system WrackSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaPeracaridLeaf litterCrustaceanMacrofaunaHabitat structurePolychaete
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The morphological diversity within a species can obscure the correct identification

2022

Critical points of various diagnostic characters and a paucity of information relating to the geographical distribution of several marine species can hinder real species delimitation, particularly if they are supposed to be cosmopolitan. Such constraints characterize many amphipod species and are mainly due to the variation in morphological characters during growth. Specifically, the benthic filter-feeding corophiid Cheiriphotis mediterranea Myers, 1983 displays different shapes for the male gnathopod 2 as it grows. This variation has hitherto never been described but an extensive sampling has provided us with the opportunity of studying it in detail. More than six thousand individuals, bel…

BioindicatorSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaAnimal Science and ZoologyMediterranean biodiversityMorphotypesTaxonomy Morphotypes Bioindicator Mediterranean biodiversity Levantine basinLevantine basinTaxonomy
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Assessment of the Sabellaria alveolata reefs’ structural features along the Southern coast of Sicily (Strait of Sicily, Mediterranean Sea)

2022

The honeycomb worm Sabellaria alveolata is a gregarious tube-dwelling polychaete that builds remarkable biogenic reefs in marine coastal waters. Sabellaria alveolata reefs are considered valuable marine habitats requiring protection measures for their conservation, as they play a key role in the functioning of coastal ecosystems. Sabellarid reefs are extensively developed along the Atlantic coasts of Europe and reported for the Mediterranean Sea and the Italian coasts, where large reefs have been recorded in several localities. Fragmentary information is available on their health status, Sabellaria reefs thus being listed as “Data Deficient” in the Red List of Marine Habitats. To fill this …

engineer specieshabitat heterogeneityEnvironmental EngineeringSettore BIO/07Settore BIO/05 - ZoologiaPolychaetaAquatic ScienceOceanographySabellariamarine conservationbiogenic reefsMediterranean Seabiogenic reefMediterranean Sea.engineer speciehabitat-former speciesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSabellaria; Polychaeta; biogenic reefs; engineer species; habitat heterogeneity; marine conservation; biodiversity; Mediterranean SeabiodiversityMediterranean Marine Science
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Dataset from: Small-scale patches of detritus as habitat for invertebrates within a Zostera noltei meadow

2021

This dataset is related to "Small-scale patches of detritus as habitat for invertebrates within a Zostera noltei meadow" (Valentina Costa, Renato Chemello, Davide Iaciofano, Sabrina Lo Brutto, Francesca Rossi)

leaf littercrustaceansmacrofaunatransitional systempolychaetesbeach-casthabitat structureperacaridsmesograzers
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Parhyale plumicornis (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Hyalidae): is this an anti-lessepsian Mediterranean species? Morphological remarks, molecular markers and…

2016

Hyalid amphipods living in coastal marine habitats are frequently included in ecological studies. The systematics of this taxon has been subject to profound changes, with an emphasis on the North Pacific fauna. Since a proper species delimitation is a prerequisite in taxonomic and ecological studies, Parhyale plumicornis (Heller, 1866) has been herein re-described, showing the criticisms and mismatches of various characters, which were previously used in dichotomous keys. This species was collected for the first time off the western coast of Sicily Island (Italy: central Mediterranean Sea). The male is peculiar, due to the second antennae heavily setose posteriorly and bearing long tufts of…

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