0000000001055989

AUTHOR

Valeria Montalto

showing 27 related works from this author

A mechanistic approach reveals non linear effects of climate warming on mussels throughout the Mediterranean sea

2016

There is a dire need to forecast the ecological impacts of global climate change at scales relevant to policy and management. We used three interconnected models (climatic, biophysical and energetics) to estimate changes in growth, reproduction and mortality risk by 2050, for three commercially and ecologically important bivalves at 51 sites in the Mediterranean Sea. These results predict highly variable responses (both positive and negative) in the time to reproductive maturity and in the risk of lethality among species and sites that do not conform to simple latitudinal gradients, and which would be undetectable by methods focused only on lethal limits and/or range boundaries.

0106 biological sciencesAtmospheric ScienceGlobal and Planetary ChangeRange (biology)Ecology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyGlobal warmingEnergeticsClimate changeAquatic animal010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesAquatic organismsMediterranean seaEnvironmental scienceClimatic Change
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The impact of climate change on Mediterranean intertidal communities: losses in coastal ecosystem integrity and services

2014

As has been shown for other ecosystems, the ecological and socio-economic impacts of climate change on Mediterranean intertidal habitats are highly variable in space and time. We conducted field and laboratory measurements of cellular, ecophysiological and behavioural responses of selected intertidal invertebrates (mussels, gastropods and sponges) and completed a literature review to determine what is known of socioeconomic consequences of these biological changes. Results suggest significant gaps in our knowledge that may impede a complete understanding of likely impacts (physical, biological, and socioeconomic) and that sufficient data for such an analysis is available only for mussels. A…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaGlobal and Planetary ChangeEcosystem serviceEcologyBioenergetic mechanistic modellingEcophysiologyMytilaster minimusInvasive specieIntertidal zoneClimate changeIntertidalIntertidal; Bioenergetic mechanistic modelling; Ecophysiology; Ecosystem services; Climate change; Invasive species; Mediterranean SeaIntroduced speciesIntertidal ecologyEcosystem servicesFisheryGeographyHabitatMediterranean SeaClimate changeEcosystemintertidal; bioenergetic mechanistic modelling; ecophysiology; ecosystem services; climate change; invasive species; Mediterranean Sea
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The effect of the quality of diet on the functional response of Mytilus galloprovincialis (Lamarck, 1819): Implications for integrated multitrophic a…

2017

Abstract The integrated multi-trophic aquaculture (i.e., IMTA) is a practice combining organisms with different trophic levels with the final purpose of transforming the continuous waste of food by targeting species into nutrient input for other non-target species. This practice very often involves filter feeders, such as bivalves, by the use of which bioenergetics budgets are strongly influenced by the quality and quantity of different foods. However, to date, scant information is available, to really understand the rebounds of food availability on the growth performances of these harvested biomasses in the natural environment. By choosing the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis as a model, t…

0106 biological sciencesGrowth performanceEcologybusiness.industryFeeding010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyFunctional responseMarine spatial planningAquatic ScienceBiologyPlankton010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesLife history theoryFisheryHabitatAquacultureDynamic Energy Budget modelPhytoplanktonMusselbusinessTrophic levelAquaculture
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Predictive mechanistic bioenergetics to model habitat suitability of shellfish culture in coastal lakes

2014

Quantitative tools based on mechanistic modelling of functional traits able to enhance the sustainability of aquaculture and most other human activities (i.e. reducing the likelihood of detrimental impacts optimising productions), are especially important factors in the decision to site aquaculture facilities in coastal lakes, ponds and lagoons and, in the case of detrimental impact, to adopt mitigation measures. We tested the ability of mechanistic functional trait based models to predict life history traits of cultivable shellfish in shallow coastal lakes. Dynamic Energy Budget (DEB) models were run to generate spatially explicit predictions of Mytilus galloprovincialis life history (LH) …

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaMediterranean climatehabitat suitabilityDynamic energy budgetAquatic ScienceBiologyorganismal fitnessOceanographyLife history theoryAquacultureDynamic Energy Budget modellife history traitsEcological nicheaquaculture; Dynamic Energy Budget model; habitat suitability; life history traits; Mytilus galloprovincialis; organismal fitness; lagoonaquaculture Dynamic Energy Budget model habitat suitability life history traits Mytilus galloprovincialis organismal fitness lagoonbusiness.industryEcologybiology.organism_classificationMytiluslagoonFisheryaquacultureMytilus galloprovincialisHabitatSustainabilitybusiness
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Low temperature trumps high food availability to determine the distribution of intertidal mussels Perna perna in South Africa

2016

Explanations of species distributions often assume that the absence of a species is due to its inability to tolerate an environmental variable. Recent modelling techniques based on the dynamic energy budget (DEB) theory offer an effective way of identifying how interacting environmental parameters influence distributions through non-lethal effects on growth and development. The mussel Perna perna is an abundant ecosystem engineer around the coasts of Africa, South America and the Arabian peninsula, with an unexplained 1500 km lacuna in its distribution on the west coast of South Africa. We used a DEB approach to explain its distribution in southern Africa and test the hypothesis that this l…

0106 biological sciencesThermal limitEcologyPhysiologybusiness.industryEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyDistribution (economics)Intertidal zoneMusselAquatic ScienceBiologyHigh foodbiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematic010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesFisheryPerna pernaMetabolismDynamic energy budget modelAquatic scienceMusselbusinessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMarine Ecology Progress Series
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Parameterisation of bivalve functional traits for mechanistic eco-physiological dynamic energy budget (DEB) models

2013

Mechanistic models such as those based on dynamic energy budget (DEB) theory are emergent ecomechanics tools to investigate the extent of fitness in organisms through changes in life history traits as explained by bioenergetic principles. The rapid growth in interest around this approach originates from the mechanistic characteristics of DEB, which are based on a number of rules dictating the use of mass and energy flow through organisms. One apparent bottleneck in DEB applications comes from the estimations of DEB parameters which are based on mathematical and statistical methods (covariation method). The parameterisation process begins with the knowledge of some functional traits of a tar…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaMechanistic modelsEcologyEcologyDynamic energy budgetBivalveAnthropogenic pressurebivalve mechanistic model DEBBrachidontes pharaonisAquatic ScienceBiologyBody sizeBottleneckLife history theoryMechanistic models; Dynamic energy budget; Bivalve; Parameterisation methods; Brachidontes pharaonis; Mediterranean SeaParameterisation methodsEnergy flowMediterranean SeaDynamic energy budgetBiochemical engineeringEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOrganismExperimental OrganismMarine Ecology Progress Series
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Life history traits to predict biogeographic species distributions in bivalves

2015

Organismal fecundity (F) and its relationship with body size (BS) are key factors in predicting species distribution under current and future scenarios of global change. A functional trait-based dynamic energy budget (FT-DEB) is proposed as a mechanistic approach to predict the variation of F and BS as function of environmental correlates using two marine bivalves as model species (Mytilus galloprovincialis and Brachidontes pharaonis). Validation proof of model skill (i.e., degree of correspondence between model predictions and field observations) and stationarity (i.e., ability of a model generated from data collected at one place/time to predict processes at another place/time) was provid…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaDynamic energy budgetClimate ChangeSpecies distributionContext (language use)BiologyMediterraneanModels BiologicalSub-tidal systemLife history theoryMediterranean SeaAnimalsBody SizeEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcologyAnimalBivalveTemperatureGeneral MedicineFecundityRegressionBivalviaFunctional trait-based modelFertilityFoodBrachidontes pharaonisTraitAnimal Distribution
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Functional role of biofouling linked to aquaculture facilities in Mediterranean enclosed locations

2020

Biofouling is generally considered a serious threat for human coastal activities such as aquaculture, and the ecological role of fouling organisms associated with fish-farm cages remains one of the most debated topics in the ecological field. However, although biofouling may cause significant problems related to human health, environmental impact and financial losses, in the past decade there has been an increasing interest in developing methods to promote the growth of biofouling on artificial structures as a strategy to mitigate human impacts and reduce the organic enrichment caused by net-cage fish farming. Here we investigated the filtration activity of biofouling assemblages colonizing…

Settore BIO/07 - Ecologia0106 biological sciencesFunctional roleMediterranean climateManagement Monitoring Policy and LawAquatic Science010603 evolutionary biology01 natural scienceslcsh:Aquaculture. Fisheries. AnglingBiofoulingBioremediationAquaculturelcsh:QH540-549.5Coastal aquaculture14. Life underwaterHypoxiaWater Science and Technologylcsh:SH1-691Foulingbusiness.industry010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyHypoxia (environmental)FoulingFisheryGeography13. Climate actionlcsh:EcologybusinessBioremediationAquaculture Environment Interactions
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Predicting biological invasions in marine habitats through eco-physiological mechanistic models: a case study with the bivalveBrachidontes pharaonis

2013

Aim We used a coupled biophysical ecology (BE)-physiological mechanistic modelling approach based on the Dynamic Energy Budget theory (DEB, Dynamic energy budget theory for metabolic organisation, 2010, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge; DEB) to generate spatially explicit predictions of physiological performance (maximal size and reproductive output) for the invasive mussel, Brachidontes pharaonis. Location We examined 26 sites throughout the central Mediterranean Sea. Methods We ran models under subtidal and intertidal conditions; hourly weather and water temperature data were obtained from the Italian Buoy Network, and monthly CHL-a data were obtained from satellite imagery. Results …

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaEcologyDynamic energy budgetMarine habitatsIntertidal zoneBiologyLife history theoryMediterranean seaBivalves Dynamic Energy Budget model fundamental niche invasive species life-history traits Mediterranean Sea.HabitatBrachidontes pharaonisBiological dispersalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDiversity and Distributions
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Dynamic Energy Budget model parameter estimation for the bivalve Mytilus californianus: Application of the covariation method

2014

Dynamic Energy Budget (DEB) models serve as a powerful tool for describing the flow of energy through organisms from assimilation of food to utilization for maintenance, growth and reproduction. The DEB theory has been successfully applied to several bivalve species to compare bioenergetic and physiological strategies for the utilization of energy. In particular, mussels within the Mytilus edulis complex (M. edulis, M. galloprovincialis, and M. trossulus) have been the focus of many studies due to their economic and ecological importance, and their worldwide distribution. However, DEB parameter values have never been estimated for Mytilus californianus, a species that is an ecological domin…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaBioenergeticsEnvironmental changeEcologyDynamic energy budgetIntertidal zoneModel parametersAquatic ScienceBiologyDEB Mytilus covariation methodOceanographybiology.organism_classificationMytilusFisheryModel parameterWest coastEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Sea Research
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Dynamic Energy Budget parameters of Brachidontes pharaonis, a lessepsian bivalve in the Mediterranean Sea.

2014

Dynamic Energy Budget (DEB) models are used for describing the flow of energy through organisms. The most important and powerful aspect of DEB theory is that inter-specific differences can be captured in the same model by comparison of parameter values. However, estimation of these parameters is complicated and can often not be done with direct empirical measurements alone. Here, we present DEB parameter estimates obtained by combining both experimental and literature data for the filter feeder Brachidontes pharaonis, which is considered one among the 100 worst invasive marine species in the Mediterranean Basin. We utilize a statistical procedure based on the covariation method to obtain pa…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaDynamic energy budgetFilter feederAquatic ScienceBiologyOceanographyAtmospheric sciencesMediterranean BasinMarine species/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/life_below_waterOceanographyMediterranean seaDEB ParametersInvasivenessMediterranean SeaBrachidontes pharaonisSDG 14 - Life Below WaterEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of sea research
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Thinking beyond organism energy use: a trait-based bioenergetic mechanistic approach for predictions of life history traits in marine organisms

2014

The functional trait-based bioenergetic approach is emergent in many ecological spectra, from the conservation of natural resources to mitigation and adaptation strategies in a global climate change context. Such an approach relies on being able to exploit mechanistic rules to connect environmental human-induced variability to functional traits (i.e. all those specific traits defining species in terms of their ecological roles) and use these to provide estimates of species life history traits (LH; e.g. body size, fecundity per life span, number of reproductive events). LHs are species-specific and proximate determinants of population characteristics in a certain habitat. They represent the …

Settore BIO/07 - Ecologiaeducation.field_of_studyEcologyEcologyDynamic energy budgetPopulationlife history trait DEC model mechanisticContext (language use)Aquatic ScienceBiologyNatural resourceLife history theoryPopulation modelTraiteducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOrganismMarine Ecology
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Estimation of dynamic energy budget parameters for the Mediterranean toothcarp (Aphanius fasciatus)

2014

Organisms adopt different sets of physiological, behavioural and morphological trade-offs in order to cope with natural environmental fluctuations. This has consequential rebounds on ecological processes and population dynamics. Such aspects become crucial for sex-dimorphic species, where sex-specific growth variation could mirror different tactics both in energy acquisition and investment between maximum female and male body size with cascading effects on population demography. To date, different approaches have been used in order to understand the causes of individual growth rate changes in ectotherm indeterminate growers, most of which failed. Here, we propose the use of a mechanistic mo…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaMediterranean climateEstimationTrade-offseducation.field_of_studyAphanius FasciatusEcologyDynamic energy budgetDynamic Energy Budget theoryPopulationAphaniusContext (language use)Dynamic Energy Budget theory Aphanius Fasciatus Mediterranean Toothcarp Trade-offsDEB lagoon aphanius bioenergeticsMediterranean ToothcarpAquatic ScienceBiologyOceanographybiology.organism_classificationEctothermCascading effectseducationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Testing the effects of temporal data resolution on predictions of the effects of climate change on bivalves

2014

a b s t r a c t The spatial-temporal scales on which environmental observations are made can significantly affect our perceptions of ecological patterns in nature. Understanding potential mismatches between environmen- tal data used as inputs to predictive models, and the forecasts of ecological responses that these models generate are particularly difficult when predicting responses to climate change since the assumption of model stationarity in time cannot be tested. In the last four decades, increases in computational capacity (by a factor of a million), and the evolution of new modeling tools, have permitted a corresponding increase in model complexity, in the length of the simulations,…

Environmental changeEcologyEcological ModelingDynamic energy budgetClimate changeMarine intertidal zoneMytilus galloprovincialiDarwinian fitneMediterraneanAtmospheric sciencesEnvironmental dataTemporal databaseDarwinian fitnessDynamic Energy Budget modelsDarwinian fitness;Mediterranean;Marine intertidal zone;Dynamic Energy Budget models;Mytilus galloprovincialis;Regional climate modelsMytilus galloprovincialis13. Climate actionDynamic Energy Budget modelTemporal resolutionEnvironmental scienceClimate model14. Life underwaterTemporal scalesRegional climate models
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Eco-physiological response of two marine bivalves to acute exposition to commercial Bt-based pesticide

2013

Microbial products based on the entomopathogenic bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) are among the most common biopesticides used worldwide to suppress insect pests in forests, horticulture and agricultural crops. Some of the effects of commercial Bt have been recorded for terrestrial and freshwater non-target organisms but little research is available on marine fauna. Nevertheless, due to the contiguity of agro-ecosystems and coastal habitats, marine fauna may be highly influenced by this control method. We studied the effect of a commercial Bt product on the physiological and ecological responses and the energy budget of two of the most frequent marine intertidal bivalves in the Mediter…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaBiopesticidesBiological pollutionFaunaBacillus thuringiensisSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaAlien speciesBrachidontes pharaonisAquatic ScienceBiologyOceanographyBacillus thuringiensisAgricultural coastal areasAnimalsBacillus thuringiensiBrachidontes pharaoniEcosystemPesticidesAlien specieBiological pollutionAgricultural coastal areas; Alien species; Bacillus thuringiensis; Biological pollution; Biopesticides; Brachidontes pharaonis; Mytilaster minimusBacillus thuringiensis; Mytilaster minimus; Brachidontes pharaonis; Biological pollution; Biopesticides; Alien species; Agricultural coastal areasbusiness.industryEcologyMytilaster minimusPest controlHeartFeeding BehaviorGeneral MedicinePesticideMytilaster minimusbiology.organism_classificationPollutionBivalviaAgricultural coastal areaBiopesticideBiopesticideEnergy MetabolismbusinessWater Pollutants ChemicalMarine Environmental Research
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A bioenergetics framework for integrating the effects of multiple stressors: Opening a 'black box' in climate change research

2015

Climate change is already impacting marine ecosystems across a range of scales, from individual physiology, to changes in species interactions and community structure, and ultimately to patterns in geographic distribution. Predicting how marine ecosystems will respond to environmental change is a signifi cant challenge because vulnerability to climatic and non-climatic stressors is highly variable, and depends on an organism’s functional traits, tolerance to stressors, and the environment in which it lives. We present a mechanistic approach based on biophysical and dynamic energy budget models that integrates the cumulative effects of multiple environmental stressors (temperature and food) …

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaEnvironmental changeIntertidal Dynamic Energy Budget model Biophysical model Ecophysiology Mytilus californianusEcologyDynamic energy budgetStressorVulnerabilityCumulative effectsClimate changeAquatic ScienceBiologyMarine ecosystemEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOrganism
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An energy budget for the subtidal bivalve Modiolus barbatus (Mollusca) at different temperatures

2011

Clearance rates, respiration rates and food absorption efficiencies of the commercially interesting subtidal bivalve Modiolus barbatus were measured at different temperatures under laboratory conditions and scope for growth calculated. Clearance rates were highest at temperatures from 20 °C to 28 °C, whereas respiration rate was maximal at 9 °C and minimal at 26 °C. Highest mean values of absorbed energy occurred at 20 °C and 26 °C. Scope for growth trend had negative values at 9 °C, 15 °C and 28 °C and positive values at temperatures 20 °C and 26 °C. The profitable thermal window for M. barbatus to have energy sufficient for growth and reproduction corresponded to <5 months per year. Seawa…

Settore BIO/07 - Ecologia0106 biological sciencesModiolus barbatusAquatic ScienceOceanography010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesModiolus barbatus; Mediterranean; scope for growth; temperature; respiration; clearance; physiologyOxygen ConsumptionAnimal scienceStress PhysiologicalRespirationAnimalsSeawater14. Life underwaterMolluscabiologyEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyTemperatureGeneral MedicineBivalviabiology.organism_classificationEnergy budgetPollutionMytilidaeSeawaterEnergy MetabolismModiolus barbatus Mediterranean scope for growth temperature respiration clearance physiologyRespiration rateClearance rateMarine Environmental Research
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L’effetto del food supply sul budget energetico di tre bivalvi in Mediterraneo

2012

bivalviRisposte ecologiche
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Functional traits, mechanistic bioenergetics and microclimatic downscaling of marine ectotherms

2014

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaFunctional traits mechanistic bioenergetics marine ectotherms
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The functional trait-based approach to investigate life history traits in marine invertebrates to predict effects of global climate change on ecosyst…

2013

life history trait climate change ecosystemsSettore BIO/07 - Ecologia
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Moving beyond mortality: a metabolic framework for exploring effects of climate change on intertidal mussel bed zonation

2013

Settore BIO/07 - Ecologiametabolic climate change intertidal mussel
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The estimation of DEB parameters for the invasive intertidal bivalve, Brachidontes pharaonis

2011

Settore BIO/07 - Ecologiabioenergetics DEB modelling climate change intertidal bivalve
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Mechanistic bioenergetics models to link functional traits to population dynamics: a study case with a marine bivalve

2013

Mechanistic model bivalve
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Can Septifer virgatus survive in a warming world? A Dynamic Energy Budget model approach

2014

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaSeptifer virgatus DEB bivalve
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Intertidal oyster and mussel beds in a global warming perspective. Trade offs and microclimatic downscaling

2013

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaIntertidal oyster mussel
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Modelli meccanicistici biofisici e bioenergetici DEB per la predizione della nicchia ecologica dei sospensivori bentonici in Mediterraneo in un conte…

2014

I modelli meccanicistici basati sull’analisi dei tratti funzionali comportamentali (e.g. preferenze alimentari), fisiologici (e.g. vulnerabilità alla temperatura) e morfologici (e.g. forma e colore) che concorrono nell’ottimizzazione dell’incoming energetico del singolo organismo sono una soluzione pratica per fornire previsioni accurate sull’abbondanza degli organismi di una specie in un mondo in continuo cambiamento (Araujo & Rahbek 2006). Tale approccio è definito come ecomeccanica e ha rappresentato la base sulla quale costruire questo progetto di tesi. L’integrazione dei più recenti modelli biofisici e bioenergetici ha permesso di evidenziare tanto le strategie di gestione ed allocazio…

Settore BIO/07 - Ecologiamodelli meccanicistici bivalvi cambiamenti climatici
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L’effetto della mitilicoltura posta a valle di allevamenti di specie ittiche riduce il carico organico

2007

L’utilizzo del mussel cleaning che sfrutta le caratteristiche fisiologiche dei molluschi filtratori per la mitigazione degli impatti derivanti da reflui particellati di origine antropica, ed in particolare delle attività di piscicoltura, è stato introdotto di recente in diversi paesi europei. Tale procedura si basa sull’ipotesi che la filtrazione operata da elevate biomasse di molluschi eduli posti nei pressi degli impianti di pescicoltura possa ridurre il carico organico in eccesso proveniente dal surplus di mangime fornito ai pesci allevati e che in certa parte inutilizzato tende a sedimentare al di sotto delle gabbie di allevamento. In questo studio abbiamo analizzato in due periodi diff…

mitilicoltura mussel cleaning carico organico
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