Search results for " Mediterranean sea."

showing 10 items of 201 documents

Mediterranean Great Conversation

2015

The exit from the Mediterranean emergency requires rethinking its identity in a new perspective. This means recognizing its legitimate role as a “Great Sea in Between”, as a cultural interface able to connect all the citizens that address to it, in everyday life and as individuals, involving them in a real “great conversation” based on the design disciplines. Design, Brand, Visual Identity, Packaging, Social Media, Fashion, Food, Architecture, Music may be powerful antidotes to the immobility of those who mourn a lost Mediterranean harmony and also a viable alternative to the ethnic closure led by the proponents of the Clash of Civilizations.

Architectural Design Bruno Latour Design design del prodotto fashion design Grande Conversazione Great Conversation Invention of Tradition Mediterranean Sea Mediterraneo Music Packaging Social Media Soft Economy Visual IdentitySettore M-FIL/05 - Filosofia E Teoria Dei Linguaggi
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Non-Indigenous Species (NIS) within Marine Protected Areas (MPAs). The case study of the Aegadian Islands MPA (Sicily, Tyrrhenian Sea) and the Dwejra…

2018

The introduction of non-indigenous species (NIS) has been pointed out as a major threat to biodiversity. NIS may become invasive alien species (IAS) and may cause biodiversity loss and ecosystem service changes. In the Mediterranean Sea, Sicily and surrounding islands, also including a high number of Marine Protected Area (MPAs), as a consequence of their geographic position and the intense maritime traffic, is a region particularly vulnerable and prone to NIS invasions. Since frontiers do not exist in the sea, biological invasions may severely affect MPAs, whose major aim is biodiversity conservation. Among the Sicilian MPAs, the Aegadian Islands MPA report the highest number of NIS (19). M…

Biodiversity Marine Protected Areas Mediterranean Sea Non-Indigenous SpeciesSettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E Applicata
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Possible impacts of volcanic ash emissions of Mount Etna on the primary productivity in the oligotrophic Mediterranean Sea: Results from nutrient-rel…

2013

Atmospheric deposition of volcanic ash has recently been recognized as an important nutrient source into the surface ocean. Mount Etna (Italy), one of the world's most active volcanoes, is located in the oligotrophic Mediterranean Sea (MedSea). Despite the active volcanism on Mount Etna, the biogeochemical impacts of volcanic ash fallouts on the marine primary productivity (MPP) remain largely unknown. Here we present the results of seawater nutrient release experiments with volcanic ash samples from Mount Etna that have been collected during different eruptive episodes between 2001 and 2007. Our results show that volcanic ash from Mount Etna releases significant amounts of fixed-N (35-855 …

Biogeochemical cycleEarth scienceVolcanismsystemsurface-waterOceanographyAtmospheric sciencesironMediterranean seanitrateDust stormvolcanic ashsaharan dustoceanic fertilizationEnvironmental ChemistryOceanic fertilization Volcanic ash Mount Etna Mediterranean Sea Phosphate Nitrate Ironmediterranean seaphosphorusphosphateWater Science and Technologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryExplosive eruptionatmospheric depositioneruptive behaviorGeneral ChemistryfalloutVolcanophytoplanktonSeawatermount etnalevantine basinGeologyVolcanic ash
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Settlement performance of the Mediterranean reef-builders Dendropoma cristatum (Biondi 1859) in response to natural bacterial films

2018

The gastropod Dendropoma cristatum is a biogenic engineer of the central Mediterranean, forming reefs along the lower rocky intertidal fringe with a remarkable ecological role. To understand whether reef-associated biofilm cultivable bacterial and biofilm ageing may trigger the settlement of the juvenile snails, a combination of laboratory techniques and field experiments was used. Reef-associated biofilm cultivable bacteria were isolated, and a settlement-choice experiment was performed in situ on artificial biofilms composed of i) a mixture of six biofilm-forming selected isolates, ii) all the cultivable bacteria, and iii) 13-, 23-, 32-day old biofilms formed under naturalconditions. Overall,sett…

Biological engineers Reefs Vermetidae Mediterranean sea Dendropoma cristatum Settlement Bacteria Biological cuesSettore BIO/07 - Ecologia
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Population structure of Brachidontes pharaonis (P. Fisher, 1870) (Bivalvia, Mytilidae) in the Mediterranean Sea, and evolution of a novel mtDNA polym…

2006

Abstract Brachidontes pharaonis (Fisher P, 1870) is an Indo-Pacific mussel that has colonized the Mediterranean Sea via the Suez Canal. Mussels may have migrated by natural dispersal of pelagic larvae, or they may have been transported on the hulls of ships, or in ballast water, or by some combination of these. Mitochondrial COI sequences (618 bp) from 101 mussels from six localities in the central and eastern Mediterranean Sea and from one site in the Red Sea were used to describe population structure. Analysis of molecular variance indicated that frequencies differed among populations, and that 92% of the variation resided within populations. The majority of haplotypes were private allele…

Brachidontes pharaonis Invasive Alien Species Mediterranean Sea Population structure.EcologybiologyEcologyHaplotypeZoologyAquatic ScienceBivalviabiology.organism_classificationBalancing selectionNucleotide diversityMediterranean seaMytilidaeBrachidontes pharaonisBiological dispersalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMarine Biology
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Seasonal variation in total phenolic content of Dictyopteris polypodioides (Dictyotaceae) and Cystoseira amentacea (Sargassaceae) from the Sicilian c…

2014

This study focuses on the differences in total phenolic content and its seasonal variations in two temperate brown algae, Cystoseira amentacea (C. Agardh) Bory and Dictyopteris polypodioides (A.P. De Candolle) J.V. Lamouroux, inhabiting respectively the infralittoral fringe and the upper infralittoral zone. Phenolic compounds are secondary metabolites, found in almost all brown algal orders, that function as defense against grazers, epiphytes and UV radiation. Total phenolic content was determined colorimetrically with the Folin-Ciocalteu reagent. Results showed significant differences in total phenol content between D. polypodioides and C. amentacea with higher values observed in the first…

Brown algae Mediterranean Sea phenols secondary metabolites temporal variationsbiologySettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaCystoseira amentaceaPlant ScienceSeasonalitybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaselanguage.human_languageDictyopteris polypodioidesBotanyDictyotaceaelanguagemedicineSettore BIO/04 - Fisiologia VegetaleSargassaceaeSicilianFlora Mediterranea
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First detection of SARS-CoV-2 A.23.1 sub-lineage in migrants arriving to Italy via the Mediterranean Sea and public health implications

2021

COVID-19 Mediterranean sea Migrants Molecular surveillance NGS Phylogeny analysis Public health SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination programs2019-20 coronavirus outbreakmedicine.medical_specialtyLineage (genetic)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)Vaccination programsMigrantsArticlePhylogeny analysisMediterranean seamedicineHumansPhylogenyTransients and MigrantsPublic healthSARS-CoV-2Public healthPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthCOVID-19VirologyInfectious DiseasesGeographyItalyMolecular surveillanceNGSMediterranean seaTravel Medicine and Infectious Disease
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Geochemical characterization of groundwater and submarine discharge in the south-eastern Sicily

2006

Abstract The main results of a hydrogeochemical survey carried out during 2002–2003 along the coast of the south-eastern Sicily, which aimed at geochemical characterization of both groundwater chemistry and submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) in the area are presented. A general frame of chemical processes affecting the studied groundwater and SGD point out that most samples fall within the calcite-anhydrite-dolomite field (CAD). The chemical composition of the samples within the CAD triangle is essentially controlled by calcite, dolomite and gypsum dissolution, which are the main minerals of the carbonate rocks hosting the aquifers. An additional process evidenced in this study is a mixi…

CalciteHydrologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryDolomiteGeochemistryGeologyAquiferAquatic ScienceOceanographySubmarine groundwater dischargechemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryNitrateGroundwater Seawater Submarine groundwater discharge Hydrogeochemistry Water–rock interaction Nutrients Mediterranean sea SicilyCarbonate rockSeawaterGroundwaterGeology
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A new record and molecular characterization of the Green Turtle Chelonia mydas (Testudines, Cheloniidae) in Sicilian coastal waters

2017

A juvenile specimen of the Green Turtle, Chelonia mydas, was recovered in Sicilian coastal waters close to Avola (Syracuse province, south-eastern Sicily, Italy). Before being released, the specimen was measured and inspected for the presence of ingested hooks or other possible harms to its health. A fragment of the mtDNA marker COI was amplified and sequenced in order to provide the first molecular data for the species from the central Mediterranean area. The possible influence of climate change on the occurrence of this thermophilic species in the central Mediterranean area is briefly discussed.

Chelonia mydasCOI mitochondrial DNAbiologyEcologySettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaZoologySea turtleAquatic ScienceOceanographybiology.organism_classificationlanguage.human_languagelaw.inventionlawMediterranean SealanguageMediterranean areaCheloniidaeSea turtle Chelonia mydas COI mitochondrial DNA Mediterranean SeaTurtle (robot)Sicilian
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Status of vulnerable Cystoseira populations along the Italian infralittoral fringe, and relationships with environmental and anthropogenic variables

2018

We analyzed the occurrence and status of infralittoral fringe populations of Cystoseira spp. (Fucales) at thirteen rocky sites around the Italian coastline, and explored the relationships with relevant environmental and anthropogenic variables. We found Cystoseira populations at 11 sites: most were scattered and comprised monospecific stands of C. compressa, and only 6 sites also supported sparse specimens of either C. amentacea var. stricta or C. brachycarpa. Coastal human population density, Chlorophyll a seawater concentrations, sea surface temperature, annual range of sea surface temperature and wave fetch explained most of the variation of the status of C. compressa. We hypothesize a g…

Chlorophyll0106 biological sciencesRange (biology)FucalesAquatic ScienceCystoseiraPhaeophytaOceanography010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesCystoseira sppRocky shoreCanopy-forming algaeMediterranean seaRocky infralittoral fringeMediterranean SeaHumansHuman ActivitiesSeawaterEcosystemPopulation DensitybiologyEcologyChlorophyll A010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyFucaleUrbanizationTemperatureMarine habitatsHabitat lossbiology.organism_classificationCanopy-forming algae; Cystoseira spp.; Fucales; Habitat loss; Mediterranean Sea; Rocky infralittoral fringe; Oceanography; Aquatic Science; PollutionPollutionCystoseira spp.Habitat destructionGeographyItalyHabitatHabitat loFucalesEnvironmental MonitoringMarine Pollution Bulletin
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