Publications by authors named "Vittorio Gazale"

Background: Marine protected areas (MPAs) usually have both positive effects of protection for the fisheries' target species and indirect negative effects for sea urchins. Moreover, often in MPAs sea urchin human harvest is restricted, but allowed. This study is aimed at estimating the effect of human harvest of the sea urchin within MPAs, where fish exploitation is restricted and its density is already controlled by a higher natural predation risk.

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Our study provides a first dataset on marine litter collected at five pocket beaches situated in the northern Sardinia (Italy). The monitoring method refers to the operational guidelines for rapid beach assessment of beach waste described by UNEP. We classified the 7975 items collected according to the eight categories and 99 types.

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Article Synopsis
  • The fan mussel is the largest bivalve unique to the Mediterranean Sea, and since 2016, it has been experiencing significant mass mortality in various regions.
  • Initial research pointed to a specific pathogen as the main cause, but newer studies suggest a combination of factors might be at play in this disease outbreak.
  • Molecular analyses conducted in Sardinia discovered that some pathogens are not exclusive to fan mussels and revealed the presence of other bacteria previously unreported in this species, highlighting the complexity of the mass mortality situation.
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Whereas most work to understand impacts of humans on biodiversity on coastal areas has focused on large, conspicuous organisms, we highlight effects of tourist access on the diversity of microscopic marine animals (meiofauna). We used a DNA metabarcoding approach with an iterative and phylogeny-based approach for the taxonomic assignment of meiofauna and relate diversity patterns to the numbers of tourists accessing sandy beaches on an otherwise un-impacted island National Park. Tourist frequentation, independently of differences in sediment granulometry, beach length, and other potential confounding factors, affected meiofaunal diversity in the shallow "swash" zone right at the mean water mark; the impacts declined with water depth (up to 2 m).

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