20 results match your criteria: "DISTAV-University of Genoa[Affiliation]"
Ecol Evol
December 2024
Shoreline Società Cooperativa Trieste Italy.
Following the increased mass mortality of populations in the Mediterranean, reliable protocols for the transport, maintenance, and controlled reproduction of this highly endangered species were drawn up within the European Life Pinna project. To test these protocols, the large Pinnidae , which shares similar habits to , has been used. In December 2022, a transport trial of nine specimens of from Trieste (NE Italy) to Camogli (NW Italy) was carried out.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiodivers Data J
July 2024
Italian National Antarctic Museum (MNA, section of Genoa), Genoa, Italy Italian National Antarctic Museum (MNA, section of Genoa) Genoa Italy.
Background: The order Isopoda Latreille, 1816 consists of species occurring in terrestrial, marine and freshwater environments. In the Southern Ocean (SO), this group is amongst the most speciose and occur at all depths. Isopoda biogeography, despite being studied since the first Antarctic expeditions, is still poorly known from a geographical point of view and shows large occurrence gaps for some groups in specific sectors of the SO.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiodivers Data J
March 2024
Italian National Antarctic Museum (MNA, section of Genoa), Genoa, Italy Italian National Antarctic Museum (MNA, section of Genoa) Genoa Italy.
Background: Distributional data on planktonic, benthic and sympagic copepods collected in the framework of the XXXIV Expeditions of the Italian National Antarctic Programme (PNRA) to the Ross Sea sector from 2018-2019 are here provided. These occurrences correspond to specimens collected from the 25 μm filters used in the desalination plant of the Italian research station "Mario Zucchelli" (MZS), located in the Terra Nova Bay area (TNB; Ross Sea, Antarctica). This dataset is a contribution to the Antarctic Biodiversity Portal, the thematic Antarctic node for both the Ocean Biogeographic Information System (AntOBIS) and the Global Biodiversity Information Facility Antarctic Biodiversity Information Facility (ANTABIF).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiology (Basel)
March 2023
School of Biosciences and Veterinary Medicine, University of Camerino, 62032 Camerino (MC), Italy.
The concept of personalized medicine and overcoming healthcare inequalities have become extremely popular in recent decades. Polymers can support cost reductions, the simplicity of customized printing processes, and possible future wide-scale expansion. Polymers with β-tricalcium phosphate (TCP) are well known for their synergy with oral tissues and their ability to induce osteoconductivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Med
March 2023
Department of Earth, Environmental and Life Sciences (DISTAV) University of Genoa, 16132 Genoa, Italy.
The recent attention to quality of life and oral health care procedures reflects a renewed 'patient-based' approach to dealing with non-life-threatening conditions. In the current study, we proposed a novel surgical approach to the extraction of impacted inferior third molars (iMs3) through a randomised, blinded, split-mouth controlled clinical trial following the CONSORT guidelines. The novel surgical procedure, hereinafter referred to as single incision access (SIA), will be compared with our previously described flapless surgical approach (FSA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHandb Exp Pharmacol
April 2023
Institute of Biophysics, Genoa, Italy.
Human TPC channels are an emerging family of intracellular proteins fundamental for cell physiology and involved in various severe pathologies. Their localization in the membranes of endo-lysosomes, intracellular compartments of submicrometric dimensions, makes their study difficult with usual electrophysiological techniques. In this work, we show how the plant vacuole, a versatile organelle that can occupy up to 90% of the volume in mature plant cells, can be used as a heterologous system of expression for functional characterization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Evol
July 2022
CNRS UMR 7144 'Adaptation et Diversité en Milieux Marins' (AD2M) Team 'Dynamique de la Diversité Marine' (DyDiv), Station Biologique de Roscoff Sorbonne Université Roscoff France.
The Antarctic marine environment hosts diversified and highly endemic benthos owing to its unique geologic and climatic history. Current warming trends have increased the urgency of understanding Antarctic species history to predict how environmental changes will impact ecosystem functioning. Antarctic benthic lineages have traditionally been examined under three hypotheses: (1) high endemism and local radiation, (2) emergence of deep-sea taxa through thermohaline circulation, and (3) species migrations across the Polar Front.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomol Concepts
March 2022
Institute of Biophysics, National Research Council, Via De Marini 6, 16149 Genova, Italy.
In the present work, we discuss the way in which the parallel application of the patch-clamp technique and the 2',7'-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein (BCECF) fluorescence detection for recording luminal proton changes allows the functional characterization of nonelectrogenic potassium/proton vacuolar antiporters of the NHX (Na/H exchanger) family. Moreover, we review the functional role of the tonoplast-specific phosphoinositide PI(3,5)P, able to simultaneously inhibit the activity of NHXs and CLC-a transporters, whose coordinated action can play an important role in the water balance of plant cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
April 2022
DISTAV - University of Genoa, 26 Corso Europa, I-16032 Genoa, Italy.
In the last decade, interest in monitoring and managing plastic pollution has greatly increased. This study compared levels of microplastic contamination in stomachs of Mugilidae fish, suggesting this family as a target for plastic pollution monitoring in areas with different degrees of anthropisation. Two sites characterised by low and high anthropic impact, a fishpond (S'Ena Arrubia, Italy) and a port (Genoa, Italy), respectively, were compared.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
May 2021
DISTAV - University of Genoa, 26 Corso Europa, I-16032 Genoa, Italy.
Environmental contamination by plastics and microplastics is a recognised problem worldwide, and it is the focus of many research teams. In the quantification of microplastics in the environment (plastic items with dimensions between 1 μm and 5 mm), the search for shared and universally recognised protocols and methodologies is still ongoing. In this study, the use of a method for extracting microplastics from marine sediments based on density separation has been considered.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmacol Res
January 2021
Unit of Histology and Medical Embryology, Department of Anatomy, Histology, Forensic Medicine and Orthopaedics, SAPIENZA University of Rome, 16 Via A. Scarpa, Rome, 00161 Italy.
Harmful Algae
September 2017
DISTAV-University of Genoa, Corso Europa 26, 16132, Genoa, Italy; CoNISMa-P.le Flaminio, 9, 00196, Rome, Italy.
Concern regarding Benthic Harmful Algal Blooms (BHABs) is increasing since some harmful benthic species have been identified in new areas. In the Mediterranean basin, the most common harmful benthic microalgae are Ostreopsis cf. ovata and Prorocentrum lima, which produce palytoxin-like compounds and okadaic acid respectively, and the need to implement monitoring activities has increased.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConnectivity between populations influences both their dynamics and the genetic structuring of species. In this study, we explored connectivity patterns of a marine species with long-distance dispersal, the edible common sea urchin , focusing mainly on the Adriatic-Ionian basins (Central Mediterranean). We applied a multidisciplinary approach integrating population genomics, based on 1,122 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) obtained from 2b-RAD in 275 samples, with Lagrangian simulations performed with a biophysical model of larval dispersal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
June 2017
DISTAV - University of Genoa, 26 Corso Europa, I-16132, Genoa, Italy. Electronic address:
Ports are complex environments due to their complicated geometry (quays, channels, and piers), the presence of human activities (vessel traffic, shipyards, industries, and discharges), and natural factors (stream and torrent inputs, sea action, and currents). Taking these factors into consideration, we have examined the marine environment of a port from the point of view of the circulation of the water masses, hydrological characteristics, distribution of the sediment grain-size, mineralogical characteristics, and metal concentrations of the bottom sediments. Our results show that, in the case of the Port of Genoa (north-western Italy), the impact of human activities (such as a coal power-plant, oil depots, shipyards, dredging of the bottom sediments, etc.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZoology (Jena)
June 2017
ISMAR - CNR, via de Marini 6, 16149 Genoa, Italy.
Sharks belonging to the family Hexanchidae have six or seven gill slits, unlike all other elasmobranchs, which have five gill slits. Their olfactory organs have a round shape, which is common for holocephalans, but not for elasmobranchs. Thus, the shape of the olfactory organ represents a further, less striking, peculiarity of this family among elasmobranchs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHarmful Algae
July 2016
CNR - Institute of Marine Science (ISMAR), Via De Marini, 6, 16149 Genova, Italy.
The frequency and geographic extension of microalgae and gelatinous zooplankton blooms seem to have been increasing worldwide over recent decades. In particular, the harmful dinoflagellate Ostreopsis cf. ovata and the Schyphozoan jellyfish Aurelia sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
December 2015
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, dell'Ambiente e della Vita - DiSTAV - University of Genoa, Italy.
Seamounts and their influence on the surrounding environment are currently being extensively debated but, surprisingly, scant information is available for the Mediterranean area. Furthermore, although the deep Tyrrhenian Sea is characterised by a complex bottom morphology and peculiar hydrodynamic features, which would suggest a variable influence on the benthic domain, few studies have been carried out there, especially for soft-bottom macrofaunal assemblages. In order to fill this gap, the structure of the meio-and macrofaunal assemblages of the Vercelli Seamount and the surrounding deep area (northern Tyrrhenian Sea - western Mediterranean) were studied in relation to environmental features.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Evol
July 2014
Marine Biology and Ecology Research Centre, School of Marine Sciences and Engineering, Plymouth University PL4 8AA, UK.
Seaweed and seagrass communities in the northeast Atlantic have been profoundly impacted by humans, and the rate of change is accelerating rapidly due to runaway CO2 emissions and mounting pressures on coastlines associated with human population growth and increased consumption of finite resources. Here, we predict how rapid warming and acidification are likely to affect benthic flora and coastal ecosystems of the northeast Atlantic in this century, based on global evidence from the literature as interpreted by the collective knowledge of the authorship. We predict that warming will kill off kelp forests in the south and that ocean acidification will remove maerl habitat in the north.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Environ Res
February 2014
DiSTAV - University of Genoa, C.so Europa 26, 16132 Genoa, Italy.
Continuous anthropogenic CO2 emissions to the atmosphere and uptake by the oceans will cause a reduction of seawater pH and saturation state (Ω) of CaCO3 minerals from which marine calcifiers build their shells and skeletons. Sea urchins use the most soluble form of calcium carbonate, high-magnesium calcite, to build their skeleton, spines and grazing apparatus. In order to highlight the effects of increased pCO2 on the test thickness and carbonate elemental composition of juvenile sea urchins and potential differences in their responses linked to the diet, we performed a laboratory experiment on juvenile Paracentrotus lividus, grazing on calcifying (Corallina elongata) and non-calcifying (Cystoseira amentacea, Dictyota dichotoma) macroalgae, under different pH (corresponding to pCO2 values of 390, 550, 750 and 1000 μatm).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTemperate marine rocky habitats may be alternatively characterized by well vegetated macroalgal assemblages or barren grounds, as a consequence of direct and indirect human impacts (e.g. overfishing) and grazing pressure by herbivorous organisms.
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