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Dive into the research topics where Adriano Stinca is active.

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Featured researches published by Adriano Stinca.


Plant Biosystems | 2018

An updated checklist of the vascular flora native to Italy.

Fabrizio Bartolucci; L. Peruzzi; Gabriele Galasso; Antonella Albano; A. Alessandrini; Nmg Ardenghi; Giovanni Astuti; Gianluigi Bacchetta; S. Ballelli; Enrico Banfi; G. Barberis; Liliana Bernardo; D. Bouvet; M. Bovio; Lorenzo Cecchi; R. Di Pietro; Gianniantonio Domina; Simonetta Fascetti; Giuseppe Fenu; F. Festi; Bruno Foggi; Lorenzo Gallo; Günter Gottschlich; L. Gubellini; Duilio Iamonico; Mauro Iberite; P. Jiménez-Mejías; E. Lattanzi; D. Marchetti; E. Martinetto

Abstract An updated inventory of the native vascular flora of Italy, providing details on the occurrence at regional level, is presented. The checklist includes 8195 taxa (6417 species and 1778 subspecies), distributed in 1092 genera and 152 families; 23 taxa are lycophytes, 108 ferns and fern allies, 30 gymnosperms and 8034 angiosperms. The taxa currently occurring in Italy are 7483, while 568 taxa have not been confirmed in recent times, 99 are doubtfully occurring in the country and 19 are data deficient. Out of the 568 not confirmed taxa, 26 are considered extinct or possibly extinct.


Plant Biosystems | 2016

Plant invasions on small Mediterranean islands: An overview

Laura Celesti-Grapow; L. Bassi; Giuseppe Brundu; Ignazio Camarda; Emanuela Carli; Giuseppe D’Auria; E. Del Guacchio; Gianniantonio Domina; Giulio Ferretti; Bruno Foggi; Lorenzo Lazzaro; Pietro Mazzola; S. Peccenini; F. Pretto; Adriano Stinca; C. Blasi

Abstract Biological invasions have become one of the main drivers of habitat degradation and a leading cause of biodiversity loss in island ecosystems worldwide. The spread of invasive species poses a particular environmental threat on the islands of the Mediterranean Basin, which are hot spots of biodiversity and contain rare habitats and endemic species, especially on small islands, which are highly vulnerable to biodiversity loss. Following a recent survey, in this paper we aim to provide an overview of the present-day non-native vascular flora of small Mediterranean islands based on a sample of 37 islands located in the middle of the Mediterranean Sea, off the coast of Italy. By comparing the current data with those gathered during a previous survey conducted in the same study area, we also aim to highlight the main changes that have occurred in non-native plant species diversity, establishment and distribution in recent years and to present a first general overview of the most prominent plant taxa in the island’s introduced flora, focusing on those most responsible for these changes and those that pose the greatest environmental threats. We recorded 203 non-native plant species, 147 of which have established on at least one of the islands investigated. Overall, we detected a sharp increase in the number of species, in their levels of establishment and in the extent of their distribution within the study area in recent years. This may be explained by the intensification of research on plant invasions, as well as to new introduction, escape, establishment and invasion events on the islands in recent decades. The most remarkable plants detected include acacias and succulents, two groups that appear to be emerging very rapidly and to be posing new threats to the conservation of the islands’ natural environment, especially the genus Carpobrotus, whose spread into natural habitats containing rare and endemic taxa is seriously threatening biodiversity on both a local and global scale. On the whole, our results show that the plant invasion phenomenon in the study area has in recent years intensified considerably. As this process seems likely to continue, we should expect more establishment events in the future and the further spread of species that are already present. This is of particular conservation concern on the islands investigated in this survey, which are rich in endemisms, but have been facing deep socio-economic and environmental transformations in these last decades as a consequence of the abandonment of traditional management practices and the development of tourism. Our study thus confirms that plant invasions on Mediterranean islands are a serious environmental problem that threatens biodiversity conservation not only in the Mediterranean biogeographic region, but also on the global scale, and highlights the need to further increase efforts aimed at preventing, controlling or mitigating the effects of plant invasions in island ecosystems.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Regime shift by an exotic nitrogen-fixing shrub mediates plant facilitation in primary succession.

Adriano Stinca; Giovanni Battista Chirico; Guido Incerti; Giuliano Bonanomi

Ecosystem invasion by non-native, nitrogen-fixing species is a global phenomenon with serious ecological consequences. However, in the Mediterranean basin few studies addressed the impact of invasion by nitrogen-fixing shrubs on soil quality and hydrological properties at local scale, and the possible effects on succession dynamics and ecosystem invasibility by further species. In this multidisciplinary study we investigated the impact of Genista aetnensis (Biv.) DC., an exotic nitrogen-fixing shrub, on the Vesuvius Grand Cone (Southern Italy). Specifically, we tested the hypotheses that the invasion of G. aetnensis has a significant impact on soil quality, soil hydrological regime, local microclimate and plant community structure, and that its impact increases during the plant ontogenetic cycle. We showed that G. aetnensis, in a relatively short time-span (i.e. ~ 40 years), has been able to build-up an island of fertility under its canopy, by accumulating considerable stocks of C, N, and P in the soil, and by also improving the soil hydrological properties. Moreover, G. aetnensis mitigates the daily range of soil temperature, reducing the exposure of coexisting plants to extremely high temperatures and water loss by soil evaporation, particularly during the growing season. Such amelioration of soil quality, coupled with the mitigation of below-canopy microclimatic conditions, has enhanced plant colonization of the barren Grand Cone slopes, by both herbaceous and woody species. These results suggest that the invasion of G. aetnensis could eventually drive to the spread of other, more resource-demanding exotic species, promoting alternative successional trajectories that may dramatically affect the local landscape. Our study is the first record of the invasion of G. aetnensis, an additional example of the regime shifts driven by N-fixing shrubs in Mediterranean region. Further studies are needed to identity specific management practices that can limit the spread and impacts of this species.


Webbia | 2009

The vascular flora of the Royal Park of Portici (Naples, Italy)

Adriano Stinca; Riccardo Motti

Summary To extend our floristic knowledge of the Vesuvian area and, more generally, of Campania region, we carried out a botanical survey of the Royal Park of Portici (Naples, Italy). The inventory we obtained features 449 taxa, including 108 new taxa for the Somma-Vesuvius complex and 13 species are new to the Campania region. 50 previously recorded taxa were not retrieved. An analysis of life forms and phytochorological spectra showed that the flora is dominated by Therophytes (42.8%) and Mediterranean species s. l. (41.7%). The high number of Alien species (17.6%) and the low number of Endemics (1.1%) confirm the occurrence of extensive human disturbance.


Hacquetia | 2014

Manihot Esculenta (Euphorbiaceae), A New Alien Species In Italy

Adriano Stinca; Giuseppe D’Auria; Riccardo Motti

Abstract In the present work the presence of Manihot esculenta Crantz is reported for the first time for Italy and Europe, a neophyte native to South America: ecology and invasive status are presented. Izvleček V članku poročamo o prvem pojavljanju vrste Manihot esculenta Crantz, neofita iz Južne Amerike, v Italiji in Evropi in predstavljamo njegovo ekologijo in invazivni status.


Webbia | 2017

New alien vascular species for the flora of southern Italy

Adriano Stinca; Giuseppina Chianese; Giuseppe D’Auria; Emanuele Del Guacchio; Simonetta Fascetti; Enrico Vito Perrino; Leonardo Rosati; G. Salerno; Annalisa Santangelo

Abstract In the present work new or confirmed alien not-cultivated vascular plants are reported for the flora of the southern Italy regions: Acalypha virginica, Alcea biennis subsp. biennis, Bidens subalternans, Cardamine occulta, Casuarina equisetifolia, Cedrus atlantica, Cedrus deodara, Chamaeiris orientalis, Cotula coronopifolia, Elodea canadensis, Eragrostis mexicana subsp. virescens, Euphorbia nutans, Fagopyrum esculentum, Ficus microcarpa, Hesperocyparis arizonica, Hesperocyparis glabra, Kalanchoë × houghtonii, Lantana camara subsp. aculeata, Lemna minuta, Ligustrum sinense, Lobelia erinus, Lonicera japonica, Oenothera lindheimeri, Panicum capillare, Persicaria capitata, Phyla nodiflora, Schinus molle, Sedum palmeri, Sesbania punicea, Solanum elaeagnifolium, Solanum sisymbriifolium and Veronica peregrina. Furthermore, Lantana montevidensis is new for the Italian alien flora, Asparagus asparagoides and Tradescantia pallida are reported for the first time in continental Italy, whereas Cucurbita moschata, Nandina domestica and Taxodium distichum are new for the Italian peninsula. Moreover, field surveys in Campania allow us to update at regional level the naturalization status of Euphorbia nutans (naturalized) and Ligustrum sinense (casual). The new data confirm that new non-native species are continuously introduced into the flora of southern Italy and it is noteworthy that several species, widely used in the reforestation since the middle of the last century, have undergone naturalization in recent years.


Acta Botanica Croatica | 2016

First Italian record of Paspalum notatum Flüggé (Poaceae) and its typification

Adriano Stinca; Gabriele Galasso; Enrico Banfi

Abstract In the present work the presence of Paspalum notatum Flüggé (Poaceae) in Italy was reported for the first time. It is a neophyte native to America, known for applications in phytoremediation. Its typification, ecology and invasiveness status are also presented.


Phytotaxa | 2015

An inventory of the names of vascular plants endemic to Italy, their loci classici and types

Lorenzo Peruzzi; Gianniantonio Domina; Fabrizio Bartolucci; Gabriele Galasso; S. Peccenini; Francesco Maria Raimondo; Antonella Albano; A. Alessandrini; Enrico Banfi; G. Barberis; Liliana Bernardo; M. Bovio; Salvatore Brullo; Giuseppe Brundu; Antonello Brunu; Ignazio Camarda; Luisa Carta; Fabio Conti; Antonio Croce; Duilio Iamonico; Mauro Iberite; Gianluca Iiriti; D. Longo; Stefano Marsili; Pietro Medagli; Annalaura Pistarino; Cristina Salmeri; Annalisa Santangelo; Elisabetta Scassellati; Federico Selvi


International Biodeterioration & Biodegradation | 2011

Analysis of the biodeteriogenic vascular flora at the Royal Palace of Portici in southern Italy

Riccardo Motti; Adriano Stinca


Eppo Bulletin | 2012

Pistia stratiotes L. and Eichhornia crassipes (Mart.) Solms.: emerging invasive alien hydrophytes in Campania and Sardinia (Italy)

Giuseppe Brundu; Adriano Stinca; L. Angius; G. Bonanomi; Laura Celesti-Grapow; G. D'Auria; R. Griffo; A. Migliozzi; R. Motti; P. Spigno

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Annalisa Santangelo

University of Naples Federico II

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Riccardo Motti

University of Naples Federico II

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Fabio Conti

University of Belgrade

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Bruno Foggi

University of Florence

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Giuliano Bonanomi

University of Naples Federico II

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Antonio Croce

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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