Alessandra Campanelli
National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Alessandra Campanelli.
Marine Environmental Research | 2017
Paolo Cocci; Martina Capriotti; Gilberto Mosconi; Alessandra Campanelli; Emanuela Frapiccini; Mauro Marini; Giovanni Caprioli; Gianni Sagratini; Graziano Aretusi; Francesco Alessandro Palermo
Recent evidences suggest that the toxicological effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) involve multiple nuclear receptor-mediated pathways, including estrogen receptor (ER) and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) signaling systems. Thus, our objective in this study was to detect the summated endocrine effects of EDCs with metabolic activity in coastal waters of the central Adriatic Sea by means of a toxicogenomic approach using seabream hepatocytes. Gene expression patterns were also correlated with seawater levels of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). We found that seawater extracts taken at certain areas induced gene expression profiles of ERα/vitellogenin, PPARα/Stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1A, cytochrome P4501A (CYP1A) and metallothionein. These increased levels of biomarkers responses correlated with spatial distribution of PAHs/PCBs concentrations observed by chemical analysis in the different study areas. Collectively, our data give a snapshot of the presence of complex EDC mixtures that are able to perturb metabolic signaling in coastal marine waters.
Sensors | 2014
Rosa Maria Cavalli; Mattia Betti; Alessandra Campanelli; Annalisa Di Cicco; Daniela Guglietta; Pierluigi Penna; Viviana Piermattei
This methodology assesses the accuracy with which remote data characterizes a surface, as a function of Full Width at Half Maximum (FWHM). The purpose is to identify the best remote data that improves the characterization of a surface, evaluating the number of bands in the spectral range. The first step creates an accurate dataset of remote simulated data, using in situ hyperspectral reflectances. The second step evaluates the capability of remote simulated data to characterize this surface. The spectral similarity measurements, which are obtained using classifiers, provide this capability. The third step examines the precision of this capability. The assumption is that in situ hyperspectral reflectances are considered the “real” reflectances. They are resized with the same spectral range of the remote data. The spectral similarity measurements which are obtained from “real” resized reflectances, are considered “real” measurements. Therefore, the quantity and magnitude of “errors” (i.e., differences between spectral similarity measurements obtained from “real” resized reflectances and from remote data) provide the accuracy as a function of FWHM. This methodology was applied to evaluate the accuracy with which CHRIS-mode1, CHRIS-mode2, Landsat5-TM, MIVIS and PRISMA data characterize three coastal waters. Their mean values of uncertainty are 1.59%, 3.79%, 7.75%, 3.15% and 1.18%, respectively.
Polar Research | 2011
Alessandra Campanelli; Serena Massolo; Federica Grilli; Mauro Marini; Elio Paschini; Paola Rivaro; Antonio Artegiani; Stanley S. Jacobs
We describe the upper ocean thermal structure and surface nutrient concentrations between New Zealand and Antarctica along five transects that cross the Subantarctic Front, the Polar Front (PF) and the southern Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) front. The surface water thermal structure is coupled with variations in surface nutrient concentrations, making water masses identifiable by both temperature and nutrient ranges. In particular, a strong latitudinal gradient in orthosilicate concentration is centred at the PF. On the earlier sections that extend south-west from the Campbell Plateau, orthosilicate increases sharply southward from 10–15 to 50–55 µmol l−1 between 58° S and 60° S, while surface temperature drops from 7°C to 2°C. Nitrate increases more regularly toward the south, with concentrations ranging from 10–12 µmol l−1 at 54° S to 25–30 µmol l−1 at 66° S. The same features are observed during the later transects between New Zealand and the Ross Sea, but the sharp silica and surface temperature gradients are shifted between 60° S and 64° S. Both temporal and spatial factors may influence the observed variability. The January transect suggests an uptake of silica, orthophosphate and nitrate between 63° S and 70° S over the intervening month, with an average depletion near 37%, 44% and 29%, respectively. An N/P (nitrite + nitrate/orthophosphate) apparent drawdown ratio of 8.8±4.1 and an Si/N (silicic acid/nitrite + nitrate) apparent drawdown ratio >1 suggest this depletion results from a seasonal diatom bloom. A southward movement of the oceanic fronts between New Zealand and the Ross Sea relative to prior measurements is consistent with reports of recent warming and changes in the ACC.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2018
Gian Marco Luna; Elena Manini; Valentina Turk; Tinkara Tinta; Giuseppe d'Errico; Elisa Baldrighi; Vanja Baljak; Donatella Buda; Marina Cabrini; Alessandra Campanelli; Arijana Cenov; Paola Del Negro; Dragana Drakulović; Cinzia Fabbro; Marin Glad; Dolores Grilec; Federica Grilli; Sandra Jokanović; Slaven Jozić; Vesna Kauzlarić; Romina Kraus; Mauro Marini; Josip Mikuš; Stefania Milandri; Marijana Pećarević; Laura Perini; Grazia Marina Quero; Mladen Šolić; Darija Vukić Lušić; Silvia Zoffoli
Ports are subject to a variety of anthropogenic impacts, and there is mounting evidence of faecal contamination through several routes. Yet, little is known about pollution in ports by faecal indicator bacteria (FIB). FIB spatio-temporal dynamics were assessed in 12 ports of the Adriatic Sea, a semi-enclosed basin under strong anthropogenic pressure, and their relationships with environmental variables were explored to gain insight into pollution sources. FIB were abundant in ports, often more so than in adjacent areas; their abundance patterns were related to salinity, oxygen, and nutrient levels. In addition, a molecular method, quantitative (q)PCR, was used to quantify FIB. qPCR enabled faster FIB determination and water quality monitoring that culture-based methods. These data provide robust baseline evidence of faecal contamination in ports and can be used to improve the management of routine port activities (dredging and ballast water exchange), having potential to spread pathogens in the sea.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2018
Romina Kraus; Živana Ninčević-Gladan; Rocco Auriemma; Mauro Bastianini; Luca Bolognini; Marina Cabrini; Magdalena Cara; Marijeta Čalić; Alessandra Campanelli; Ivan Cvitković; Marija Despalatović; Dragana Drakulović; Vesna Flander-Putrle; Fabio Grati; Mateja Grego; Federica Grilli; Andrej Jaklin; Ivica Janeković; Jerina Kolitari; Lovrenc Lipej; Erika Magaletti; Mauro Marini; Borut Mavrič; Josip Mikuš; Patricija Mozetič; Martina Orlando-Bonaca; Slavica Petović; Robert Precali; Nastjenjka Supić; Benedetta Trabucco
Port baseline surveys (PBS) provide species inventories in and around ports, with a focus on non-indigenous species that may have been introduced by vessels, primarily via ballast water. PBS are an essential tool to support effective management strategies for non-indigenous as well as native harmful aquatic organisms and pathogens (HAOP). This paper describes the methodology of PBS that were conducted in 12 Adriatic ports. The PBS employed existing protocols that were adapted to meet the characteristics of the Adriatic sites. Their results are reported in several papers included in this special issue, each of which is devoted to a specific community. An overview of existing surveys protocols - which provide valuable support to decision-making and to design effective monitoring of non-indigenous species - is also supplied.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2017
Stefano Accoroni; Luciana Tartaglione; Emma Dello Iacovo; Salvatore Pichierri; Mauro Marini; Alessandra Campanelli; Carmela Dell'Aversano; Cecilia Totti
Intense blooms of the toxic dinoflagellate Ostreopsis have been a recurrent phenomenon along several Mediterranean coasts. Blooms have been associated with noxious effects on human health and mortality of marine organisms, due to the production of palytoxin-like compounds. We analyzed the toxin concentrations throughout an O. cf. ovata bloom to highlight their relationships with environmental parameters in the Conero Riviera, northern Adriatic Sea. High temperature and balanced nutrient conditions were the optimal environmental conditions to start and sustain blooms as well as to maximize toxin production. Ostreopsis showed a gradual decrease of toxin content throughout the bloom ascribed to the occurring of the same non-optimal conditions that led to the bloom decline. Moreover, our results suggest that toxin fraction released during bloom could be higher than that released in batch culture. Results from this study pointed out that the first bloom phase is potentially the most dangerous to human health.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008
Mauro Marini; Burt Jones; Alessandra Campanelli; Federica Grilli; Craig M. Lee
Dynamics of Atmospheres and Oceans | 2011
Alessandra Campanelli; Federica Grilli; Elio Paschini; Mauro Marini
Marine Geology | 2016
Mauro Marini; Vittorio Maselli; Alessandra Campanelli; Federica Foglini; Federica Grilli
Geofizika | 2009
Alessandra Campanelli; Ana Bulatović; Marina Cabrini; Federica Grilli; Zoran Kljajić; Renzo Mosetti; Elio Paschini; Pierluigi Penna; Mauro Marini