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Dive into the research topics where Bruno De Cinti is active.

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Featured researches published by Bruno De Cinti.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Generalisation within specialization: inter-individual diet variation in the only specialized salamander in the world

Andrea Costa; Sebastiano Salvidio; Mario Posillico; Giorgio Matteucci; Bruno De Cinti; Antonio Romano

Specialization is typically inferred at population and species level but in the last decade many authors highlighted this trait at the individual level, finding that generalist populations can be composed by both generalist and specialist individual. Despite hundreds of reported cases of individual specialization there is a complete lack of information on inter-individual diet variation in specialist species. We studied the diet of the Italian endemic Spectacled Salamander (Salamandrina perspicillata), in a temperate forest ecosystem, to disclose the realised trophic niche, prey selection strategy in function of phenotypic variation and inter-individual diet variation. Our results showed that Salamandrina is highly specialized on Collembola and the more specialized individuals are the better performing ones. Analyses of inter-individual diet variation showed that a subset of animals exhibited a broader trophic niche, adopting different foraging strategies. Our findings reflects the optimal foraging theory both at population and individual level, since animals in better physiological conditions are able to exploit the most profitable prey, suggesting that the two coexisting strategies are not equivalent. At last this species, feeding on decomposers of litter detritus, could play a key role determining litter retention rate, nutrient cycle and carbon sequestration.


PeerJ | 2016

Patchiness of forest landscape can predict species distribution better than abundance: the case of a forest-dwelling passerine, the short-toed treecreeper, in central Italy

Marco Basile; Francesco Valerio; Rosario Balestrieri; Mario Posillico; Rodolfo Bucci; Tiziana Altea; Bruno De Cinti; Giorgio Matteucci

Environmental heterogeneity affects not only the distribution of a species but also its local abundance. High heterogeneity due to habitat alteration and fragmentation can influence the realized niche of a species, lowering habitat suitability as well as reducing local abundance. We investigate whether a relationship exists between habitat suitability and abundance and whether both are affected by fragmentation. Our aim was to assess the predictive power of such a relationship to derive advice for environmental management. As a model species we used a forest specialist, the short-toed treecreeper (Family: Certhiidae; Certhia brachydactyla Brehm, 1820), and sampled it in central Italy. Species distribution was modelled as a function of forest structure, productivity and fragmentation, while abundance was directly estimated in two central Italian forest stands. Different algorithms were implemented to model species distribution, employing 170 occurrence points provided mostly by the MITO2000 database: an artificial neural network, classification tree analysis, flexible discriminant analysis, generalized boosting models, generalized linear models, multivariate additive regression splines, maximum entropy and random forests. Abundance was estimated also considering detectability, through N-mixture models. Differences between forest stands in both abundance and habitat suitability were assessed as well as the existence of a relationship. Simpler algorithms resulted in higher goodness of fit than complex ones. Fragmentation was highly influential in determining potential distribution. Local abundance and habitat suitability differed significantly between the two forest stands, which were also significantly different in the degree of fragmentation. Regression showed that suitability has a weak significant effect in explaining increasing value of abundance. In particular, local abundances varied both at low and high suitability values. The study lends support to the concept that the degree of fragmentation can contribute to alter not only the suitability of an area for a species, but also its abundance. Even if the relationship between suitability and abundance can be used as an early warning of habitat deterioration, its weak predictive power needs further research. However, we define relationships between a species and some landscape features (i.e., fragmentation, extensive rejuvenation of forests and tree plantations) which could be easily controlled by appropriate forest management planning to enhance environmental suitability, at least in an area possessing high conservation and biodiversity values.


Journal of Ecology | 2011

Functional traits and local environment predict vegetation responses to disturbance: a pan‐European multi‐site experiment

Markus Bernhardt-Römermann; Alan Gray; Adam J. Vanbergen; Laurent Bergès; Andreas Bohner; Rob W. Brooker; Luc De Bruyn; Bruno De Cinti; Thomas Dirnböck; Ulf Grandin; Alison J. Hester; Robert Kanka; Stefan Klotz; Grégory Loucougaray; Lars Lundin; Giorgio Matteucci; Ilona Mészáros; Viktor Oláh; Elena Preda; Bernard Prévosto; Juha Pykälä; Wolfgang Schmidt; Michele E. Taylor; Angheluta Vadineanu; Theresa Waldmann; Jutta Stadler


Global Change Biology | 2014

On the tracks of Nitrogen deposition effects on temperate forests at their southern European range - an observational study from Italy.

Marco Ferretti; Aldo Marchetto; Silvia Arisci; Filippo Bussotti; Marco Calderisi; Stefano Carnicelli; Guia Cecchini; Gianfranco Fabbio; Giada Bertini; Giorgio Matteucci; Bruno De Cinti; Luca Salvati; Enrico Pompei


Italian Journal of Forest and Mountain Environments | 2010

Structural patterns, growth processes, carbon stocks in an Italian network of old-growth beech forests.

Gianluca Piovesan; Alfredo Alessandrini; Michele Baliva; Tommaso Chiti; Ettore D'Andrea; Bruno De Cinti; Alfredo Di Filippo; Luigi Hermanin; Marco Lauteri; Giuseppe Scarascia Mugnozza; Bartolomeo Schirone; Emanuele Ziaco; Giorgio Matteucci


Forest Ecology and Management | 2015

A guild-based approach to assessing the influence of beech forest structure on bird communities

Rosario Balestrieri; Marco Basile; Mario Posillico; Tiziana Altea; Bruno De Cinti; Giorgio Matteucci


Forest Ecology and Management | 2017

Habitat trees and salamanders: Conservation and management implications in temperate forests

Riccardo Piraccini; Mario Cammarano; Andrea Costa; Marco Basile; Mario Posillico; Luigi Boitani; Marco Bascietto; Giorgio Matteucci; Bruno De Cinti; Antonio Romano


Forest Ecology and Management | 2017

Conservation of salamanders in managed forests: Methods and costs of monitoring abundance and habitat selection

Antonio Romano; Andrea Costa; Marco Basile; Ranieri Raimondi; Mario Posillico; Daniele Scinti Roger; Aldo Crisci; Riccardo Piraccini; Pasquale Raia; Giorgio Matteucci; Bruno De Cinti


Hystrix-italian Journal of Mammalogy | 2015

The effect of thinning on bat activity in Italian high forests: the LIFE+ "ManFor C.BD." experience

Luca Cistrone; Tiziana Altea; Giorgio Matteucci; Mario Posillico; Bruno De Cinti; Danilo Russo


Forest Ecology and Management | 2012

Biometric assessment of aboveground carbon pools and fluxes in three European forests by Randomized Branch Sampling

Marco Bascietto; Bruno De Cinti; Giorgio Matteucci; Alessandro Cescatti

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Fabrizio Ferretti

Consiglio per la ricerca e la sperimentazione in agricoltura

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Gianfranco Fabbio

Consiglio per la ricerca e la sperimentazione in agricoltura

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Paolo Cantiani

Consiglio per la ricerca e la sperimentazione in agricoltura

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Riccardo Piraccini

Sapienza University of Rome

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