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Dive into the research topics where Carlo Andreoli is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlo Andreoli.


Botanica Marina | 1995

Occurrence of Ostreopsis ovata (Dinophyceae) in the Tyrrhenian sea during summer 1994

L Tognetto; Sabrina Bellato; Isabella Moro; Carlo Andreoli

The presence of Ostreopsis ovata, a dinoflagellate, characteristic of the tropical and subtropical seas and particularly of ciguatera endemic areas, was reported in the Tyrrhenian Sea. Our results showed the persistence of this species at two stations from August to October 1994. Some observations led us to believe that O. ovata was probably indigenous in this area and not introduced by shipping with bilge water or ballast water.


Polar Biology | 1995

Diatoms and dinoflagellates in Terra Nova Bay (Ross Sea-Antarctica) during austral summer 1990

Carlo Andreoli; C. Tolomio; Isabella Moro; Marco Radice; Emanuela Moschin; Sabrina Bellato

During January/February 1990 the floristic composition and biomass of diatoms and dinoflagellates in Terra Nova Bay (Ross Sea) were investigated. The study area included eight stations, seven of which were inshore and one offshore. Of the 94 taxa identified, 58 were diatoms and 34 were dinoflagellates. Cell densities were higher in surface layers and particularly at two stations, one located at the centre of the bay, and the other to the south of the Terra Nova station. While density data showed that the diatoms predominated over the dinoflagellates and over Phaeocystis sp., the biomass values were largely made up of the dinoflagellates contribution.


Photosynthetica | 2009

Responses of the Antarctic microalga Koliella antarctica (Trebouxiophyceae, Chlorophyta) to cadmium contamination

N. La Rocca; Carlo Andreoli; Giorgio M. Giacometti; Nicoletta Rascio; Isabella Moro

Ultrastructural and physiological effects of exposure to 1 ppm and 5 ppm of cadmium (Cd) on cultured cells of Koliella antarctica, a green microalga from Antarctica, were investigated. The amount of Cd in the alga rose with the increase of the metal concentration in the growth medium and most Cd remained outside the cells, bound to the components of the cell walls. The increase of Cd in the microalga was concomitant with the decrease of other elements, mainly calcium (Ca). Exposure to 1 ppm Cd slowed culture growth by inhibiting cell division and also caused the development of some misshapen cells with chloroplast showing disordered thylakoids. However, this concentration did not substantially affect the chlorophyll (Chl) content or photosystem (PS) activity. At 5 ppm, Cd cell growth suddenly stopped and some cells lysed. After a week of Cd contamination, the cells were enlarged and severely damaged. The chloroplasts showed great ultrastructural alterations and a reduced Chl content. Cd exposure negatively affected PSII, whose activity was almost completely lost after four days.


Journal of Phycology | 2012

Ulva (Chlorophyta, Ulvales) Biodiversity in the North Adriatic Sea (Mediterranean, Italy): Cryptic Species and New Introductions.

Marion Adelheid Wolf; Katia Sciuto; Carlo Andreoli; Isabella Moro

Ulva Linnaeus (Ulvophyceae, Ulvales) is a genus of green algae widespread in different aquatic environments. Members of this genus show a very simple morphology and a certain degree of phenotypic plasticity, heavily influenced by environmental conditions, making difficult the delineation of species by morphological features alone. Most studies dealing with Ulva biodiversity in Mediterranean waters have been based only on morphological characters and a modern taxonomic revision of this genus in the Mediterranean is not available. We report here the results of an investigation on the diversity of Ulva in the North Adriatic Sea based on molecular analyses. Collections from three areas, two of which subject to intense shipping traffic, were examined, as well as historical collections of Ulva stored in the Herbarium Patavinum of the University of Padova, Italy. Molecular analyses based on partial sequences of the rbcL and tufA genes revealed the presence of six different species, often with overlapping morphologies: U. californica Wille, U. flexuosa Wulfen, U. rigida C. Agardh, U. compressa Linnaeus, U. pertusa Kjellman, and one probable new taxon. U. californica is a new record for the Mediterranean and U. pertusa is a new record for the Adriatic. Partial sequences obtained from historical collections show that most of the old specimens are referable to U. rigida. No specimens referable to the two alien species were found among the old herbarium specimens. The results indicate that the number of introduced seaweed species and their impact on Mediterranean communities have been underestimated, due to the difficulties in species identification of morphologically simple taxa as Ulva.


Journal of Phycology | 2010

First record of Gracilaria vermiculophylla (Gracilariales, Rhodophyta) in the Po Delta lagoons, Mediterranean Sea (Italy).

Adriano Sfriso; Silvia Maistro; Carlo Andreoli; Isabella Moro

Molecular outcomes led us to report the first occurrence of the invasive alien species Gracilaria vermiculophylla (Ohmi) Papenf. in the Mediterranean Sea. This species was recorded for the first time in the Po Delta lagoons in May and October 2008, probably introduced by the importation of the Manila clam Tapes philippinarum. At present, G. vermiculophylla is spread only near some clam‐farming areas, but its diffusion is expected to increase with the colonization of other lagoons where aquaculture is spread, as already observed for other alien species such as Agardhiella subulata and Solieria filiformis. The present study supplies further information on the morphology of this species, the ecological characteristics of the colonized areas, and the most probable introduction vector, confirming that the species spreading occurs in eutrophic and turbid coastal systems.


Cladistics | 2012

Polyphasic approach and typification of selected Phormidium strains (Cyanobacteria)

Katia Sciuto; Carlo Andreoli; Nicoletta Rascio; Nicoletta La Rocca; Isabella Moro

Cyanobacteria (phylum Cyanophyta/Cyanobacteria, class Cyanophyceae) are among the most widespread organisms and are able to adapt themselves to different extreme environments. These micro‐organisms have an important ecological role, given their ability to perform oxygenic photosynthesis, and are employed in different fields based on their ability to produce several bioactive compounds. Their prokaryotic nature, the presence of many cryptic species, and the coexistence of different nomenclature systems make the taxonomic identification of cyanobacteria particularly difficult. Moreover, for several species, the original reference strains (holotypes) are lacking. Increasingly, authors are using a polyphasic approach to characterize cyanobacteria, while typification is a recent trend that is being used to solve the problem of missing holotypes in other micro‐organisms. Here we focus on a filamentous cyanobacterium, isolated from the Euganean Thermal District (Padova, Italy) and temporarily named strain ETS‐02, using a polyphasic approach that includes morphological, ultrastructural, biochemical (pigment and fatty acid content), physiological (nitrogen fixation), and genetic (16S rRNA, 16S–23S ITS, cpcB‐IGS‐cpcA, rpoC1, gyrB, rbcL, nifD loci) analyses. The description of Phormidium cf. irriguum CCALA 759 as the epitype of Phormidium irriguum was also used to complete the characterization of strain ETS‐02.


European Journal of Phycology | 2002

Pyramimonas australis sp. nov. (Prasinophyceae, Chlorophyta) from Antarctica : fine structure and molecular phylogeny

Isabella Moro; Nicoletta La Rocca; Luisa Dalla Valle; Emanuela Moschin; Enrico Negrisolo; Carlo Andreoli

An undescribed marine Pyramimonas, P. australis Andreoli et Moro, sp. nov., forming a bloom in a hole of Terra Nova Bay (Ross Sea, Antarctica) sea ice, was collected, but could not be cultured. Consequently, the description of this new species is based on light and electron microscope observations on samples that were fixed or stored at −80  °C, and its phylogenetic position inferred from nuclear-encoded small-subunit ribosomal DNA (SSU rDNA) and chloroplast-encoded rbcL gene sequences. This is the third Antarctic species described for this genus. The ultrastructure of the cell is consistent with species of the subgenus Trichocystis McFadden, but differs in that it has unique body and cyst scales, and a different encystment procedure. The outermost layer of body scales is formed by flat box scales with peripheral perforations oriented parallel to the four edges and with a further eight central perforations oriented perpendicular to the peripheral ones. Crown scales, which in many other species of the genus form the outermost layer over the entire cell body, were observed in this species in the flagellar pit over the box scales. The flagella are covered by a pentagonal underlayer of scales and by limuloid scales with two subsidiary spines, in addition to the central one. Encystment begins in the flagellate form resulting in a cyst with an irregular wall bearing spine scales. Ultrastructural and molecular data confirm that P. australis belongs to the subgenus Trichocystis.


European Journal of Phycology | 2010

Polyphasic characterization of a thermo-tolerant filamentous cyanobacterium isolated from the Euganean thermal muds (Padua, Italy)

Isabella Moro; Nicoletta Rascio; Nicoletta La Rocca; Katia Sciuto; Patrizia Albertano; Laura Bruno; Carlo Andreoli

In this paper we report a morphological, ultrastructural, biochemical and molecular (16S rRNA, 16S–23S ITS, rbcL and rpoC1 gene sequencing) survey on a very thin, non-heterocystous, filamentous cyanobacterium, isolated from mats covering several mud maturation tanks of the Euganean Thermal District, at temperatures ranging from 26 to 59°C. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis results, obtained using cyanobacterial primers targeting the 16S rRNA gene, confirmed that this cyanobacterium is one of the commonest taxa growing in the mud tanks. Comparison with Geitlerinema sp. PCC 8501 (=Phormidium laminosum Gomont ex Gomont strain OH-1-p Cl 1), a thin thermobiotic species isolated from hot springs of Oregon and morphologically similar to our isolate, led us to hypothesize that the Euganean and PCC 8501 strains are either very similar sister species or ecotypes of the same species in a yet to be defined clade, clearly distinct within the paraphyletic Leptolyngbya group.


Polar Biology | 1992

The picoplankton in Antarctic lakes of northern Victoria Land during summer 1989–1990

Carlo Andreoli; L Scarabel; Susanna Spini; Chiara Grassi

SummaryPhotoautotrophic picoplankton is reported from some lakes located near the Italian Antarctic station of Terra Nova. Observations, carried out by both flow cytometry on water samples and electron microscopy on micro-organisms in cultures from each lake, have confirmed the occurrence in all the environments studied of this fraction accounting, in several cases, for more than the 50% of the phytoplankton, measured as chlorophyll. Cultures of the picoplankton fraction from these waters contained known prokaryotic (Synechococcus) and eukaryotic (Chlorella) genera as well as two unidentified entities, possibly prochlorophytes.


Italian Journal of Zoology | 2000

Ecological, physiological, and biomolecular surveys on microalgae from Ross Sea (Antarctica)

Carlo Andreoli; Isabella Moro; Nicoletta La Rocca; Luisa Dalla Valle; Luciano Masiero; Nicoletta Rascio; Francesca Dalla Vecchia

Abstract Results of analyses on pico, nano‐ and microphytoplankton from the sea‐ice of Terra Nova Bay, during austral summer 1995–96, are reported. In this environment, among the 116 taxa that we found, the most abundant were diatoms (102). The interior algal community of the sea‐ice was dominated by Fragilariopsis spp., Archeomonas areolata, and hypnozygotes of Porella glacialis. In the algal mat at the deeper layer of the ice, however, diatoms showed higher density. Photoautotrophic picoplankton was also present and red‐fluorescing cells, small eukaryotes and phycocyanin‐rich cyanobacteria prevailed over phycoerythrin‐rich cyanobacteria. Besides these data, ultrastructural, physiological and biomolecular surveys on three Antarctic sea water microalgae, of which only Koliella antarctica was known, were also carried out. The 18S rDNA gene sequences of K. antarctica and other closely related species allowed us to verify that the Koliella genus belongs to Trebouxiophyceae, while as regards the other two taxa, one of them was found to belong to the Heterococcus and the other to the Pyramimonas genus. They might be unde‐scribed species of the Southern Ocean. Pyramimonas sp., found in Terra Nova Bay during the austral summer 1998–99, carried tri‐chocysts. Moreover, K. antartica, like Heterococcus sp., showed great ability to live both in fresh water and at different salinities.

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Adriano Sfriso

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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Andrea Gambaro

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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