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Featured researches published by Corrado Marcenò.


Rendiconti Lincei-scienze Fisiche E Naturali | 2018

Habitat conservation in Italy: the state of the art in the light of the first European Red List of Terrestrial and Freshwater Habitats

Daniela Gigante; Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta; Emiliano Agrillo; S. Armiraglio; S. Assini; Fabio Attorre; Simonetta Bagella; Gabriella Buffa; Laura Casella; C Giancola; G. Giusso del Galdo; Corrado Marcenò; Giovanna Pezzi; Irene Prisco; Roberto Venanzoni; Daniele Viciani

The importance of taking into account ecosystems, plant communities and habitats for the development of biodiversity conservation strategies is increasingly acknowledged. Recently, the first ever European Red List of Habitats was produced, which provided an evaluation of the extinction risk of EUNIS-based natural and semi-natural habitats in Europe. As assessment unit, it used the habitat intended as a plant community, thus representing a landmark for the role of vegetation science in nature conservation. In the present paper, the results of the European Red List of Habitats are analyzed at the national scale with specific reference to the terrestrial and freshwater habitat types occurring in Italy. More than three-quarters of the assessed European habitat types were recognized for the Italian territory. The distribution of the threat categories reflects approximately the situation at the EU28 level. About 35% of the assessed habitat types are referred to a threat category; no critically endangered habitat is present in Italy. The most frequently used criteria are those related to a reduction in quantity. Some critical issues arising from the analyses are discussed. In particular, the presence of knowledge gaps is pointed out, with remarkable reference to the poor availability of spatial and quantitative data, severely affecting the application of the criteria adopted for the assessment. Descriptions of habitat types from Italy are reported, some of which are representative, emblematic or even exclusive to the Italian territory. The outcomes of the analysis represent the starting point for the future development of a national-scale Red List of Habitats. Results also emphasized how habitat types with a too broad definition pose a limit to a proper evaluation of the regional biogeographic variability, often very high in Italy, with local floristic and phytocoenotic peculiarities which do not find room in the adopted European typology. This is the reason why the development of national subtypes stands as a necessary step for the development of a realistic and effective assessment at the national scale.


Applied Vegetation Science | 2018

Biogeographic variability of coastal perennial grasslands at the European scale

S. Del Vecchio; Edy Fantinato; J. A. M. Janssen; F. Bioret; Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta; Irene Prisco; Rossen Tzonev; Corrado Marcenò; J. S. Rodwell; Gabriella Buffa

Question: Coastal environments have often been described as azonal. While this characteristic is clear for the foredune system, it seems less evident for more inland fixed dunes, which host habitats of major conservation concern, whose features seem to be more related to local climatic conditions. We hypothesized that, unlike other coastal habitats, dune perennial grasslands differ floristically and structurally across their European range and that patterns of variation are linked to the corresponding climate. Location: European coasts (Atlantic Ocean, Baltic, Mediterranean, Black Sea). Methods: We used a large data set of phytosociological releves, representative of coastal grasslands throughout their European range. The role of climatic variables (temperature, precipitation and continentality) in determining the variability in species composition and vegetation structure (by means of life forms) was investigated through CCA, DCA and GLM. The degree of concentration of species occurrences within groups was calculated through the Phi coefficient. Results: Through multivariate analyses we identified seven major types of coastal grassland, corresponding to different geographic areas. The groups significantly differed in their climatic envelope, as well as in their species composition and community structure. Conclusion: Our results confirm the hypothesis that coastal dune perennial grasslands are subjected to local climate, which exerts significant effects on both floristic composition and community structure. As a consequence, coastal grasslands are particularly prone to the effect of possible climate change, which may alter species composition and distribution, and lead to shifts in the distribution of native plant communities.


Applied Vegetation Science | 2018

Classification of European and Mediterranean coastal dune vegetation

Corrado Marcenò; Riccardo Guarino; Javier Loidi; Mercedes Herrera; Maike Isermann; Ilona Knollová; Lubomír Tichý; Rossen Tzonev; Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta; Úna FitzPatrick; Dmytro Iakushenko; J. A. M. Janssen; Borja Jiménez-Alfaro; Zygmunt Kacki; Iva Keizer-Sedláková; Vitaliy Kolomiychuk; J. S. Rodwell; J.H.J. Schaminée; Urban Šilc; Milan Chytrý

Aims: Although many phytosociological studies have provided detailed local and regional descriptions of coastal dune vegetation, a unified classification of this vegetation in Europe and the Mediterranean Basin has been missing. Our aim is to produce a formalized classification of this vegetation and to identify the main factors driving its plant species composition at a continental scale. LocationAtlantic and Baltic coasts of Europe, Mediterranean Basin and the Black Sea region. - Methods: We compiled a database of 30,759 plots of coastal vegetation, which were resampled to reduce unbalanced sampling effort, obtaining a data set of 11,769 plots. We classified these plots with TWINSPAN, interpreted the resulting clusters and used them for developing formal definitions of phytosociological alliances of coastal dune vegetation, which were included in an expert system for automatic vegetation classification. We related the alliances to climatic factors and described their biogeographic features and their position in the coastal vegetation zonation. We examined and visualized the floristic relationships among these alliances by means of DCA ordination. - Results: We defined 18 alliances of coastal dune vegetation, including the newly described Centaureo cuneifoliae-Verbascion pinnatifidi from the Aegean region. The main factors underlying the differentiation of these alliances were biogeographic and macroclimatic contrasts between the Atlantic-Baltic, Mediterranean and Black Sea regions, along with ecological differences between shifting and stable dunes. The main difference in species composition was between the Atlantic-Baltic and Mediterranean-Black Sea regions. Within the former region, the main difference was driven by the different ecological conditions between shifting and stable dunes, whereas within the latter, the main difference was biogeographic between the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. - Conclusions: The first formal classification of the European coastal dune vegetation was established, accompanied by an expert system containing the formal definitions of alliances, which can be applied to new data sets. The new classification system critically revised the previous concepts and integrated them into a consistent framework, which reflects the main gradients in species composition driven by biogeographic influences, macroclimate and the position of the sites in the coast-inland zonation of the dune systems. A revision of the class concept used in EuroVegChecklist is also proposed.


Applied Vegetation Science | 2016

European Vegetation Archive (EVA): An integrated database of European vegetation plots

Milan Chytrý; S.M. Hennekens; Borja Jiménez-Alfaro; Ilona Knollová; Jürgen Dengler; Florian Jansen; Flavia Landucci; J.H.J. Schaminee; Svetlana Aćić; Emiliano Agrillo; Didem Ambarlı; Pierangela Angelini; Iva Apostolova; Fabio Attorre; Christian Berg; Erwin Bergmeier; Idoia Biurrun; Zoltán Botta-Dukát; Henry Brisse; Juan Antonio Campos; Luis Carlón; Andraž Čarni; Laura Casella; János Csiky; Renata Ćušterevska; Zora Dajić Stevanović; Jiří Danihelka; Els De Bie; Patrice De Ruffray; Michele De Sanctis


Journal of Biogeography | 2015

Regional metacommunities in two coastal systems: spatial structure and drivers of plant assemblages

Francisco De Borja Jiménez Alfaro González; Corrado Marcenò; Riccardo Guarino; Milan Chytrý


Landscape and Urban Planning | 2016

Thirty years unmanaged green roofs: Ecological research and design implications

Chiara Catalano; Corrado Marcenò; Vito Armando Laudicina; Riccardo Guarino


Rendiconti Lincei-scienze Fisiche E Naturali | 2015

A test on Ellenberg indicator values in the Mediterranean evergreen woods (Quercetea ilicis)

Corrado Marcenò; Riccardo Guarino


Rend. Fis. Acc. Lincei | 2017

Human disturbance, habitat degradation and niche shift: the case of the endemic Calendula maritima Guss. (W Sicily, Italy)

Salvatore Pasta; Giuseppe Garfì; Francesco Carimi; Corrado Marcenò


Archive | 2017

Biodiversity patterns of dry grasslands at the meeting point of Central Europe and the Balkans : Impressions and first results from the 9th EDGG Field Workshop in Serbia

Svetlana Aćić; Jürgen Dengler; Idoia Biurrun; Thomas Becker; Ute Becker; Asun Berastegi; Steffen Boch; Iwona Dembicz; Itziar García-Mijangos; Riccardo Guarino; Monika Janišová; Ute Jandt; Martin Magnes; Corrado Marcenò; Salza Palpurina; Mariya A. Polyakova; Yulia Vasheniak; Kiril Vassilev; Nikolay Velev; Verica Stojanović; Predrag M. Lazarević; Mirjana Krstivojević Ćuk; Zora Dajić Stevanović


Diversity patterns across communities in the frame of global change: conservation challenges | 2017

Habitat conservation in Italy: the state of the art in the light of the first European Red List of Habitats. In: Diversity patterns across communities in the frame of global change: conservation challenges, Abstracts, 26th Congress of the European Vegetation Survey, Bilbao (Spain)

Daniela Gigante; Atr Acosta; Emiliano Agrillo; S. Armiraglio; Sp Assini; Fabio Attorre; Simonetta Bagella; Gabriella Buffa; Laura Casella; C Giancola; Giusso Del Galdo Gp; Corrado Marcenò; Giovanna Pezzi; Roberto Venanzoni; Daniele Viciani

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Emiliano Agrillo

Sapienza University of Rome

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Fabio Attorre

Sapienza University of Rome

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Gabriella Buffa

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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