Cristian Mugnai
National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Cristian Mugnai.
Chemosphere | 2013
Stefania Romano; Rossano Piazza; Cristian Mugnai; Silvia Giuliani; Luca Giorgio Bellucci; Cu Nguyen Huu; Marco Vecchiato; Stefano Zambon; Nhon Dang Hoai; Mauro Frignani
Concentration and distribution of PCBs, PCB 11, and PBDEs in both surficial sediment and soil samples, taken from a zone subject to recent accelerated development, were investigated to assess the environmental quality and understand both natural and anthropogenic processes that influence contaminant behaviors. Values of PCB and PBDE are in the lower range of those reported in literature, typical of low impacted coastal zones. This could be due to efficient processes of resuspension and removal. Contaminants in the lagoon showed higher concentrations in sediments from sites close to the city and the outfalls of the industrial area, while soils showed maximum values in the northern samples. In addition, congener patterns and statistical analyses suggest the presence of effective degradation processes, especially for PBDEs, with the exception of the most concentrated samples that may indicate a direct input. PCB 11 is a significant component (up to 18%) in most lagoon sediments. Its presence is strongly associated with fine particles, thus the distribution seems to be driven mainly by the system hydrodynamic and does not trace the sources. Due to evaporation, only flooded agricultural soils show a similar relative abundance of this congener.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2012
Luca Giorgio Bellucci; Silvia Giuliani; Stefania Romano; Sonia Albertazzi; Cristian Mugnai; Mauro Frignani
Assessing pollution levels and trends in heavily impacted environments is important but hardly achievable due to the difficulty of recovering suitable undisturbed sediment records. An integrated approach is here presented to solve this kind of problem. It was adopted in the Augusta Bay (Italy) for the study of Hg historical inputs and present trends. Archive information on dredging and mud disposal, together with bathymetry and high-resolution seismic profiles, were used to identify suitable sampling sites. Undisturbed sediment cores were collected in the port and bay. Sediments were analyzed for depth distributions of radiotracers ((210)Pb and (137)Cs), Hg, and main sediment parameters (magnetic susceptibility, grain size, dry bulk density, mineralogy, and organic carbon and nitrogen contents). Hexachlorobenzene (HCB) was also analyzed as an additional time tracer, since its production history in the area was well-known. Results show that peak Hg contamination (up to 575 mg·kg(-1)) was reached in the 1970s. Technological improvements and waste treatment in the following years determined a consistent decrease, but high concentrations still affect surficial sediments (0.25-92 mg·kg(-1)). Hg-HCB correlation suggests that this situation is likely the effect of resuspension and redistribution of deep sediments by dredging and naval traffic.
Hydrobiologia | 2003
Cristian Mugnai; Magali Gerino; Mauro Frignani; Sabine Sauvage; Luca Giorgio Bellucci
Short experiments (14–21 days) were carried out during autumn 1998 and spring 1999 at one selected site of the Venice Lagoon to measure bioturbation activities and mixing rates, as well as to obtain quantitative information on benthos functionality. Fluorescent sediment particles (luminophores, 63–350 μm) were introduced as pulse inputs at the sediment surface. The concentration–depth profiles of the tracer were simulated with a new advection–diffusion–non local model applied under non-steady state conditions. This allowed the quantification of the mixing parameters associated with different mechanisms: biodiffusion (Db), bioadvection (W) and non-local mixing (Ke, z1, z2). A parameter RS (removed sediment) was also calculated to account for the flux of sediment due to non-local transport. Results show that bioturbation was dominated by biodiffusion in autumn and by bioadvection in spring. Mean mixing parameters Db, W, and RS changed from 3.09 to 0.87 cm2 y−1, from 0.93 to 15.50 y−1 and from 5.85 to 7.79 g cm−2 y−1, respectively.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2011
Silvia Giuliani; Rossano Piazza; Luca Giorgio Bellucci; Nguyen Huu Cu; Marco Vecchiato; Stefania Romano; Cristian Mugnai; Dang Hoai Nhon; Mauro Frignani
PCBs were analysed in surficial sediments and selected sediment cores collected between 2002 and 2008 in Central Vietnam coastal lagoons. The aim was to determine contamination levels and trends, and to evaluate the effects of anthropogenic pressures and natural events. Samples were mostly fine-grained with low total PCB concentrations (0.367-44.7 μg kg(-1)). Atmospheric transport and post depositional processes modify to some degree the fingerprint of PCB inputs to the environment favouring the predominance of 3, 4 and 5 chlorinated congeners. The similarity of congener distributions in contemporary surficial samples also suggests the presence of a unique source over the entire study area, probably connected to mobilisation and long range transports from land-based stocks. The removal of consistent sediment layers is hypothesised based on repeated samplings of the same area. Natural meteorological events (such as typhoons) are suspected to be responsible for these sediment losses.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2010
Rossano Piazza; Silvia Giuliani; Luca Giorgio Bellucci; Cristian Mugnai; Nguyen Huu Cu; Dang Hoai Nhon; Marco Vecchiato; Stefania Romano; Mauro Frignani
Samples from nine Central Vietnam coastal lagoons, together with three soils and sediments collected in two freshwater reservoirs of the Thua Thien-Hué province, were analysed for polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs). Total concentrations are low, from 192 to 2912 pg g(-1) and depth profiles in Tam Giang-Cau Hai (TG-CH) sediment cores show only minor changes over time in PCDD/F input and composition. Octachloro dibenzo-p-dioxin (OCDD) is the prevailing congener (approximately 90%), indicating combustion as the main PCDD/F source to these coastal systems, whereas natural formation might be partly responsible for the presence at depth. 2,3,7,8-Tetrachloro dibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD), largely sprayed together with Agent Orange over the study areas during the war (1961-1971), is absent or very low. This result supports the hypothesis of strong degradation soon after spraying. Multivariate statistical analyses account for the presence of local, short-range sources as observed in the northern part of the TG-CH lagoon.
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2010
J.K. Sommerfreund; George B. Arhonditsis; M.L. Diamond; Mauro Frignani; Gabriele Capodaglio; Magali Gerino; Luca Giorgio Bellucci; Silvia Giuliani; Cristian Mugnai
A Monte Carlo analysis is used to quantify environmental parametric uncertainty in a multi-segment, multi-chemical model of the Venice Lagoon. Scientific knowledge, expert judgment and observational data are used to formulate prior probability distributions that characterize the uncertainty pertaining to 43 environmental system parameters. The propagation of this uncertainty through the model is then assessed by a comparative analysis of the moments (central tendency, dispersion) of the model output distributions. We also apply principal component analysis in combination with correlation analysis to identify the most influential parameters, thereby gaining mechanistic insights into the ecosystem functioning. We found that modeled concentrations of Cu, Pb, OCDD/F and PCB-180 varied by up to an order of magnitude, exhibiting both contaminant- and site-specific variability. These distributions generally overlapped with the measured concentration ranges. We also found that the uncertainty of the contaminant concentrations in the Venice Lagoon was characterized by two modes of spatial variability, mainly driven by the local hydrodynamic regime, which separate the northern and central parts of the lagoon and the more isolated southern basin. While spatial contaminant gradients in the lagoon were primarily shaped by hydrology, our analysis also shows that the interplay amongst the in-place historical pollution in the central lagoon, the local suspended sediment concentrations and the sediment burial rates exerts significant control on the variability of the contaminant concentrations. We conclude that the probabilistic analysis presented herein is valuable for quantifying uncertainty and probing its cause in over-parameterized models, while some of our results can be used to dictate where additional data collection efforts should focus on and the directions that future model refinement should follow.
Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management | 2013
Luca Giorgio Bellucci; Cristian Mugnai; Silvia Giuliani; Stefania Romano; Sonia Albertazzi; Mauro Frignani
The history of the Venice Lagoon contamination is presented here, based on sediment records and on information about industrial activities and past management choices. We used polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs) as tracers since the relative abundance of their congeners can help in locating their sources. The most important PCDD/F source to the canals of the first industrial area (built in the 1920s) can be ascribed to processes involving pyrite to obtain sulfuric acid and recovery of copper and other metals. Indeed, homologue profiles and documents show that the PCDD/Fs contamination is mainly related to the use and disposal of both these industrial wastes and materials dredged from the most contaminated canals. In particular, these latter constitute the ground under the second industrial area (built after World War II). Furthermore, hazardous materials were stored until 1992 in an islet exposed to erosion, whereas tracts of industrial canal banks eroded until 2000. Similar situations are frequent in transition and coastal areas worldwide.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2008
Silvia Giuliani; Mario Sprovieri; Mauro Frignani; Nguyen Huu Cu; Cristian Mugnai; Luca Giorgio Bellucci; Sonia Albertazzi; Stefania Romano; Maria Luisa Feo; Ennio Marsella; Dang Hoai Nhon
Acta Oecologica-international Journal of Ecology | 2007
Magali Gerino; Mauro Frignani; Cristian Mugnai; Luca Giorgio Bellucci; Daniela Prevedelli; Andrea Valentini; Alberto Castelli; Sébastien Delmotte; Sabine Sauvage
American Journal of Environmental Sciences | 2012
Stefania Romano; Cristian Mugnai; Silvia Giuliani; Clara Turetta; Nguyen Huu Cu; Luca Giorgio Bellucci; Dang Hoai Nhon; Gabriele Capodaglio; Mauro Frignani