Debora Bellafiore
National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Debora Bellafiore.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014
Georg Umgiesser; Christian Ferrarin; Andrea Cucco; Francesca De Pascalis; Debora Bellafiore; Michol Ghezzo; Marco Bajo
A comparison study between 10 Mediterranean lagoons has been carried out by means of the 3-D numerical model SHYFEM. The investigated basins are the Venice and Marano-Grado lagoons in the Northern Adriatic Sea, the Lesina and Varano lagoons in the Southern Adriatic Sea, the Taranto basin in the Ionian Sea, the Cabras Lagoon in Sardinia, the Ganzirri and Faro lagoons in Sicily, the Mar Menor in Spain, and the Nador Lagoon in Morocco. This study has been focused on hydrodynamics in terms of exchange rates, transport time scale, and mixing. Water exchange depends mainly on the inlet shape and tidal range, but also on the wind regimes in the case of multi-inlet lagoons. Water renewal time, which is mostly determined by the exchange rate, is a powerful concept that allows lagoons to be characterized with a time scale. In the case of the studied lagoons, the renewal time ranged from few days in the Marano-Grado Lagoon up to 1 year in the case of the Mar Menor. The analysis of the renewal time frequency distribution allows identifying subbasins. The numerical study proved to be a useful tool for the intercomparison and classification of the lagoons. These environments range from a leaky type to a choked type of lagoons and give a representative picture of the lagoons situated around the Mediterranean basin. Mixing efficiency turns out to be a function of the morphological complexity, but also of the forcings acting on the system.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2014
Christian Ferrarin; Marco Bajo; Debora Bellafiore; Andrea Cucco; Francesca De Pascalis; Michol Ghezzo; Georg Umgiesser
Lagoons are considered to be the most valuable systems of the Mediterranean coastal area, with crucial ecological, historical, economical, and social relevance. Climate change strongly affects coastal areas and can deeply change the status of transitional areas like lagoons. Herein we investigate the hydrological response of 10 Mediterranean lagoons to climate change by means of numerical models. Our results suggest that Mediterranean lagoons amplify the salinity and temperature changes expected for the open sea. Moreover, numerical simulations indicate that there will be a general loss of intralagoon and interlagoon variability of their physical properties. Therefore, as a result of climate change, we see on Mediterranean lagoons an example of a common process that in future may effect many coastal environments: that of homogenization of the physical characteristics with a tendency toward marinization.
Ocean Dynamics | 2012
Debora Bellafiore; Edoardo Bucchignani; Silvio Gualdi; Sandro Carniel; Vladimir Djurdjevic; Georg Umgiesser
Modeling studies of future changes in coastal hydrodynamics, in terms of storm surges and wave climate, need appropriate wind and atmospheric forcings, a necessary requirement for the realistic reproduction of the statistics and the resolution of small scale features. This work compares meteorological results from different climate models in the Mediterranean area, with a focus on the Adriatic Sea, in order to assess their capability to reproduce coastal meteorological features and their possibility to be used as forcings for hydrodynamic simulations. Five meteorological datasets are considered. They are obtained from two regional climate models, implemented with different spatial resolutions and setups and are downscaled from two different global climate models. Wind and atmospheric pressure fields are compared with measurements at four stations along the Italian Adriatic coast. The analysis is carried out both on simulations of the control period 1960–1990 and on the A1B Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change scenario projections (2070–2100), highlighting the ability of each model in reproducing the statistical coastal meteorological behavior and possible changes. The importance of simulated global- and regional-scale meteorological processes, in terms of correct spatial resolution of the phenomena, is also discussed. Within the Adriatic Sea, the meteorological climate is influenced by the local orography that controls the strengthening of north-eastern katabatic winds like Bora. Results show indeed that the increase in spatial resolution provides a more realistic wind forcing for the hydrodynamic simulations. Moreover, the chosen setup and the global climate models that drive the regional downscalings appear to play an important role in reproducing correct atmospheric pressure fields. The comparison between scenario and control simulations shows a small increase in the mean atmospheric pressure values, while a decrease in mean wind speed and in extreme wind events is observed, particularly for the datasets with higher spatial resolution. Finally, results suggest that an ensemble of downscaled climate models is likely to provide the most suitable climatic forcings (wind and atmospheric pressure fields) for coastal hydrodynamic modeling.
Scientific Data | 2017
Fantina Madricardo; Federica Foglini; Aleksandra Kruss; Christian Ferrarin; Nicola Pizzeghello; Chiara Murri; Monica Rossi; Marco Bajo; Debora Bellafiore; Elisabetta Campiani; Stefano Fogarin; Valentina Grande; Lukasz Janowski; Erica Keppel; Elisa Leidi; Giuliano Lorenzetti; Francesco Maicu; Vittorio Maselli; Alessandra Mercorella; Giacomo Montereale Gavazzi; Tiziano Minuzzo; Claudio Pellegrini; Antonio Petrizzo; Mariacristina Prampolini; Alessandro Remia; Federica Rizzetto; Marzia Rovere; Alessandro Sarretta; Marco Sigovini; Luigi Sinapi
Tidal channels are crucial for the functioning of wetlands, though their morphological properties, which are relevant for seafloor habitats and flow, have been understudied so far. Here, we release a dataset composed of Digital Terrain Models (DTMs) extracted from a total of 2,500 linear kilometres of high-resolution multibeam echosounder (MBES) data collected in 2013 covering the entire network of tidal channels and inlets of the Venice Lagoon, Italy. The dataset comprises also the backscatter (BS) data, which reflect the acoustic properties of the seafloor, and the tidal current fields simulated by means of a high-resolution three-dimensional unstructured hydrodynamic model. The DTMs and the current fields help define how morphological and benthic properties of tidal channels are affected by the action of currents. These data are of potential broad interest not only to geomorphologists, oceanographers and ecologists studying the morphology, hydrodynamics, sediment transport and benthic habitats of tidal environments, but also to coastal engineers and stakeholders for cost-effective monitoring and sustainable management of this peculiar shallow coastal system.
Coastal Engineering | 2014
Ralf Weisse; Debora Bellafiore; Melisa Menéndez; Fernando J. Méndez; Robert J. Nicholls; Georg Umgiesser; Patrick Willems
Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2010
Christian Ferrarin; Georg Umgiesser; Marco Bajo; Debora Bellafiore; Francesca De Pascalis; Michol Ghezzo; Giorgio Mattassi; Isabella Scroccaro
Continental Shelf Research | 2010
Christian Ferrarin; Andrea Cucco; Georg Umgiesser; Debora Bellafiore; Carl L. Amos
Ocean Dynamics | 2008
Debora Bellafiore; Georg Umgiesser; Andrea Cucco
Ocean Dynamics | 2010
Debora Bellafiore; Georg Umgiesser
Ocean Science | 2013
Petras Zemlys; Christian Ferrarin; Georg Umgiesser; Saulius Gulbinskas; Debora Bellafiore