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Featured researches published by Doris De Vito.


Hydrobiologia | 2010

Data integration for European marine biodiversity research: creating a database on benthos and plankton to study large-scale patterns and long-term changes.

Leen Vandepitte; B. Vanhoorne; Alexandra Kraberg; Natalie Anisimova; Chryssanthi Antoniadou; Rita Araújo; Inka Bartsch; Beatriz Beker; Lisandro Benedetti-Cecchi; Iacopo Bertocci; Sabine Cochrane; Keith M Cooper; J.A. Craeymeersch; Epaminondas Christou; Dennis J Crisp; Salve Dahle; Marilyse De Boissier; Mario de Kluijver; Stanislav G. Denisenko; Doris De Vito; G.C.A. Duineveld; Vincent Escaravage; Dirk Fleischer; Simona Fraschetti; Adriana Giangrande; Carlos Heip; Herman Hummel; Uuszula Janas; Rolf Karez; Monika Kędra

The general aim of setting up a central database on benthos and plankton was to integrate long-, medium- and short-term datasets on marine biodiversity. Such a database makes it possible to analyse species assemblages and their changes on spatial and temporal scales across Europe. Data collation lasted from early 2007 until August 2008, during which 67 datasets were collected covering three divergent habitats (rocky shores, soft bottoms and the pelagic environment). The database contains a total of 4,525 distinct taxa, 17,117 unique sampling locations and over 45,500 collected samples, representing almost 542,000 distribution records. The database geographically covers the North Sea (221,452 distribution records), the North-East Atlantic (98,796 distribution records) and furthermore the Baltic Sea, the Arctic and the Mediterranean. Data from 1858 to 2008 are presented in the database, with the longest time-series from the Baltic Sea soft bottom benthos. Each delivered dataset was subjected to certain quality control procedures, especially on the level of taxonomy. The standardisation procedure enables pan-European analyses without the hazard of taxonomic artefacts resulting from different determination skills. A case study on rocky shore and pelagic data in different geographical regions shows a general overestimation of biodiversity when making use of data before quality control compared to the same estimations after quality control. These results prove that the contribution of a misspelled name or the use of an obsolete synonym is comparable to the introduction of a rare species, having adverse effects on further diversity calculations. The quality checked data source is now ready to test geographical and temporal hypotheses on a large scale.


Zootaxa | 2015

The non-Siphonophoran Hydrozoa (Cnidaria) of Salento, Italy with notes on their life-cycles: an illustrated guide

Cinzia Gravili; Doris De Vito; Cristina Gioia Di Camillo; Luis Martell; Stefano Piraino; Ferdinando Boero

The majority of Hydrozoa is represented by not readily noticeable, small species. In recent decades, however, taxonomic knowledge of the group has increased worldwide, with a significant number of investigations focused on the Mediterranean Sea. Over more than two decades, 115 species of hydrozoans were recorded from coastal waters along nearly 300 km of the Salento Peninsula (Apulia, Italy). For each species, records from different collections were merged into single sheets of a general database. For each species, the following information is reported: description, cnidome, biology, occurrence in Salento, worldwide distribution, and bibliography. Descriptions refer to the benthic hydroid stage and, when present, also to the planktonic medusa stage. The 115 species of Hydrozoa, recorded along the Salento coastline, represent 25% of the Mediterranean Hydrozoa fauna (totaling 461 species), and nearly 3% of 3,702 worlds known species covered in a recent monograph. Four species are non-indigenous, three of them with invasive behavior (Clytia hummelincki, Clytia linearis, and Eudendrium carneum), and one species now very common (Eudendrium merulum) in Salento. The complete life cycle of Clytia paulensis (Vanhöffen, 1910) is described for the first time.


Italian Journal of Zoology | 2013

Destructive standard squares or low-impact visually driven collection? A comparison of methods for quantitative samplings of benthic hydrozoans

Stefano Piraino; Doris De Vito; E. Brodbeck; C. G. Di Camillo; Giovanni Fanelli; Ferdinando Boero

Abstract The patchy distribution pattern of benthic hydrozoans reflects high sensitivity of colonies to local and micro-scale environmental factors, which may affect the outcome of biodiversity inventories based on different sampling methodologies. We compared three quantitative sampling methods for benthic hydrozoans, differing for strategy (scraping standardized surfaces or picking visually located colonies) and tactics (extension of examined surface). Each of the three methods consisted of eight replicate samplings to compare relative and absolute method efficiencies, also in terms of minimum sampling area representative of the hydroid diversity in the study site. A single horizontal belt transect on a vertical rocky cliff was chosen at 15 m depth near Otranto (South Adriatic). A total of 37 species were identified by the three methods and their relative abundances were evaluated. The hydroid assemblage was dominated by generalist species with high polyp numbers able to colonize different substrata. We compared the outcomes of each of the three sampling methods, and by a cost-benefit analysis we identified the optimal sampling methods to be adopted according to the different targets of the investigations. On data standardized to the same total sampled areas, the three sampling methods did not originate significant differences in the number of polyps of each recorded species (PDA, Polyp Detection Ability), whereas the visually-oriented collection (VIS) and the scrapings over 20 × 20 cm standard surfaces (S20) were more effective in the detected number of species (SDA, Species Detection Ability) than over 10 × 10 cm squares (S10). For ecological purposes, samplings based on five S20 replicates can be considered an appropriate experimental design to get a statistically robust representation of the studied hydroid assemblage at Punta Palascia. However, variation in depth, exposure and geographical locations may require different sampling approaches, and pre-surveys should be always carried out before addressing taxonomical surveys of sessile organisms.


Invertebrate Systematics | 2018

The importance of applying Standardised Integrative Taxonomy when describing marine benthic organisms and collecting ecological data

Cristina Gioia Di Camillo; Cinzia Gravili; Doris De Vito; Daniela Pica; Stefano Piraino; Stefania Puce; Carlo Cerrano

Abstract. The decline of morphologically based taxonomy is mainly linked to increasing species redundancy, which probably contributed to a worldwide disinterest in taxonomy, and to a reduction of funding for systematic biology and for expertise training. The present trend in the study of biodiversity is integrated taxonomy, which merges morphological and molecular approaches. At the same time, in many cases new molecular techniques have eclipsed the morphological approach. The application of Standardised Integrative Taxonomy, i.e. a rigorous, common method of description based on the integration between ecological and morphological characteristics, may increase the precision, accessibility, exploitability and longevity of the collected data, and favour the renaissance of taxonomy by new investments in biodiversity exploration.


Canadian Journal of Zoology | 2004

Reverse development in Cnidaria

Stefano Piraino; Doris De Vito; J. Schmich; Jean Bouillon; Ferdinando Boero


The International Journal of Developmental Biology | 2007

Induction of reverse development in two marine Hydrozoans

J. Schmich; Yulia A. Kraus; Doris De Vito; Daria Graziussi; Ferdinando Boero; Stefano Piraino


Marine Biology | 2006

Evidence of reverse development in Leptomedusae (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa): the case of Laodicea undulata (Forbes and Goodsir 1851)

Doris De Vito; Stefano Piraino; J. Schmich; Jean Bouillon; Ferdinando Boero


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2008

Redescription of the zooxanthellate Eudendrium moulouyensis (Eudendriidae: Hydrozoa) from the Mediterranean Sea

Doris De Vito; Ferdinando Boero; C. G. Di Camillo; César Megina; Stefano Piraino


Marine Ecology | 2016

A unified assessment of marine Mediterranean assemblages: a lesson from benthic hydroids

Manuel M. González-Duarte; César Megina; Doris De Vito; Cristina Goia Di Camillo; Stefania Puce; Stefano Piraino


Polar Biology | 2003

Larval necrophilia: the odd life cycle of a pandeid hydrozoan in the Weddell Sea shelf

Stefano Piraino; Doris De Vito; Jean Bouillon; Ferdinando Boero

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Jean Bouillon

Université libre de Bruxelles

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C. G. Di Camillo

Marche Polytechnic University

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Stefania Puce

Marche Polytechnic University

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