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Featured researches published by E. Delaney.


Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management | 1999

An integrated approach to sediment quality assessment: The Venetian lagoon as a case study

A. Volpi Ghirardini; T. Birkemeyer; A. Arizzi Novelli; E. Delaney; Bruno Pavoni; Pier Francesco Ghetti

Abstract Recent research trends in sediment quality assessment have demonstrated the need for an integrated approach which combines chemical characterisation with biological effects evaluation, both in the laboratory (toxicity bioassays) and in situ (macrobenthic community structure investigations). The Sediment Quality Triad organises these three aspects of sediment quality assessment in a single approach, where each component is complementary to the others. Considering the lack of previous studies, this preliminary work aimed to verify the potential of an integrated approach in a complex ecosystem, the Venetian lagoon. Five sampling stations along a presumed quality gradient were chosen. The chemical analyses of heavy metals and organic pollutants have been compared with the results of the toxicity bioassays (Microtox ® solid phase, saline extracts and pore water, and sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus sperm cell bioassay performed with saline extracts) and with the characterisation of the infaunal community structure. The results of this first application pointed out the complementarity of the three approaches and the ability of the integrated approach in discriminating different levels of environmental stress. Nevertheless, deeper investigations both on the response of the macrobenthic community to natural variability and on the environmental toxicity of several sulphur compounds (i.e. elemental sulphur) will be necessary.


Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2008

EVALUATION OF COROPHIUM ORIENTALE AS BIOINDICATOR FOR VENICE-LAGOON: SENSITIVITY ASSESSMENT AND TOXICITY-SCORE PROPOSAL

Martina Bergamin; Arizzi Novelli Alessandra; Seta Noventa; E. Delaney; Andrea Barbanti; Annamaria Volpi Ghirardini

The 96-h water-only exposure and 10-d sediment toxicity tests with the amphipod Corophium orientale were performed in order to enhance the knowledge about its overall sensitivity and its applicability to Venice Lagoon sediments. The values obtained with cadmium as reference toxicant demonstrated a certain variability of the LC(50); the higher value was found in spring and the lower in late summer. Tests with other pure chemicals (Ni, Total Ammonia, Sodium Dodecyl-Sulphate) showed good discriminatory power; the toxicity gradient observed was: Cd (LC(50) of 3.3 mg/L)>SDS (LC(50) of 8.7 mg/L)>total ammonia (LC(50) of 126mg/L)>Ni (LC(50) of 352 mg/L). Sediment toxicity test results were used to obtain information on non-treatment factors (grain-size, TOC content) that could act as confounding factors, and to develop a site-specific toxicity-score based on minimum significant difference approach. Confounding factors seem not to affect test results. The procedure to develop the toxicity score took into account the relatively lower sensitivity of C. orientale with respect to other amphipods commonly used in toxicity tests (Ampelisca abdita and Rhepoxynius abronius).


Toxicological & Environmental Chemistry | 1999

H. diversicolor, N. succinea and P. cultrifera (Polychaeta: Nereididae) as bioaccumulators of cadmium and zinc from sediments: Preliminary results in the Venetian lagoon (Italy)

A Volpi Ghirardini; L. Cavallini; E. Delaney; D. Tagliapietra; Pier Francesco Ghetti; Cinzia Bettiol; Emanuele Argese

A field investigation was performed to evaluate the suitability of three nereid polychaetes species as biomonitors for sediment contamination by Cd and Zn in the Venetian lagoon (Italy). With regard to the treatment and subsequent chemical analysis of the animals, a specific methodology was set up. Metal concentrations in sediments and tissues were compared for 20 stations. Cd bioaccumulation was detected in all species, although bioaccumulation factors and the concentration trends were different. This finding could be explained by a difference in the metal bioavailability or in the accumulation strategy of species. Zn results have confirmed the presence of a regulation strategy in the nereid polychaetes, as previously reported.


Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2016

Assessment of sediment toxicity in the Lagoon of Venice (Italy) using a multi-species set of bioassays

Martina Bergamin; Chiara Losso; E. Delaney; Alessandra Arizzi Novelli; Annamaria Volpi Ghirardini

Within the framework of a Weight of Evidence (WoE) approach, a set of four toxicity bioassays involving the amphipod Corophium volutator (10 d lethality test on whole sediment), the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus (fertilization and embryo toxicity tests on elutriate) and the pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas (embryo toxicity test on elutriate) was applied to sediments from 10 sampling sites of the Venice Lagoon (Italy). Sediments were collected during three campaigns carried out in May 2004 (spring campaign), October 2004 (autumn campaign) and February 2005 (winter campaign). Toxicity tests were performed on all sediment samples. Sediment grain-size and chemistry were measured during spring and autumn campaigns. This research investigated (i) the ability of toxicity tests in discriminating among sites with different contamination level, (ii) the occurrence of a gradient of effect among sampling sites, (iii) the possible correlation among toxicity tests, sediment chemistry, grain size and organic carbon, and (iv) the possible occurrence of toxicity seasonal variability. Sediment contamination levels were from low to moderate. No acute toxicity toward amphipods was observed, while sea urchin fertilization was affected only in few sites in just a single campaign. Short-term effects on larval development of sea urchin and oyster evidenced a clear spatial trend among sites, with increasing effects along the axis connecting the sea-inlets with the industrial area. The set of bioassays allowed the identification of a spatial gradient of effect, with decreasing toxicity from the industrial area toward the sea-inlets. Multivariate data analysis showed that the malformations of oyster embryos were significantly correlated to the industrial contamination (metals, polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons, hexachlorobenzene and polychlorinated biphenyls), while sea urchin development to sediment concentrations of As, Cr and organic carbon. Both embryo toxicity tests were significantly affected by high ammonia concentrations found in the elutriates extracted from some mudflat and industrial sediments. No significant temporal variation of the toxicity was observed within the experimental period. Amendments to the set of bioassays, with inclusion of chronic tests, can certainly provide more reliability and consistency to the characterization of the (possible) toxic effects.


Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2009

Sequential toxicity identification evaluation (TIE) for characterizing toxicity of Venice Lagoon sediments: comparison of two different approaches.

Martina Bergamin; Elisa Volpato; E. Delaney; Clara Turetta; Martina Ranaldo; Gabriele Capodaglio; Cristina Nasci

A toxicity identification evaluation phase-I (TIE-1) procedure was carried out on five pore water samples extracted from sediments of the Venice Lagoon previously investigated to assess both chemical contamination and toxic effects on the biota. Two different sequential TIE procedures were tested. A first sequence (TIE-1) provided for adding Na2S2O3, adding Na-EDTA, filtering, elution through a C18-SPE column and removing ammonia using the macroalgae Ulva rigida Agardh 1823, while a second procedure (TIE-2) was set up using U. rigida treatment for ammonia removal as first step, keeping unchanged the sequence of the other manipulations. Two different exposure time to the macroalgae were tested (3-h and 15-h). Sperm-cell toxicity test with the echinoid Paracentrotus lividus and embryotoxicity tests with the bivalves Mytilus galloprovincialis and Crassostrea gigas were performed on pore-water samples to assess the effect of the sequential treatments on the overall toxicity. The results confirmed that ammonia contribution to toxicity is strong in most of the samples and that metals, specially Cu, are of concern at least in three sites. The TIE-2 procedure provided more reliable results for the samples characterized by high ammonia contribution to the overall toxicity, whereas the results of TIE-1 and TIE-2 were equivalent for the samples where ammonia contribution was not prevailing. Chemical analyses and test results showed that a 3-h U. rigida exposure is suitable to remove ammonia toxicity minimizing potential metal up-take.


Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2018

Testing lagoonal sediments with early life stages of the copepod Acartia tonsa (Dana): An approach to assess sediment toxicity in the Venice Lagoon

Martina Bergamin; E. Delaney; Annamaria Volpi Ghirardini; Kresten Ole Kusk

The early-life stages of development of the calanoid copepod Acartia tonsa from egg to copepodite I is proposed as an endpoint for assessing sediment toxicity by exposing newly released eggs directly onto the sediment-water interface. A preliminary study of 5 sediment samples collected in the lagoon of Venice highlighted that the larval development rate (LDR) and the early-life stages (ELS) mortality endpoints with A. tonsa are more sensitive than the standard amphipod mortality test; moreover LDR resulted in a more reliable endpoint than ELS mortality, due to the interference of the sediment with the recovery of unhatched eggs and dead larvae. The LDR data collected in a definitive study of 48 sediment samples from the Venice Lagoon has been analysed together with the preliminary data to evaluate the statistical performances of the bioassay (among replicate variance and minimum significant difference between samples and control) and to investigate the possible correlation with sediment chemistry and physical properties. The results showed that statistical performances of the LDR test with A. tonsa correspond with the outcomes of other tests applied to the sediment-water interface (Strongylocentrotus purpuratus embryotoxicity test), sediments (Neanthes arenaceodentata survival and growth test) and porewater (S. purpuratus); the LDR endpoint did, however, show a slightly higher variance as compared with other tests used in the Lagoon of Venice, such as 10-d amphipod lethality test and larval development with sea urchin and bivalves embryos. Sediment toxicity data highlighted the high sensitivity and the clear ability of the larval development to discriminate among sediments characterized by different levels of contamination. The data of the definitive study evidenced that inhibition of the larval development was not affected by grain-size and the organic carbon content of the sediment; in contrast, a strong correlation between inhibition of the larval development and the sediment concentrations of some metals (Cu, Hg, Pb, Zn), acid-volatile sulphides (AVS), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) was found. No correlation was found with DDTs, hexachlorobenzene and organotin compounds.


Ecotoxicology | 2018

Assessment of whole-sediment chronic toxicity using sub-lethal endpoints with Monocorophium insidiosum

Martina Bergamin; E. Delaney; Annamaria Volpi Ghirardini

A whole-sediment test with the infaunal amphipod Monocorophium insidiosum has been developed to assess the long-term effects exerted by sediment contamination on survival, growth rates and attainment of sexual maturity. Juvenile amphipods were exposed for 28 days to a control sediment (native sediment) and three sediment samples collected in sites of the Venice Lagoon, characterized by contamination levels ranging from low to moderate, and absence of acute toxicity toward amphipods. Growth rate was estimated as daily length (μm d−1) and weight increments (μg d−1). The long-term exposure to the test sediments affected significantly both growth rate and attainment of sexual maturity of the females of M. insidiosum. In contrast, survival was high and uniform among all the samples, despite the contamination gradient. The results suggest growth to be the more reliable and statistically relevant endpoint. Attainment of sexual maturity, although allowed the identification of detrimental effects, was affected by a higher among-replicates variance as compared with growth rates, and thus less reliable than growth for the identification of impairments. The significant impairments observed both on growth and attainment of maturity evidenced the need to address the monitoring, also in the Lagoon of Venice, towards the assessment of the long-term effects on benthic species.


Journal of Soils and Sediments | 2007

The assessment of sediment screening risk in Venice Lagoon and other coastal areas using international sediment quality guidelines

Sabine E. Apitz; Andrea Barbanti; Alberto Giulio Bernstein; Martina Bocci; E. Delaney; Laura Montobbio


Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 2007

Developing Toxicity Scores for Embryotoxicity Tests on Elutriates with the Sea Urchin Paracentrotus lividus, the Oyster Crassostrea gigas, and the Mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis

Chiara Losso; Alessandra Arizzi Novelli; E. Delaney; Pier Francesco Ghetti; Annamaria Volpi Ghirardini


BIOLOGIA MARINA MEDITERRANEA | 2001

Valutazione della tossicità di sedimenti della laguna di Venezia mediante l'impiego di Paracentrotus lividus (Echinodermata: Echinoidea)

Annamaria Volpi Ghirardini; A. Arizzi Novelli; B Borsetto; E. Delaney; D. Tagliapietra

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Annamaria Volpi Ghirardini

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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Emanuele Argese

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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Pier Francesco Ghetti

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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Cinzia Bettiol

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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D. Tagliapietra

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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L. Cavallini

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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A. Arizzi Novelli

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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Chiara Losso

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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Alessandra Arizzi Novelli

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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A. Volpi Ghirardini

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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