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Dive into the research topics where Fernando Rubino is active.

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Featured researches published by Fernando Rubino.


Trends in Ecology and Evolution | 1996

The continuity of living matter and the discontinuities of its constituents: do plankton and benthos really exist?

Ferdinando Boero; Genuario Belmonte; Giovanni Fanelli; Stefano Piraino; Fernando Rubino

Plankton and benthos are popular concepts identifying two ways of life of aquatic organisms. Their spatial separation led to the development of different sampling techniques and to separate conceptualizations of the principles governing these subsets of the aquatic environment. Reciprocal connections between plankton and benthos, however, are very strong both from a functional (energy fluxes) and a structural (life cycle dynamics) point of view. A full appreciation of such links is forcing marine ecology towards a more integrated approach.


Hydrobiologia | 1997

Morphological convergence of resting stages of planktonic organisms: a review

Genuario Belmonte; Anna Maria Miglietta; Fernando Rubino; Ferdinando Boero

In temperate seas, many plankters avoid unfavourable periods by producing resting stages which accumulate in the sediments to form biodiversity banks from which plankton communities are seasonally restored. Most resting stages have typical spiny coverings. This morphology is common across phyla, and even kingdoms, and favours flotation, passive transport, and sensory activity, also opposing both predation and burial into the sediments. Spiny coverings are considered a convergence allowing survival of resting forms.


Plant Biosystems | 1996

Plankton dynamics in the Mar Piccolo of Taranto: a pilot plan

Fernando Rubino; Orestina D. Saracino; Giovanni Fanelli; Genuario Belmonte; Ferdinando Boero

Abstract An integrated sampling of both active (cells in water column) and resting stages (cysts sinking to the bottom) of phytoplankton, was carried out on March 1996 in the Mar Piccolo of Taranto. At least 46 taxa were recognized in the water column. Cyst sinking rate was about 23,000 m-2 d-1. Out of 37 recognized morphotypes, mainly dinoflagellates, 18 were previously unrecorded from the area. The present sampling represents the preliminar test to outline an experimental design to an integrated study of plankton dynamics.


Hydrobiologia | 2018

Active and resting microbenthos in differently contaminated marine coastal areas: insights from the Gulf of Trieste (northern Adriatic, Mediterranean Sea)

Manja Rogelja; Tamara Cibic; Fernando Rubino; Manuela Belmonte; Paola Del Negro

Marine benthic microalgae are a promising bioindicator of contamination. To date, however, investigations on the microbenthic communities subjected to multiple stressors in natural environments are still very rare. To assess whether the benthic processes of primary production and oxygen consumption, and the structure of active and resting microbenthos, were affected by sediment contamination, seven stations were sampled in different zones of the port of Trieste, subjected to multiple and diffuse contamination, and a reference site in the Marine Reserve of Miramare. No major differences in total abundance of active microbenthos were observed among sites, but the dominance of stress-resistant species and the reduction of more sensitive ones, were registered nearby the main productive activities. The densities of resting microbenthos were higher in polluted areas, and represented by key dinoflagellate species that were clearly linked to contamination. The analysis of similarity applied to both active and resting communities significantly separated the most contaminated stations from the other ones. The photosynthetic capability of active microbenthos did not seem to be affected by contamination. The maximum oxygen consumption rates observed in sediments nearby the productive activities were likely ascribable to high organic C contents and the presence of metals in reduced chemical form.


International Journal of Ecology | 2013

Plankton Resting Stages in the Marine Sediments of the Bay of Vlorë (Albania)

Fernando Rubino; Salvatore Moscatello; Manuela Belmonte; Gianmarco Ingrosso; Genuario Belmonte

In the frame of the INTERREG III CISM project, sediment cores were collected at 2 stations in the Gulf of Vlore to study the plankton resting stage assemblages. A total of 87 morphotypes were identified and produced by Dinophyta, Ciliophora, Rotifera, and Crustacea. In 22 cases, the cyst belonged to a species absent from the plankton of the same period. The most abundant resting stages were those produced by Scrippsiella species (Dinophyta). Some calcareous cysts were identified as fossil species associated with Pleistocene to Pliocene sediment, although they were also found in surface sediments and some of them successfully germinated, thus proving their modern status. Total abundance generally decreased with sediment depth at station 40, while station 45 showed distinct maxima at 3 and 8 cm below the sediment surface. The depth of peak abundance in the sediment varied with species. This paper presents the first study of the plankton resting stages in the Bay of Vlore. The study confirmed the utility of this type of investigation for a more correct evaluation of species diversity. In addition, the varying distribution with sediment depth suggests that this field could be of some importance in determining the history of species assemblages.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2018

Port Baseline Biological Surveys and seaweed bioinvasions in port areas: What's the matter in the Adriatic Sea?

Antonella Petrocelli; Boris Antolić; Luca Bolognini; Ester Cecere; Ivan Cvitković; Marija Despalatović; Annalisa Falace; Stefania Finotto; Ljiljana Iveša; Vesna Mačić; Mauro Marini; Martina Orlando-Bonaca; Fernando Rubino; Benedetta Trabucco; Ante Žuljević

One of the objectives of the BALMAS project was to conduct Port Baseline Biological Surveys of native and non-indigenous benthic flora in 12 Adriatic ports. Samples of macroalgae growing on vertical artificial substrates were collected in spring and autumn 2014 and/or 2015. A total number of 248 taxa, 152 Rhodophyta, 62 Chlorophyta, and 34 Ochrophyta, were identified. Of these, 13 were non-indigenous seaweeds, mainly filamentous macroalgae, that were probably introduced through hull fouling. Some of these taxa had already been described in the study areas, others were recorded for the first time, a few were no longer detected at sites where they had previously been recorded (e.g. Sargassum muticum). Some other NISS reported for the Adriatic Sea, were not collected at any sampling site (i.e. Caulerpa cylindracea, Codium fragile). Possible reasons for the absence of these species are discussed.


Scientia Marina | 2004

Plankton biodiversity around the Salento Peninsula (South East Italy): an integrated water/sediment approach

Salvatore Moscatello; Fernando Rubino; Orestina D. Saracino; Giovanni Fanelli; Genuario Belmonte; Ferdinando Boero


Marine Ecology | 2000

Resting Stages of Plankton in Recent North Adriatic Sediments

Fernando Rubino; Genuario Belmonte; Anna Maria Miglietta; Sebastiano Geraci; Ferdinando Boero


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2010

Dinoflagellate cysts from surface sediments of Syracuse Bay (Western Ionian Sea, Mediterranean)

Fernando Rubino; Manuela Belmonte; Carmela Caroppo; Mariagrazia Giacobbe


Ecological Complexity | 2004

From biodiversity and ecosystem functioning to the roots of ecological complexity

Ferdinando Boero; Genuario Belmonte; Simona Bussotti; Giovanni Fanelli; Simonetta Fraschetti; Adriana Giangrande; Cinzia Gravili; Paolo Guidetti; A.C. Pati; Stefano Piraino; Fernando Rubino; Orestina D. Saracino; J. Schmich; Antonio Terlizzi; Sebastiano Geraci

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Carmela Caroppo

National Research Council

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