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Dive into the research topics where Francesca Margiotta is active.

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Featured researches published by Francesca Margiotta.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Phytoplankton blooms during austral summer in the Ross Sea, Antarctica: Driving factors and trophic implications

Olga Mangoni; Francesco Bolinesi; Francesca Margiotta; Giorgio Budillon; Yuri Cotroneo; Cristina Misic; Paola Rivaro; Maria Saggiomo

During the austral summer of 2014, an oceanographic cruise was conducted in the Ross Sea in the framework of the RoME (Ross Sea Mesoscale Experiment) Project. Forty-three hydrological stations were sampled within three different areas: the northern Ross Sea (RoME 1), Terra Nova Bay (RoME 2), and the southern Ross Sea (RoME 3). The ecological and photophysiological characteristics of the phytoplankton were investigated (i.e., size structure, functional groups, PSII maximum quantum efficiency, photoprotective pigments), as related to hydrographic and chemical features. The aim was to identify the mechanisms that modulate phytoplankton blooms, and consequently, the fate of organic materials produced by the blooms. The observed biomass standing stocks were very high (e.g., integrated chlorophyll-a up to 371 mg m-2 in the top 100 m). Large differences in phytoplankton community composition, relative contribution of functional groups and photosynthetic parameters were observed among the three subsystems. The diatoms (in different physiological status) were the dominant taxa in RoME 1 and RoME 3; in RoME 1, a post-bloom phase was identified, whereas in RoME 3, an active phytoplankton bloom occurred. In RoME 2, diatoms co-occurred with Phaeocystis antarctica, but were vertically segregated by the upper mixed layer, with senescent diatoms dominating in the upper layer, and P. antarctica blooming in the deeper layer. The dominance of the phytoplankton micro-fraction over the whole area and the high Chl-a suggested the prevalence of non-grazed large cells, independent of the distribution of the two functional groups. These data emphasise the occurrence of significant temporal changes in the phytoplankton biomass in the Ross Sea during austral summer. The mechanisms that drive such changes and the fate of the carbon production are probably related to the variations in the limiting factors induced by the concurrent hydrological modifications to the Ross Sea, and they remain to be fully clarified. The comparison of conditions observed during summer 2014 and those reported for previous years reveal considerably different ecological assets that might be the result of current climate change. This suggests that further changes can be expected in the future, even at larger oceanic scales.


Advances in Oceanography and Limnology | 2013

Role of light and photophysiological properties on phytoplankton succession during the spring bloom in the north-western Mediterranean Sea

Christophe Brunet; F. Conversano; Francesca Margiotta; C. Dimier; L. Polimene; Ferdinando Tramontano

This study aimed to determine the role of light on the succession of the phytoplankton community during the spring bloom in the northwestern Mediterranean Sea. To this end, three successive Lagrangian experiments were carried out between March and April 2003. The three experiments correspond to distinct phases of the bloom development (pre-bloom, bloom peak and post-bloom, respectively) and therefore to different trophic conditions. Phytoplankton (sampled on a daily scale) was grouped in size-based classes (pico and nano+micro) each of them were characterised in terms of chemotaxonomic composition, primary production and photophysiological properties. The phytoplankton community evolved with time changing in both size-class dominance and specie/group dominance within each size class. The bloom peak was characterised by highly dynamic condition (i.e. vertical mixing) and by the dominance of both small (pico) and large (nano and micro) diatoms, as a result of their capacity to photoacclimate to changing light regimes (‘physiological plasticity’). Concluding, we suggest that the physiological adaptation to light is the main factor driving the succession of the phytoplankton community during the first phases of the bloom (until the onset of thermal stratification) in the western Mediterranean Sea.


Journal of Coastal Research | 2011

Trophic Characterization of the Pelagic Ecosystem in Vlora Bay (Albania)

Olga Mangoni; Francesca Margiotta; Maria Saggiomo; Immacolata Santarpia; Giorgio Budillon

Abstract Phytoplankton assemblages were studied to characterize the trophic status of the semienclosed Vlora Bay (Albania) and to evaluate the influence of terrestrial inputs on its pelagic ecosystem. The study was carried out as part of the European Project CISM (INTERREG IIIA Italy–Albania) and conducted during two oceanographic cruises (spring 2007, winter 2008). The size-fractionated chlorophyll a concentrations, primary production rates, and the chemotaxonomic composition (high-performance liquid chromatography) of the phytoplankton assemblages were measured. The spatial variability of primary production rates and chlorophyll a concentrations both showed a pronounced E-W gradient in the surface layer, with the highest values along the eastern coast. In spring, a deep chlorophyll maximum was observed in the central western part of the bay, whereas in winter a homogeneous vertical distribution was observed. The phytoplankton assemblages were quite similar in both seasons and were dominated by the picophytoplankton fraction (≈46% and 53% in spring and in winter, respectively). Haptophytes and pelagophytes were the major phytoplankton groups, and accounted, respectively, for 50% and 15% in spring, and 40% and 25% in winter. The results showed that Vlora Bay was characterized by generally oligotrophic conditions and that the influence of the southern Adriatic open waters was negligible. The trophic characteristics of the pelagic ecosystem of the bay were essentially driven by terrestrial inputs.


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

Plankton dynamics across the freshwater, transitional and marine research sites of the LTER-Italy Network: patterns, fluctuations, drivers

Giuseppe Morabito; Maria Grazia Mazzocchi; Adriana Zingone; Caterina Bergami; Giovanna Flaim; Stefano Accoroni; Alberto Basset; Mauro Bastianini; Genuario Belmonte; Fabrizio Bernardi Aubry; Isabella Bertani; Mariano Bresciani; Fabio Buzzi; Marina Cabrini; Elisa Camatti; Carmela Caroppo; Bruno Cataletto; Michela Castellano; Paola Del Negro; Alessandra de Olazabal; Iole Di Capua; Antonia Concetta Elia; Daniela Fornasaro; Marina Giallain; Federica Grilli; Barbara Leoni; Marina Lipizer; Lorenzo Longobardi; Alessandro Ludovisi; Antonella Gesuina Laura Lugliè

A first synoptic and trans-domain overview of plankton dynamics was conducted across the aquatic sites belonging to the Italian Long-Term Ecological Research Network (LTER-Italy). Based on published studies, checked and complemented with unpublished information, we investigated phytoplankton and zooplankton annual dynamics and long-term changes across domains: from the large subalpine lakes to mountain lakes and artificial lakes, from lagoons to marine coastal ecosystems. This study permitted identifying common and unique environmental drivers and ecological functional processes controlling seasonal and long-term temporal course. The most relevant patterns of plankton seasonal succession were revealed, showing that the driving factors were nutrient availability, stratification regime, and freshwater inflow. Phytoplankton and mesozooplankton displayed a wide interannual variability at most sites. Unidirectional or linear long-term trends were rarely detected but all sites were impacted across the years by at least one, but in many case several major stressor(s): nutrient inputs, meteo-climatic variability at the local and regional scale, and direct human activities at specific sites. Different climatic and anthropic forcings frequently co-occurred, whereby the responses of plankton communities were the result of this environmental complexity. Overall, the LTER investigations are providing an unparalleled framework of knowledge to evaluate changes in the aquatic pelagic systems and management options.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2017

Distribution, community composition and potential metabolic activity of bacterioplankton in an urbanized Mediterranean Sea coastal zone

Kumari Richa; Cecilia Balestra; Roberta Piredda; Vladimir Benes; Marco Borra; Augusto Passarelli; Francesca Margiotta; Maria Saggiomo; Elio Biffali; Remo Sanges; David J. Scanlan; Raffaella Casotti

ABSTRACT Bacterioplankton are fundamental components of marine ecosystems and influence the entire biosphere by contributing to the global biogeochemical cycles of key elements. Yet, there is a significant gap in knowledge about their diversity and specific activities, as well as environmental factors that shape their community composition and function. Here, the distribution and diversity of surface bacterioplankton along the coastline of the Gulf of Naples (GON; Italy) were investigated using flow cytometry coupled with high-throughput sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene. Heterotrophic bacteria numerically dominated the bacterioplankton and comprised mainly Alphaproteobacteria, Gammaproteobacteria, and Bacteroidetes. Distinct communities occupied river-influenced, coastal, and offshore sites, as indicated by Bray-Curtis dissimilarity, distance metric (UniFrac), linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe), and multivariate analyses. The heterogeneity in diversity and community composition was mainly due to salinity and changes in environmental conditions across sites, as defined by nutrient and chlorophyll a concentrations. Bacterioplankton communities were composed of a few dominant taxa and a large proportion (92%) of rare taxa (here defined as operational taxonomic units [OTUs] accounting for <0.1% of the total sequence abundance), the majority of which were unique to each site. The relationship between 16S rRNA and the 16S rRNA gene, i.e., between potential metabolic activity and abundance, was positive for the whole community. However, analysis of individual OTUs revealed high rRNA-to-rRNA gene ratios for most (71.6% ± 16.7%) of the rare taxa, suggesting that these low-abundance organisms were potentially active and hence might be playing an important role in ecosystem diversity and functioning in the GON. IMPORTANCE The study of bacterioplankton in coastal zones is of critical importance, considering that these areas are highly productive and anthropogenically impacted. Their richness and evenness, as well as their potential activity, are very important to assess ecosystem health and functioning. Here, we investigated bacterial distribution, community composition, and potential metabolic activity in the GON, which is an ideal test site due to its heterogeneous environment characterized by a complex hydrodynamics and terrestrial inputs of varied quantities and quality. Our study demonstrates that bacterioplankton communities in this region are highly diverse and strongly regulated by a combination of different environmental factors leading to their heterogeneous distribution, with the rare taxa contributing to a major proportion of diversity and shifts in community composition and potentially holding a key role in ecosystem functioning.


Estuaries and Coasts | 2010

Coastal Phytoplankton Do Not Rest in Winter

Adriana Zingone; Laurent Dubroca; Daniele Iudicone; Francesca Margiotta; Federico Corato; Maurizio Ribera d’Alcalà; Diana Sarno


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2013

Diversity and germination patterns of diatom resting stages at a coastal Mediterranean site

Marina Montresor; Carmen Di Prisco; Diana Sarno; Francesca Margiotta; Adriana Zingone


Marine Ecology | 2015

The green–blue swing: plasticity of plankton food-webs in response to coastal oceanographic dynamics

Domenico D'Alelio; Maria Grazia Mazzocchi; Marina Montresor; Diana Sarno; Adriana Zingone; Iole Di Capua; Gayantonia Franzè; Francesca Margiotta; Maurizio Ribera d'Alcalà


Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers | 2012

Combined effects of hydrographic structure and iron and copper availability on the phytoplankton growth in Terra Nova Bay Polynya (Ross Sea, Antarctica)

Paola Rivaro; Maria Luisa Abelmoschi; Marco Grotti; Carmela Ianni; Emanuele Magi; Francesca Margiotta; Serena Massolo


Polar Biology | 2011

Primary production processes and photosynthetic performance of a unique periantarctic ecosystem: the Strait of Magellan

Immacolata Santarpia; Maria Saggiomo; Francesca Margiotta; Olga Mangoni

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Dive into the Francesca Margiotta's collaboration.

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Maria Saggiomo

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Olga Mangoni

University of Naples Federico II

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Adriana Zingone

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Diana Sarno

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Maria Grazia Mazzocchi

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Marina Montresor

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Augusto Passarelli

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Domenico D'Alelio

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Giorgio Budillon

University of Naples Federico II

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Immacolata Santarpia

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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