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Dive into the research topics where Giuseppe Lembo is active.

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Featured researches published by Giuseppe Lembo.


PLOS ONE | 2015

The seascape of demersal fish nursery areas in the North Mediterranean Sea, a first step towards the implementation of spatial planning for trawl fisheries

Francesco Colloca; Germana Garofalo; Isabella Bitetto; Maria Teresa Facchini; Fabio Grati; Angela Martiradonna; Gianluca Mastrantonio; Nikolaos Nikolioudakis; Francesc Ordinas; Giuseppe Scarcella; George Tserpes; M. Pilar Tugores; Vasilis D. Valavanis; Roberto Carlucci; Fabio Fiorentino; Maria Cristina Follesa; Magdalena Iglesias; Leyla Knittweis; Eugenia Lefkaditou; Giuseppe Lembo; Chiara Manfredi; Enric Massutí; Marie Louise Pace; Nadia Papadopoulou; Paolo Sartor; Christopher J. Smith; Maria Teresa Spedicato

The identification of nursery grounds and other essential fish habitats of exploited stocks is a key requirement for the development of spatial conservation planning aimed at reducing the adverse impact of fishing on the exploited populations and ecosystems. The reduction in juvenile mortality is particularly relevant in the Mediterranean and is considered as one of the main prerequisites for the future sustainability of trawl fisheries. The distribution of nursery areas of 11 important commercial species of demersal fish and shellfish was analysed in the European Union Mediterranean waters using time series of bottom trawl survey data with the aim of identifying the most persistent recruitment areas. A high interspecific spatial overlap between nursery areas was mainly found along the shelf break of many different sectors of the Northern Mediterranean indicating a high potential for the implementation of conservation measures. Overlap of the nursery grounds with existing spatial fisheries management measures and trawl fisheries restricted areas was also investigated. Spatial analyses revealed considerable variation depending on species and associated habitat/depth preferences with increased protection seen in coastal nurseries and minimal protection seen for deeper nurseries (e.g. Parapenaeus longirostris 6%). This is partly attributed to existing environmental policy instruments (e.g. Habitats Directive and Mediterranean Regulation EC 1967/2006) aiming at minimising impacts on coastal priority habitats such as seagrass, coralligenous and maerl beds. The new knowledge on the distribution and persistence of demersal nurseries provided in this study can support the application of spatial conservation measures, such as the designation of no-take Marine Protected Areas in EU Mediterranean waters and their inclusion in a conservation network. The establishment of no-take zones will be consistent with the objectives of the Common Fisheries Policy applying the ecosystem approach to fisheries management and with the requirements of the Marine Strategy Framework Directive to maintain or achieve seafloor integrity and good environmental status.


PLOS ONE | 2015

A human deciduous tooth and new 40Ar/39Ar dating results from the Middle Pleistocene archaeological site of Isernia La pineta, southern Italy

Carlo Peretto; Julie Arnaud; Jacopo Moggi-Cecchi; Giorgio Manzi; Sébastien Nomade; Alison Pereira; Christophe Falguères; Jean-Jacques Bahain; Dominique Grimaud-Hervé; Claudio Berto; Benedetto Sala; Giuseppe Lembo; Brunella Muttillo; Rosalia Gallotti; Ursula Thun Hohenstein; Carmela Vaccaro; Mauro Coltorti; Marta Arzarello

Isernia La Pineta (south-central Italy, Molise) is one of the most important archaeological localities of the Middle Pleistocene in Western Europe. It is an extensive open-air site with abundant lithic industry and faunal remains distributed across four stratified archaeosurfaces that have been found in two sectors of the excavation (3c, 3a, 3s10 in sect. I; 3a in sect. II). The prehistoric attendance was close to a wet environment, with a series of small waterfalls and lakes associated to calcareous tufa deposits. An isolated human deciduous incisor (labelled IS42) was discovered in 2014 within the archaeological level 3 coll (overlying layer 3a) that, according to new 40Ar/39Ar measurements, is dated to about 583–561 ka, i.e. to the end of marine isotope stage (MIS) 15. Thus, the tooth is currently the oldest human fossil specimen in Italy; it is an important addition to the scanty European fossil record of the Middle Pleistocene, being associated with a lithic assemblage of local raw materials (flint and limestone) characterized by the absence of handaxes and reduction strategies primarily aimed at the production of small/medium-sized flakes. The faunal assemblage is dominated by ungulates often bearing cut marks. Combining chronology with the archaeological evidence, Isernia La Pineta exhibits a delay in the appearance of handaxes with respect to other European Palaeolithic sites of the Middle Pleistocene. Interestingly, this observation matches the persistence of archaic morphological features shown by the human calvarium from the Middle Pleistocene site of Ceprano, not far from Isernia (south-central Italy, Latium). In this perspective, our analysis is aimed to evaluate morphological features occurring in IS42.


Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia (Research In Paleontology and Stratigraphy) | 2018

GROTTA ROMANELLI (SOUTHERN ITALY, APULIA): LEGACIES AND ISSUES IN EXCAVATING A KEY SITE FOR THE PLEISTOCENE OF THE MEDITERRANEAN

Raffaele Sardella; Ilaria Mazzini; Francesca Giustini; Beniamino Mecozzi; Mauro Brilli; Dawid A. Iurino; Giuseppe Lembo; Brunella Muttillo; Massimo Massussi; Dario Sigari; Sonia Tucci; Mario Voltaggio

Grotta Romanelli, located on the Adriatic coast of southern Apulia (Italy), is considered a key site for the Mediterranean Pleistocene for its archaeological and palaeontological contents. The site, discovered in 1874, was re-evaluated only in 1900, when P. E. Stasi realised that it contained the first evidence of the Palaeolithic in Italy. Starting in 1914, G.A. Blanc led a pioneering excavation campaign, for the first-time using scientific methods applied to systematic paleontological and stratigraphical studies. Blanc proposed a stratigraphic framework for the cave. Different dating methods (C 14 and U/Th) were used to temporally constrain the deposits. The extensive studies of the cave and its contents were mostly published in journals with limited distribution and access, until the end of the 1970s, when the site became forgotten. In 2015, with the permission of the authorities, a new excavation campaign began, led by a team from Sapienza University of Rome in collaboration with IGAG CNR and other research institutions. The research team had to deal with the consequences of more than 40 years of inactivity in the field and the combined effect of erosion and legal, as well as illegal, excavations. In this paper, we provide a database of all the information published during the first 70 years of excavations and highlight the outstanding problems and contradictions between the chronological and geomorphological evidence, the features of the faunal assemblages and the limestone artefacts.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2017

Preference Modeling to Support Stakeholder Outreach toward the Common Fishery Policy Objectives in the North Mediterranean Sea

Giuseppe Lembo; Jose M. Bellido; Isabella Bitetto; Maria Teresa Facchini; Teresa García-Jiménez; Mavra Stithou; Vassiliki Vassilopoulou; Maria Teresa Spedicato

Participatory management is a working method of paramount importance based on the principles of knowledge sharing and accountability for addressing the sustainable management of the fishery sector. To approach this multidimensional problem we applied two Multi Criteria Decision Analysis (MCDA) methods, the Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) and the Non-Structural Fuzzy Decision Support System (NSFDSS), which were applied incorporating uncertainty to generate probabilistic rankings. The NSFDSS technique was applied for the first time to address a fishery problem. Two surveys were carried out among Mediterranean Advisory Council (MEDAC) stakeholders with different backgrounds. By the two surveys we: i) made an AHP test for exploring stakeholders’ perception of the objectives and indicators used in the monitoring of the stocks, ecosystem, and fisheries, and ii) introduced the NSFDSS technique, gathering feedback on stakeholders’ preferences on management options for improving fishery sustainability (e.g., reducing discards, improving ecosystem state and economic yield in the long term). In the AHP the respondents were asked to evaluate the importance of one objective against another according to a scale of semantic scores from 1 to 5, whereas a simpler scoring scale, with only 3 possible options, was used in the NSFDSS. The two MCDA methods were proven to be useful to elicit stakeholders’ view on the potential effects of key issues on economic and environmental fishery sustainability. The results showed stakeholders’ awareness of the fact that the reproductive potential should be secured by checking mortality and/or fishing intensity. Consistently, among the ecological indicators that are tracking the fisheries policy objectives, a higher rank was attributed to “mean size of the spawners,” while cost efficiency was considered to be essential for improving profits. Regarding the economic indicators, stakeholders gave higher priority to “revenue” in comparison to “production (catches),” which is a sign of awareness that increasing fish production does not necessarily turn into increased revenue. Among the different management strategies, “fleet withdrawal” (scraping) was considered as the worst option, while the “combination of measures” was considered to be the best alternative for achieving a sustainable fishery in the long term.


Marine and Freshwater Behaviour and Physiology | 2015

Modelling swimming activities and energetic costs in European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax L., 1758) during critical swimming tests

Walter Zupa; Pierliugi Carbonara; Maria Teresa Spedicato; Giuseppe Lembo

Muscular activity patterns in red and white muscles linked to oxygen consumption were studied during critical swimming tests in the sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax Linnaeus 1758). The species is one of the most important for Mediterranean Sea aquaculture. A sigmoid model was used to fit both the oxygen consumption and red muscle activity while the white muscle activity pattern was described by an exponential model. Red muscle reaches an activation plateau close to critical swimming speed mostly due to the oxygen diffusion velocity in tissues. The exponential activation of white muscle appears to be linked to short and sudden periods of great energy need to cope with adverse conditions such as predation and escape. Both oxygen consumption and muscular activity were found to be size dependent. The bioenergetics of sea bass was modelled based on fish mass and swimming speed to predict the minimum and maximum speed as well as the mass-specific active metabolic rate and standard metabolic rate. An important finding was that contrary to other well-known species, swimming at subcritical speeds in sea bass involves both red and white muscle in different proportions.


Aquaculture | 2004

Rearing performance of Spongia officinalis on suspended ropes off the Southern Italian Coast (Central Mediterranean Sea)

Giuseppe Corriero; Caterina Longo; Maria Mercurio; Carlotta Nonnis Marzano; Giuseppe Lembo; Maria Teresa Spedicato


Marine life | 1999

Site fidelity of the dusky grouper Epinephelus marginatus (Lowe, 1834) studied by acoustic telemetry

Giuseppe Lembo; Ian A. Fleming; Finn Økland; Pierluigi Carbonara; Maria Teresa Spedicato


Crustaceana | 2000

LOCALIZATION OF NURSERY AREAS OF PARAPENAEUS LONGIROSTRIS (LUCAS, 1846) IN THE CENTRAL-SOUTHERN TYRRHENIAN SEA BY GEOSTATISTICS

Giuseppe Lembo; Teresa Silecchia; Pierluigi Carbonara; Monica Contegiacomo; Maria Teresa Spedicato


Crustaceana | 1999

A GEOSTATISTICAL APPROACH TO THE ASSESSMENT OF THE SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF PARAPENAEUS LONGIROSTRIS (LUCAS, 1846) IN THE CENTRAL-SOUTHERN TYRRHENIAN SEA

Giuseppe Lembo; Teresa Silecchia; Pierluigi Carbonara; Alessandra Acrivulis; Maria Teresa Spedicato


Quaternary International | 2016

The Middle Pleistocene site of Guado San Nicola (Monteroduni, Central Italy) on the Lower/Middle Palaeolithic transition

Carlo Peretto; Marta Arzarello; Jean-Jacques Bahain; Nicolas Boulbes; Jean Michel Dolo; Eric Douville; Christophe Falguères; Norbert Frank; Tristan Garcia; Giuseppe Lembo; Anne Marie Moigne; Brunella Muttillo; Sébastien Nomade; Alison Pereira; Maria Angela Rufo; Benedetto Sala; Qingfeng Shao; Ursula Thun Hohenstein; Umberto Tessari; Maria Chiara Turrini; Carmela Vaccaro

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Alfred Jokumsen

Technical University of Denmark

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Christophe Falguères

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Jacques Bahain

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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