Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Livio Poldini is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Livio Poldini.


Plant Biosystems | 2009

Inventory of the non‐native flora of Italy

Laura Celesti-Grapow; A. Alessandrini; Pier Virgilio Arrigoni; Enrico Banfi; Liliana Bernardo; M. Bovio; Giuseppe Brundu; M. R. Cagiotti; Ignazio Camarda; Emanuela Carli; Fabio Conti; S. Fascetti; Gabriele Galasso; L. Gubellini; V. La Valva; F. Lucchese; S. Marchiori; Pietro Mazzola; S. Peccenini; Livio Poldini; F. Pretto; F. Prosser; Consolata Siniscalco; Mariacristina Villani; Lucia Viegi; T. Wilhalm; C. Blasi

Abstract In this paper we present a comprehensive inventory of the non‐native vascular flora of Italy, which was produced within the project “A survey of the Italian non‐native flora”, funded by the Italian Ministry for the Environment. Previously published floristic accounts were the main source of information. Historical records were critically revised and integrated with recent literature, data from herbaria and some unpublished information, so as to obtain a complete, up‐to‐date catalogue of the non‐native vascular plant species that occur spontaneously in Italy. The inventory lists 1023 non‐native species and subspecies, which account for 13.4% of all the Italian flora. The Italian non‐native flora was divided, according to its residence time, into 103 archaeophytes and 920 neophytes. According to its current invasion status, it was classified into 437 casual (42.7% of all non‐native) and 524 established taxa, the latter being divided into 361 naturalized non‐invasive (35.3%) and 163 invasive taxa (15.9%). The inventory includes a group of 62 species (6.1%) that lack recent records (i.e. since 1950). By combining local expertise into a unified, nationwide scheme using a standardized method and terminology, the inventory provides the essential scientific basis for the development of plant invasion research and management in the country.


Plant Biosystems | 2010

Non‐native flora of Italy: Species distribution and threats

Laura Celesti-Grapow; A. Alessandrini; Pier Virgilio Arrigoni; Silvia Paola Assini; Enrico Banfi; E. Barni; M. Bovio; Giuseppe Brundu; M. R. Cagiotti; Ignazio Camarda; Emanuela Carli; Fabio Conti; E. Del Guacchio; Gianniantonio Domina; Simonetta Fascetti; Gabriele Galasso; L. Gubellini; F. Lucchese; Pietro Medagli; N. G. Passalacqua; S. Peccenini; Livio Poldini; F. Pretto; F. Prosser; Marisa Vidali; Lucia Viegi; Mariacristina Villani; T. Wilhalm; C. Blasi

Abstract In this paper, we provide an overview of the distribution and invasive status of non‐native species in the Italian flora across its administrative regions, biogeographic regions and main land use types, and a synthesis of current knowledge on the threats they pose within the country. The information on non‐native plant species collected during the project “A survey of the non‐native Italian flora” was used to compile comprehensive regional and national databases. The number of non‐native species within a given administrative region increases in proportion to its size, resident population density and latitude, reaching the highest values in the intensively cultivated, heavily industrialized and urbanized Po Plain in northern Italy. The number of casual species is positively correlated with the number of yearly visitors in each region and negatively correlated with the proportion of mountainous terrain within the region. If compared with the Continental and Mediterranean biogeographic regions, the Alpine region yields the lowest number of non‐native species and lowest proportion of casual species. The number and density of introduced species is highest in artificial land use types, particularly in urban areas. A negative impact is reported to be exerted by 203 species, most of which are agricultural weeds.


Plant Biosystems | 2014

Plant communities of Italy: The Vegetation Prodrome

E. Biondi; C. Blasi; M. Allegrezza; I. Anzellotti; Mattia Martin Azzella; Emanuela Carli; S. Casavecchia; R. Copiz; E. Del Vico; Laura Facioni; D. Galdenzi; R. Gasparri; C. Lasen; S. Pesaresi; Livio Poldini; G. Sburlino; F. Taffetani; Ilda Vagge; S. Zitti; L. Zivkovic

The Vegetation Prodrome of Italy was promoted in 2012 by the Italian “Ministry of Environment, Land and Sea Protection”, in collaboration with the “Italian Society of Botany”, to provide a comprehensive and systematic catalogue and description of Italian plant communities. The Prodrome that is presented in this paper is the first full organic synthesis of the vegetation of Italy at the alliance syntaxonomic level. It fulfils several needs, the main one being a unified and comprehensive national framework that may make an important contribution to the definition of the European Vegetation Prodrome. Syntaxonomy, as well as taxonomy, is sometimes based on considerations that may in part diverge: several authors tend to favour models that are divisive or aggregative to a greater or lesser extent in terms of flora, biogeography and ecology. These different points of view stimulate the scientific debate and allow the adoption of a framework that is more widely supported. The Prodrome includes 75 classes, 2 subclasses, 175 orders, 6 suborders and 393 alliances. The classes were grouped into nine broad categories according to structural, physiognomic and synecological elements rather than to syntaxonomic criteria. The rank, full valid name, any synonymies and incorrect names are provided for each syntaxon. The short declaration highlights the physiognomy, synecology, syndynamics and distribution of the plant communities that belong to the syntaxon. The Prodrome of the Italian Vegetation is linked to the European Strategy for Biodiversity, the European Habitats Directive and the European Working Groups related to the ecosystems and their services. In addition to basic applications, the Prodrome can be used as a framework for scientific research related to the investigation of the relationships between plant communities and the environmental factors that influence their composition and distribution.


European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 1998

Rate of infection of Ixodes ricinus ticks with Borrelia Burgdorferi sensu stricto, Borrelia garinii, Borrelia afzelii and group VS116 in an endemic focus of Lyme disease in Italy

Marina Cinco; D. Padovan; Rossella Murgia; Livio Poldini; L. Frusteri; I. van de Pol; N. Verbeek-De Kruif; S. Rijpkema; M. Maroli

A study to evaluate the natural rate of infection ofIxodes ricinus withBorrelia burgdorferi sensu lato was carried out in an endemic focus of Lyme disease in the Trieste area in northern Italy. Two-hundred and twenty-seven ticks collected in ten different stations were tested individually for the presence of the spirochetes using polymerase chain reaction techniques able to identify bothBorrelia burgdorferi sensu lato and the four genospecies (Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto,Borrelia garinii, Borrelia afzelii and group VS116). Multiple infection of individual ticks was found. The infection rate ranged from 0–70%. Infection ofIxodes ricinus withBorrelia burgdorferi group VS116 was found for the first time in Italy in both a high and a low endemic focus of Lyme disease.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 1988

Herbal remedies in the traditional medicine of the Venezia Giulia Region (North East Italy)

Laura Coassini Lokar; Livio Poldini

This study, carried out in the Friuli-Venezia Giulia Region (N.E. Italy), concerns the traditional uses of wild plants against human diseases. One hundred eighty-one local plant species are used for treating various illnesses. Parts of plants, their traditional uses, methods of preparing the drug, chemical constituents and therapeutical properties are described. Often the therapeutical properties are correctly known. This study may be useful to pharmacologists and chemists interested in plants with medicinal properties, as well as to botanists with ethnobotanical interests.


Plant Biosystems | 2018

An updated checklist of the vascular flora native to Italy.

Fabrizio Bartolucci; L. Peruzzi; Gabriele Galasso; Antonella Albano; A. Alessandrini; Nmg Ardenghi; Giovanni Astuti; Gianluigi Bacchetta; S. Ballelli; Enrico Banfi; G. Barberis; Liliana Bernardo; D. Bouvet; M. Bovio; Lorenzo Cecchi; R. Di Pietro; Gianniantonio Domina; Simonetta Fascetti; Giuseppe Fenu; F. Festi; Bruno Foggi; Lorenzo Gallo; Günter Gottschlich; L. Gubellini; Duilio Iamonico; Mauro Iberite; P. Jiménez-Mejías; E. Lattanzi; D. Marchetti; E. Martinetto

Abstract An updated inventory of the native vascular flora of Italy, providing details on the occurrence at regional level, is presented. The checklist includes 8195 taxa (6417 species and 1778 subspecies), distributed in 1092 genera and 152 families; 23 taxa are lycophytes, 108 ferns and fern allies, 30 gymnosperms and 8034 angiosperms. The taxa currently occurring in Italy are 7483, while 568 taxa have not been confirmed in recent times, 99 are doubtfully occurring in the country and 19 are data deficient. Out of the 568 not confirmed taxa, 26 are considered extinct or possibly extinct.


Plant Biosystems | 2011

Riparian Salix alba: Scrubs of the Po lowland (N-Italy) from an European perspective

Livio Poldini; Marisa Vidali; Paola Ganis

Abstract This paper deals with riverine Salix alba – scrubs of the Po plain (northern Italy). They were compared with analogous formations of many other European countries to study similarities and differences. Demographic concentration and intense human activities (agriculture, industry) in the basin of the Po River are among the highest in Europe, with the remarkable consequence that all hygrophilous woods and bushes contain a high number of alien species. The units dominated by Salix alba were analyzed. Their originality in comparison with the similar associations of Mediterranean, central- and SE-Europe was emphasized.


Plant Biosystems | 2011

Correlations among biodiversity, biomass and other plant community parameters using the phytosociological approach: A case study from the south-eastern Alps

Livio Poldini; Giovanni Sburlino; Gabriella Buffa; Marisa Vidali

Abstract The present study deals with the grassland complex of communities which may be found on the limestones in the south-eastern Alps; these communities show in fact a particular interest for their high biodiversity degree and for their importance for the traditional land-use economy of the south-European mountain regions. Phytosociological relevés corresponding to well-defined plant associations have been used in order to get information on the relationships among plant species diversity, biomass, chorotypes, pollination types, functional strategies and soil characteristics. The analysis was carried out both along an altitudinal and a soil evolution gradient. The analysis of the correlations among the variables and the application of the principal component analysis shows a positive correlation between soil parameters and biomass, eurichory, anemogamy and C- and R-strategies; on the contrary, a negative correlation among stenochory, entomogamy and S-strategy with the soil evolution seems to be present. This article shows how the phytosociological approach can be used to get information and knowledge on the correlations between several variables useful to understand the complex nature of the plant communities in order to support management plans.


Plant Biosystems | 2011

Italian black alder swamps: Their syntaxonomic relationships and originality within the European context

G. Sburlino; Livio Poldini; Roberto Venanzoni; L. Ghirelli

Abstract The aim of this study is to present a phytosociological survey of the Italian Alnus glutinosa-dominated swamps (Alnion glutinosae). The analysis highlights the occurrence of the following associations: Corno hungaricae-Alnetum glutinosae and Carici elatae-Alnetum glutinosae (northern Italy), Hydrocotylo-Alnetum glutinosae and Scrophulario umbrosae-Alnetum glutinosae (central and southern Italy). Carici elongatae-Alnetum glutinosae, which is widely distributed in central and northern Europe, has so far only been identified in a narrow area of the western continental sector of the Po plain; elsewhere, this association is replaced by communities generally characterized both by the lower expression of species whose main center of distribution is in the central-northern sector of Europe, and by the presence of differential entities. The comparison of data from southern, central and northern Europe confirms the syntaxonomic autonomy of most of the Italian Black Alder swamps. Moreover, the study reveals the existence of a north-to-south phytogeographic gradient, according to which the sub-boreal phytocoenoses are gradually being replaced by the central-European temperate communities as well as by the last southern European phytocoenoses occurring in the temperate and Submediterranean/Mediterranean contexts.


Biochemical Systematics and Ecology | 1987

Variation in terpene composition of Artemisia alba in relation to environmental conditions

L. Coassini Lokar; Venerando Maurich; G. Mellerio; M. Moneghini; Livio Poldini

Abstract The essential oil from inflorescences of Artemisia alba Turra (Compositae) was analysed by GLC; 33 different components were detected, 21 of which were identified by GC-MS. The composition of the extract changes with environmental and climatic conditions of the sites of collection (Adriatic area-NE Italy). Artemisia alba produces mainly sesquiterpene hydrocarbons when growing in thermophytic plant communities and mostly oxygenated monoterpenes in mesophytic plant communities. The results of ordination and cluster analysis performed on chemical data allowed the identification of four chemical types of A. alba .

Collaboration


Dive into the Livio Poldini's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. Blasi

Sapienza University of Rome

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Emanuela Carli

Sapienza University of Rome

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gabriella Buffa

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge