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Dive into the research topics where Lucia Santorufo is active.

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Featured researches published by Lucia Santorufo.


Environmental Pollution | 2012

Soil invertebrates as bioindicators of urban soil quality

Lucia Santorufo; Cornelis A.M. van Gestel; Annamaria Rocco; Giulia Maisto

This study aimed at relating the abundance and diversity of invertebrate communities of urban soils to chemical and physical soil characteristics and to identify the taxa most sensitive or tolerant to soil stressors. The invertebrate community of five urban soils in Naples, Italy, was sampled. To assess soil quality invertebrate community indices (Shannon, Simpson, Menhinick and Pielou indices), Acarina/Collembola ratios, and the soil biological quality index (QBS) were calculated. The chemical and physical characteristics of the soils strongly differed. Abundance rather than taxa richness of invertebrates were more affected by soil characteristics. The community was more abundant and diverse in the soils with high organic matter and water content and low metal (Cu, Pb, Zn) concentrations. The taxa more resistant to the urban environment included Acarina, Enchytraeids, Collembola and Nematoda. Collembolans appeared particularly sensitive to changing soil properties. Among the investigated indices, QBS seems most appropriate for soil quality assessment.


Chemosphere | 2012

Ecotoxicological assessment of metal-polluted urban soils using bioassays with three soil invertebrates

Lucia Santorufo; Cornelis A.M. van Gestel; Giulia Maisto

This study aimed at assessing the quality of urban soils by integrating chemical and ecotoxicological approaches. Soils from five sites in downtown Naples, Italy, were sampled and characterized for physical-chemical properties and total and water-extractable metal concentrations. Bioassays with Eisenia andrei, Enchytraeus crypticus and Folsomia candida were performed to assess toxicity of the soils, using survival, reproduction and growth as the endpoints. Metal bioaccumulation in the animals was also measured. The properties and metal concentrations of the soils strongly differed. Metal bioaccumulation was related with total metal concentrations in soil and was highest in E. crypticus, which was more sensitive than E. andrei and F. candida. Responses of the three species to the investigated soils seemed due to both metal contamination and soil properties.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A Thesaurus for Soil Invertebrate Trait-Based Approaches

Benjamin Pey; Marie-Angélique Laporte; Johanne Nahmani; Apolline Auclerc; Yvan Capowiez; Gaël Caro; Daniel Cluzeau; Jérôme Cortet; Thibaud Decaëns; Florence Dubs; Sophie Joimel; Muriel Guernion; Charlène Briard; Fabien Grumiaux; Baptiste Laporte; Alain Pasquet; Céline Pelosi; Céline Pernin; Jean-François Ponge; Sandrine Salmon; Lucia Santorufo; Mickaël Hedde

Soil invertebrates are known to be much involved in soil behaviour and therefore in the provision of ecosystem services. Functional trait-based approaches are methodologies which can be used to understand soil invertebrates’ responses to their environment. They (i) improve the predictions and (ii) are less dependent on space and time. The way traits have been used recently has led to misunderstandings in the integration and interpretation of data. Trait semantics are especially concerned. The aim of this paper is to propose a thesaurus for soil invertebrate trait-based approaches. T-SITA, an Internet platform, is the first initiative to deal with the semantics of traits and ecological preferences for soil invertebrates. It reflects the agreement of a scientific expert community to fix semantic properties (e.g. definition) of approximately 100 traits and ecological preferences. In addition, T-SITA has been successfully linked with a fully operational database of soil invertebrate traits. Such a link enhances data integration and improves the scientific integrity of data.


Water Air and Soil Pollution | 2014

Assessment of Eco-Physiological Performance of Quercus ilex L. Leaves in Urban Area by an Integrated Approach

C. Arena; Anna De Maio; Flavia De Nicola; Lucia Santorufo; L. Vitale; Giulia Maisto

Plant physiological performance may be endangered in contaminated urban areas. Metal and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) content in Quercus ilex leaves mainly reflects air pollution, being for these pollutants traceable the translocation from soil. In this work, in a field study, the responses at structural and functional level of Q. ilex leaves to metal and PAH pollution were assessed by an integrated approach. At this purpose, morphological (functional traits), biochemical (pigment content, antioxidant capacity, and PARP activity), and physiological (partitioning of absorbed light in the photosynthetic process) analyses were performed in leaves collected at urban parks and roadsides. Compared to the leaves of the urban parks, those sampled at the roadsides showed higher metal and PAH accumulation. The most contaminated leaves showed smaller leaf sizes and lower relative water and pigment content, as well as a lower photochemistry. In this circumstance, the excess of absorbed light at PSII was mainly dissipated via non-regulated than heat processes. On the basis of the biochemical analyses, the occurrence of DNA damages in contaminated Q. ilex leaves may be hypothesized.


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

Total and fraction content of elements in volcanic soil: Natural or anthropogenic derivation

Valeria Memoli; Enrique Eymar; Carlos García-Delgado; Lucia Santorufo; Anna De Marco; Rossella Barile; Giulia Maisto

Soil element composition derives from parent material disaggregation during pedogenesis and weathering processes but also by anthropogenic inputs. Elements are present in soils in different chemical forms that affect their availability and mobility. The aim of the study was to evaluate the main derivation, natural or anthropogenic, of elements in the soils of the Vesuvius National Park (a natural environment strongly affected by human impacts). Besides, the effects of age of the lava from which soils derive, different vegetation covers, traffic fluxes along the two roads connecting the Vesuvius crater and altitudes of the sites on the pseudo-total element concentrations and on their contents in different fraction of soil were investigated. To reach the aims, BCR (Bureau Commun de Référence) sequential extraction was performed in order to determine the distribution of elements into: acid-soluble, reducible, oxidizable and residual fractions. The relationship between the main environmental media and distribution of elements was discussed using non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS). The findings showed that, with the exception of Cd, Cu, Pb and Zn that would seem to derive also from human activities, the other investigated elements (Al, As, B, Ba, Ca, Cd, Cr, Cu, Fe, K, La, Mg, Mn, Na, Ni, P, Pb, Si, Ti, V, W and Zn) mainly had a natural derivation. Among the investigated elements, only Cd could represent a potential high risk for the studied andosols. The highest element accumulations in the soils at low altitude could be attributable to an integrated effect of plant cover, vicinity of downtowns and traffic flux. The acid-soluble fraction of elements appeared more linked to lava age; the reducible and oxidizable ones to plant cover; the residual one to the chemical composition of the parent material that gave origin to the soils.


Ecological Research | 2017

Relationships among site characteristics, taxonomical structure and functional trait distribution of arthropods in forest, urban and agricultural soils of Southern Italy

Giulia Maisto; Vittoria Milano; Lucia Santorufo

Urbanization and agriculture cause alterations in soil biodiversity. As arthropods quickly respond to soil changes, they have been recognized as good indicators of soil quality. This study aimed to evaluate if (1) soil physico-chemical properties act as environmental filters of the functional trait distribution of soil arthropod community; (2) the abundance of certain functional traits is linked to different land uses; (3) the taxonomical and functional approaches provide complementary information about the evaluation of biological soil quality. The study was performed at forest, agricultural and urban sites in downtown and surroundings of Naples. The soils were characterized for texture, pH, organic matter content, water content, total Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn concentrations. The forest soils showed the highest organic matter and water contents, and the lowest metal concentrations; the agricultural soils showed the lowest organic matter and water contents and high Cd and Cu concentrations, whereas the urban soils showed high Pb and Zn concentrations. The forest soils showed the highest arthropod density, taxa richness and diversity. The distribution of the functional traits in the arthropod communities of the different land uses highlighted similarity only for the preference to occupy soil and for the percentage contribution of detritivores. The abundance of arthropods living above litter and omnivores were positively correlated to Pb and Zn concentrations, whereas predators were positively correlated to Cu concentrations. The findings suggest that the arthropod identification at order level could be enough to detect differences in functional traits among forest, urban, and agricultural soils.


Water Air and Soil Pollution | 2017

Eco-physiological and Antioxidant Responses of Holm Oak ( Quercus ilex L.) Leaves to Cd and Pb

C. Arena; Lucia Santorufo; Pia Rosa Cataletto; Valeria Memoli; Rosaria Scudiero; Giulia Maisto

Plants of the urban environment are exposed to a wide range of pollutants, including heavy metals. This research studies in situ the eco-physiological and antioxidant responses of holm oak (Q. ilex) leaves to Pb and Cd to assess the mechanisms of metal tolerance in this species, widely used as biomonitor. Leaves of plants grown at parks and roadsides were analyzed for photosynthetic activity, Pb and Cd concentration in tissues and cell-free extracts, thiol groups, D1 and Rubisco protein content, ascorbic acid (AsA) amount, and catalase (CAT) activity. The main results evidenced that Cd concentration was higher in leaves collected at the park out from the downtown; whereas Pb was most abundant in leaves sampled at the roadside nearby the highway. Pb in cell-free extracts was higher in park than in roadside leaves. Although Cd in the leaf tissues was twofold lower than Pb, it was more abundant than Pb in cellular extracts deprived of all particulate matter. Leaves responded to different concentration of Cd and Pb modulating some eco-physiological and biochemical traits, roadside leaves showed reduced leaf lamina, higher content of photosynthetic pigments, hydrogen peroxide, and AsA, as well as higher CAT activity compared to park leaves. In the roadside leaves, a stress condition for photosynthetic apparatus can be hypothesized on the basis of the decline of photochemical activity, the increase of NPQ, and the reduction of Rubisco and D1 protein content. The elevated presence of thiol groups in these leaves suggests a possible role of Pb and Cd in activation of antioxidant responses.


Basic and Applied Ecology | 2014

Current use of and future needs for soil invertebrate functional traits in community ecology

Benjamin Pey; Johanne Nahmani; Apolline Auclerc; Yvan Capowiez; Daniel Cluzeau; Jérôme Cortet; Thibaud Decaëns; Louis Deharveng; Florence Dubs; Sophie Joimel; Charlène Briard; Fabien Grumiaux; Marie-Angélique Laporte; Alain Pasquet; Céline Pelosi; Céline Pernin; Jean-François Ponge; Sandrine Salmon; Lucia Santorufo; Mickaël Hedde


Applied Soil Ecology | 2014

An assessment of the influence of the urban environment on collembolan communities in soils using taxonomy- and trait-based approaches

Lucia Santorufo; Jérôme Cortet; C. Arena; Romain Goudon; Alain Rakoto; Jean Louis Morel; Giulia Maisto


European Journal of Soil Biology | 2015

Responses of functional and taxonomic collembolan community structure to site management in Mediterranean urban and surrounding areas

Lucia Santorufo; Jérôme Cortet; Johanne Nahmani; Céline Pernin; Sandrine Salmon; Audrey Pernot; Jean Louis Morel; Giulia Maisto

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Giulia Maisto

University of Naples Federico II

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C. Arena

University of Naples Federico II

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Johanne Nahmani

University of Montpellier

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Jérôme Cortet

University of Montpellier

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Sandrine Salmon

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Mickaël Hedde

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Benjamin Pey

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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