M. T. Carone
National Research Council
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Featured researches published by M. T. Carone.
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2009
M. T. Carone; Tiziana Simoniello; Salvatore Manfreda; Gaetano Caricato
The EU Water Framework Directive 2000/60 (Integrated River Basin Management for Europe) establishes the importance of preserving water quality through policies applied at watershed level given the strong links existing among ecological, hydrological, and hydrogeological systems. Therefore, monitoring campaigns of river water quality should be planned with multidisciplinary approaches starting from a landscape perspective. In this paper, the effects of the basin hydrology on the river water quality and, in particular, the impacts caused by the runoff production coming from agricultural areas are investigated. The fluvial segments receiving consistent amount of pollutant loads (due to the runoff routing over agricultural areas) are assumed more critical in terms of water quality and thus, they require more accurate controls. Starting from this perspective, to evaluate the runoff productions coming from agricultural areas, we applied a semi-distributed hydrological model that adopts satellite data, pedological and morphological information for the watershed description. Then, the river segments receiving critical amount of runoff loads from the surrounding cultivated areas were identified. Finally, in order to validate the approach, water quality for critical and non critical segment was investigated seasonally, by using river macroinvertebrates as indicators of water quality because of their effectiveness in preserving in time a memory of pollution events. Biomonitoring data showed that river water quality strongly decreases in correspondence of fluvial segments receiving critical amount of runoff coming from agricultural areas. The results highlight the usefulness of such a methodology to plan monitoring campaigns specifically devoted to non-point pollution sources and suggest the possibility to use this approach for water quality management and for planning river restoration policies.
Remote Sensing | 2004
Tiziana Simoniello; M. T. Carone; Maria Lanfredi; Maria Macchiato; Vincenzo Cuomo
The strict link between intra-annual vegetation dynamics (phenology) and Earths climate makes phenological information fundamental to improve understanding and models of inter-annual variability in terrestrial carbon exchange and climate-biosphere interactions. In order to monitor phenology in a landscape characterized by heterogeneous features rapidly changing over the territory, we performed multitemporal classifications of NDVI-AVHRR data and interfaced them with Landsat-TM data and orography. The sample area is the Vulture basin (Southern Italy), where cultivated and densely vegetated areas coexist with urban and recently built industrial areas. These land cover patterns rapidly change over the territory at very small spatial scales; it is a complex zone very interesting for studying the use of remote sensing techniques in the integrated monitoring context. Clusters having homogeneous NDVI time behaviors were identified. In spite of its spatial resolution, AVHRR NDVI effectively picks up the characteristic phenology for different covers and altitudes. Moreover, some pixels having particular microclimate were clustered and their characterization was only possible by using orography and TM classification information. The comparison of two intra-annual classifications (1996 and 1998) showed that the proposed approach can be very useful for studying change in pattern of vegetation dynamics.
Developments in Environmental Modelling | 2012
M. T. Carone; Tiziana Simoniello; Anna Loy; Maria Laura Carranza
Abstract For studying river basins criticalities, it is mandatory to take into account the multilayered structure of the river/landscape system. We propose an integrated analysis that combines habitat suitability (HS) maps for a riverine key species (the endangered Eurasian otter) with data on fluvial functionality (FF) as an instrument to reveal more vulnerable fluvial portions in need of restoration. The approach was tested on two river catchments with different anthropogenic pressures, both falling within the otter core area in Italy. Results showed that the integration allows for a satisfactory prioritization of river criticalities, suggesting the method as an useful tool for river environmental management.
Geomorphology | 2009
M. Liberti; Tiziana Simoniello; M. T. Carone; R. Coppola; M. D'Emilio; M. Macchiato
Ecological Engineering | 2006
M. T. Carone; Michele Greco; Bruno Molino
Fresenius Environmental Bulletin | 2010
M. T. Carone; Tiziana Simoniello; Rosa Coppola; Maria Lanfredi; Monica Proto; Maria Laura Carranza; Anna Loy; Maria Macchiato; Consorzio Nazionale
Archive | 2009
Tiziana Simoniello; M. T. Carone; Antonio Loperte; Antonio Satriani; Vito Imbrenda; M. D'Emilio; Alessandra Guariglia
Archive | 2013
Inea. Sede regionale per la Basilicata; Istituto di metodologie per l'analisi ambientale; Giuseppina Costantini; Silvia De Carlo; Teresa Lettieri; Mauro Frattegiani; Fabrizio Ferretti; Isabella De Meo; Tiziana Simoniello; Vito Imbrenda; M. T. Carone; Salvatore Digilio
Archive | 2010
Tiziana Simoniello; M. T. Carone; Giovanni Costantini; M. Frattegiani; Maria Lanfredi; M. Macchiato
Archive | 2010
Anthony S. Acampora; Salvatore Manfreda; M. T. Carone; Tiziana Simoniello; Aurelia Sole