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Dive into the research topics where Massimo Prosdocimi is active.

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Featured researches published by Massimo Prosdocimi.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

The immediate effectiveness of barley straw mulch in reducing soil erodibility and surface runoff generation in Mediterranean vineyards.

Massimo Prosdocimi; A. Jordán; Paolo Tarolli; Saskia Keesstra; Agata Novara; Artemi Cerdà

Soil and water loss in agriculture is a major problem throughout the world, and especially in Mediterranean areas. Non-conservation agricultural practices have further aggravated the situation, especially in vineyards, which are affected by one of the highest rates of soil loss among cultivated lands. Therefore, it is necessary to find the right soil practices for more sustainable viticulture. In this regard, straw mulching has proven to be effective in other crop and fire affected soils, but, nonetheless, little research has been carried out in vineyards. This research tests the effect of barley straw mulching on soil erosion and surface runoff on vineyards in Eastern Spain where the soil and water losses are non-sustainable. An experiment was setup using rainfall simulation tests at 55 mm h(-1) over 1h on forty paired plots of 0.24 m(2): twenty bare and twenty straw covered. Straw cover varied from 48 to 90% with a median value of 59% as a result of the application of 75 g of straw per m(2). The use of straw mulch resulted in delayed ponding and runoff generation and, as a consequence, the median water loss decreased from 52.59 to 39.27% of the total rainfall. The straw cover reduced the median sediment concentration in runoff from 9.8 to 3.0 g L(-1) and the median total sediment detached from 70.34 to 15.62 g per experiment. The median soil erosion rate decreased from 2.81 to 0.63 Mg ha(-1)h(-1) due to the straw mulch protection. Straw mulch is very effective in reducing soil erodibility and surface runoff, and this benefit was achieved immediately after the application of the straw.


Soil Research | 2016

Use of barley straw residues to avoid high erosion and runoff rates on persimmon plantations in Eastern Spain under low frequency-high magnitude simulated rainfall events

Artemi Cerdà; Óscar González-Pelayo; Antonio Giménez-Morera; A. Jordán; Paulo Pereira; Agata Novara; Eric C. Brevik; Massimo Prosdocimi; Majid Mahmoodabadi; Saskia Keesstra; Fuensanta García Orenes; Coen J. Ritsema

Soil and water losses due to agricultural mismanagement are high and non-sustainable in many orchards. An experiment was set up with rainfall simulation at 78 mm h–1 over 1 hour on 20 paired plots of 2 m2 (bare and straw covered) in new persimmon plantations in Eastern Spain. Effects of straw cover on the control of soil and water losses were assessed. An addition of 60% straw cover (75 g m–2) resulted in delayed ponding and runoff generation and consequently reduced water losses from 60% to 13% of total rainfall. The straw cover reduced raindrop impact and thus sediment detachment from 1014 to 47 g plot–1 h–1. The erosion rate was reduced from 5.1 to 0.2 Mg ha–1 h–1. The straw mulch was found to be extremely efficient in reducing soil erosion rates.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Quantitative comparison of initial soil erosion processes and runoff generation in Spanish and German vineyards.

J. Rodrigo Comino; Thomas Iserloh; Tamás Lassu; Artemi Cerdà; S.D. Keestra; Massimo Prosdocimi; C. Brings; Miriam Marzen; M.C. Ramos; José María Senciales; J. D. Ruiz Sinoga; Manuel Seeger; Johannes B. Ries

The aim of this study was to enable a quantitative comparison of initial soil erosion processes in European vineyards using the same methodology and equipment. The study was conducted in four viticultural areas with different characteristics (Valencia and Málaga in Spain, Ruwer-Mosel valley and Saar-Mosel valley in Germany). Old and young vineyards, with conventional and ecological planting and management systems were compared. The same portable rainfall simulator with identical rainfall intensity (40mmh(-1)) and sampling intervals (30min of test duration, collecting the samples at 5-min-intervals) was used over a circular test plot with 0.28m(2). The results of 83 simulations have been analysed and correlation coefficients were calculated for each study area to identify the relationship between environmental plot characteristics, soil texture, soil erosion, runoff and infiltration. The results allow for identification of the main factors related to soil properties, topography and management, which control soil erosion processes in vineyards. The most important factors influencing soil erosion and runoff were the vegetation cover for the ecological German vineyards (with 97.6±8% infiltration coefficients) and stone cover, soil moisture and slope steepness for the conventional land uses.


Science of The Total Environment | 2017

Rainfall simulation and Structure-from-Motion photogrammetry for the analysis of soil water erosion in Mediterranean vineyards

Massimo Prosdocimi; María Burguet; Simone Di Prima; Giulia Sofia; Enric Terol; Jesús Rodrigo Comino; Artemi Cerdà; Paolo Tarolli

Soil water erosion is a serious problem, especially in agricultural lands. Among these, vineyards deserve attention, because they constitute for the Mediterranean areas a type of land use affected by high soil losses. A significant problem related to the study of soil water erosion in these areas consists in the lack of a standardized procedure of collecting data and reporting results, mainly due to a variability among the measurement methods applied. Given this issue and the seriousness of soil water erosion in Mediterranean vineyards, this works aims to quantify the soil losses caused by simulated rainstorms, and compare them with each other depending on two different methodologies: (i) rainfall simulation and (ii) surface elevation change-based, relying on high-resolution Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) derived from a photogrammetric technique (Structure-from-Motion or SfM). The experiments were carried out in a typical Mediterranean vineyard, located in eastern Spain, at very fine scales. SfM data were obtained from one reflex camera and a smartphone built-in camera. An index of sediment connectivity was also applied to evaluate the potential effect of connectivity within the plots. DEMs derived from the smartphone and the reflex camera were comparable with each other in terms of accuracy and capability of estimating soil loss. Furthermore, soil loss estimated with the surface elevation change-based method resulted to be of the same order of magnitude of that one obtained with rainfall simulation, as long as the sediment connectivity within the plot was considered. High-resolution topography derived from SfM revealed to be essential in the sediment connectivity analysis and, therefore, in the estimation of eroded materials, when comparing them to those derived from the rainfall simulation methodology. The fact that smartphones built-in cameras could produce as much satisfying results as those derived from reflex cameras is a high value added for using SfM.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2015

Assessment of energy potential from wetland plants along the minor channel network on an agricultural floodplain

Salvatore Pappalardo; Massimo Prosdocimi; Paolo Tarolli; Maurizio Borin

Renewable energy sources such as biomasses can play a pivotal role to ensure security of energy supply and reduce greenhouse gases through the substitution of fossil fuels. At present, bioenergy is mainly derived from cultivated crops that mirror the environmental impacts from the intensification of agricultural systems for food production. Instead, biomass from perennial herbaceous species growing in wetland ecosystems and marginal lands has recently aroused interest as bioenergy for electricity and heat, methane and 2nd-generation bioethanol. The aim of this paper is to assess, at local scale, the energy potential of wetland vegetation growing along the minor hydrographic network of a reclamation area in Northeast Italy, by performing energy scenarios for combustion, methane and 2nd-generation ethanol. The research is based on a cross-methodology that combines survey analyses in the field with a GIS-based approach: the former consists of direct measurements and biomass sampling, the latter of spatial analyses and scaling up simulations at the minor channel network level. Results highlight that biomass from riparian zones could represent a significant source of bioenergy for combustion transformation, turning the disposal problem to cut and store in situ wetland vegetation into an opportunity to produce sustainable renewable energy at local scale.


Catena | 2016

Soil water erosion on Mediterranean vineyards: A review

Massimo Prosdocimi; Artemi Cerdà; Paolo Tarolli


Land Degradation & Development | 2015

Vineyards in Terraced Landscapes: New Opportunities from Lidar Data

Paolo Tarolli; Giulia Sofia; Simone Calligaro; Massimo Prosdocimi; Federico Preti; Giancarlo Dalla Fontana


Hydrology | 2016

Soil Erosion Processes in European Vineyards: A Qualitative Comparison of Rainfall Simulation Measurements in Germany, Spain and France

Jesús Rodrigo Comino; Thomas Iserloh; Xavier Morvan; Oumarou Malam Issa; Christophe Naisse; Saskia D. Keesstra; Artemio Cerdà; Massimo Prosdocimi; José Arnáez; Teodoro Lasanta; María Concepción Ramos; María José Marqués; Marta Ruíz Colmenero; Ramón Bienes; José Damián Ruiz Sinoga; Manuel Seeger; Johannes B. Ries


Earth-Science Reviews | 2016

Mulching practices for reducing soil water erosion: A review

Massimo Prosdocimi; Paolo Tarolli; Artemi Cerdà


Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2015

Bank erosion in agricultural drainage networks: new challenges from structure-from-motion photogrammetry for post-event analysis

Massimo Prosdocimi; Simone Calligaro; Giulia Sofia; Giancarlo Dalla Fontana; Paolo Tarolli

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