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Dive into the research topics where Michela Castellano is active.

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Featured researches published by Michela Castellano.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Characteristics of the mesophotic megabenthic assemblages of the Vercelli Seamount (North Tyrrhenian Sea)

Marzia Bo; Marco Bertolino; Mireno Borghini; Michela Castellano; Anabella Covazzi Harriague; Cristina Gioia Di Camillo; GianPietro Gasparini; Cristina Misic; Paolo Povero; Antonio Pusceddu; Katrin Schroeder; Giorgio Bavestrello

The biodiversity of the megabenthic assemblages of the mesophotic zone of a Tyrrhenian seamount (Vercelli Seamount) is described using Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) video imaging from 100 m depth to the top of the mount around 61 m depth. This pinnacle hosts a rich coralligenous community characterized by three different assemblages: (i) the top shows a dense covering of the kelp Laminaria rodriguezii; (ii) the southern side biocoenosis is mainly dominated by the octocorals Paramuricea clavata and Eunicella cavolinii; while (iii) the northern side of the seamount assemblage is colonized by active filter-feeding organisms such as sponges (sometimes covering 100% of the surface) with numerous colonies of the ascidian Diazona violacea, and the polychaete Sabella pavonina. This study highlights, also for a Mediterranean seamount, the potential role of an isolated rocky peak penetrating the euphotic zone, to work as an aggregating structure, hosting abundant benthic communities dominated by suspension feeders, whose distribution may vary in accordance to the geomorphology of the area and the different local hydrodynamic conditions.


Chemistry and Ecology | 2010

The Ligurian Sea: present status, problems and perspectives

R. Cattaneo Vietti; Giancarlo Albertelli; S. Aliani; S. Bava; Giorgio Bavestrello; L. Benedetti Cecchi; Carlo Nike Bianchi; E. Bozzo; Marco Capello; Michela Castellano; Carlo Cerrano; Mariachiara Chiantore; N. Corradi; Silvia Cocito; Laura Cutroneo; Giovanni Diviacco; Mauro Fabiano; M. Faimali; Marco Ferrari; G. P. Gasparini; Marina Locritani; L. Mangialajo; Valentina Marin; Mariapaola Moreno; Carla Morri; L. Orsi Relini; L. Pane; Chiara Paoli; Mario Petrillo; Paolo Povero

The Ligurian Sea is a deep basin in the northernmost sector of the western Mediterranean which shows peculiar hydrodynamic and meteo-oceanographic features. The coasts of the Ligurian Sea are among the most urbanised and industrialised along the Italian coastline: the main causes of disturbance being littoral urban development and harbour activities, the building of littoral rail- and highways, and the presence of several polluted discharges. This review, by evaluating the huge scientific output published in the last three decades, describes and discusses the most important geological, hydrological and biological characteristics of the Ligurian Sea. We show that this regional sea has largely been investigated in terms of its geological and structural evolution, as well as in terms of the sedimentation dynamics of the littoral and deep bottoms, with particular attention to the sedimentation balance of the beaches and their erosive processes. We report that the prevalent hydrodynamic and meteo-oceanographic conditions favour a continuous exchange of coastal water masses, and that the seasonal and interannual dynamics of water masses can effects the local climate, with direct and indirect consequences on fish and benthic communities documented in the last decade. We stress that although recent studies offer good knowledge of the distribution of coastal benthic communities, only scant information is available for the whole continental shelf, the submarine canyons and the rocky bathyal bottoms. Our meta-analysis reveals that significant fishing activities are monitored, but also that certain sectors of the biological resource are suffering, and suggests the set up of appropriate management measures. The Ligurian Sea hosts a number of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) of high relevance, while the institution of the Whale Sanctuary completes the protection policy of the Regione Liguria. Our meta-analysis points out the need for long-term studies, based primarily on the analysis of those areas of the Ligurian Sea that have been little investigated to date. Finally, only properly addressed studies, using experimental approaches and along appropriate spatial and temporal scales, might allow us to understand the functioning of the Ligurian marine ecosystems, evaluate their health conditions and the dynamics of the main variables that affect the distribution of the single species (including species of high economic value) and benthic communities.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Conserving Biodiversity in a Human-Dominated World: Degradation of Marine Sessile Communities within a Protected Area with Conflicting Human Uses

V. Parravicini; Fiorenza Micheli; Monica Montefalcone; Carla Morri; Elisa Villa; Michela Castellano; Paolo Povero; Carlo Nike Bianchi

Conservation research aims at understanding whether present protection schemes are adequate for the maintenance of ecosystems structure and function across time. We evaluated long-term variation in rocky reef communities by comparing sites surveyed in 1993 and again in 2008. This research took place in Tigullio Gulf, an emblematic case study where various conservation measures, including a marine protected area, have been implemented to manage multiple human uses. Contrary to our prediction that protection should have favored ecosystem stability, we found that communities subjected to conservation measures (especially within the marine protected area) exhibited the greatest variation toward architectural complexity loss. Between 1993 and 2008, chronic anthropogenic pressures (especially organic load) that had already altered unprotected sites in 1993 expanded their influence into protected areas. This expansion of human pressure likely explains our observed changes in the benthic communities. Our results suggest that adaptive ecosystem-based management (EBM), that is management taking into account human interactions, informed by continuous monitoring, is needed in order to attempt reversing the current trend towards less architecturally complex communities. Protected areas are not sufficient to stop ecosystem alteration by pressures coming from outside. Monitoring, and consequent management actions, should therefore extend to cover the relevant scales of those pressures.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2011

Seasonal and spatial variability of water quality parameters in the Port of Genoa, Italy, from 2000 to 2007.

Nicoletta Ruggieri; Michela Castellano; Marco Capello; S. Maggi; Paolo Povero

This paper presents the results of the statistical analysis of a set of physico-chemical and biological water quality parameters, monthly collected from 2000 to 2007 in the Genoa Harbour area (Ligurian Sea). We applied multivariate methods, such as principal component analysis (PCA) and dynamic factor analysis (DFA) for investigating the spatial and temporal variability and for providing important background information on pollution problems in the region. PCA evidenced the role of the sewage and river discharges and of the exchanges with the open sea in determining the harbour water quality. DFA was used to estimate underlying common trends in the time series. The DFA results partly show a general improvement of water quality over the 8-years period. However, in other areas, we found inter-annual variations but no significant multi-annual trend. Furthermore, we included meteorological variables in our statistical analyses because of their potential influence on the water quality parameters. These natural forcings explain part of the variability in water quality parameters that are superimposed on the dominating anthropogenic pollution factors.


Marine Environmental Research | 2011

Organic matter features, degradation and remineralisation at two coastal sites in the Ligurian Sea (NW Mediterranean) differently influenced by anthropogenic forcing

Cristina Misic; Michela Castellano; Anabella Covazzi Harriague

Organic matter (OM) features, degradation and remineralisation were studied in the seawater of a natural coastal site (Marine Protected Area of Portofino) and at an urbanised coastal site (Quarto, Genoa city) of the Ligurian Sea. The accumulation of low trophic value OM and the persistence of phytoplanktonic biomass throughout the year were observed only at the urbanised site. Efficient OM degradation and remineralisation via high-activity (two times higher than at the Portofino site) hydrolytic enzymatic activities (alkaline phosphatase and leucine aminopeptidase) were recorded. This active degradation indicated a generally good resistance of the Quarto system to environmental pressures (coastal inputs and anthropogenic influence). However, the high potential release of recycled inorganic nutrients and the favourable environmental conditions (i.e. higher seawater temperature at the Quarto site and allochthonous inputs), could encourage unpredictable development of the autotrophic fraction, including an already observed dystrophic blooming of toxic microalgae.


Environmental Earth Sciences | 2014

Technical and public approaches to involve dredging stakeholders and citizens in the development of a port area

Laura Cutroneo; F. Massa; Michela Castellano; G. Canepa; S. Costa; Paolo Povero; Sergio Tucci; Marco Capello

The stakeholders involved in a dredging operation are many and varied, some specifically involved in the technical aspects (client and dredging operators, organisations involved in legislative matters and/or environmental monitoring), and others less so (general public).These different kinds of stakeholders need different information and consequently different kind of data need to be produced (description of dredging objectives and scope, technical dredges characteristics, related legislation, environmental monitoring data, work progress, etc.) that need to be managed to share dredging information and knowledge. Here, we illustrate two examples of communication strategy adopted in the case of the dredging of the Port of Genoa (Italy) to ensure the correct data dissemination among the project partners and to the public. The first realized with a WebGIS (MArine Coastal Information SysTEm—Port Section, MACISTE-PS), a technology composed of data handling tools for storage, recovery, management and analysis of spatial data, and the second with a set of different communication products (posters, article publications, congress participations, website, etc.). The adoption of these two strategies assures us the dissemination of dredging information to a broad spectrum of people.


Chemistry and Ecology | 2010

Physical and sedimentological characterisation of dredged sediments

Marco Capello; Laura Cutroneo; Michela Castellano; Marco Orsi; Andrea Pieracci; Rosa Maria Bertolotto; Paolo Povero; Sergio Tucci

Port dredging operations inevitably create a turbid plume around the dredge and it is necessary to follow the movement of this to impede its diffusion into the surrounding environment and reduce any negative impacts. To characterise the extension and concentration of the plume induced by dredging it is necessary to study the physical properties of the water, the residence time of the sediments in the water column and the diffusion velocity of the water and sediments. It is also essential to characterise the area and determine the specifics of the port environment under so-called normal maritime-traffic conditions. During the initial stage of such a study it is necessary to obtain measurements under diverse wind–wave conditions to characterise the physical features of the water column of the port area, the turbidity, the quantity and dimension of the suspended particulate matter and the current dynamics. In this article we present a series of physico-sedimentological operations to characterise a zone to be dredged based upon our experience during pre-dredging work in the Port of Genoa (Italy).


Antarctic Science | 2006

Water column features and their relationship with sediments and benthic communities along the Victoria Land coast, Ross Sea, summer 2004

Paolo Povero; Michela Castellano; Nicoletta Ruggieri; L. S. Monticelli; Mariachiara Chiantore; Marta Guidetti; Riccardo Cattaneo-Vietti

The northern Victoria Land coastal marine environment was investigated during the late summer 2004, within the framework of the Latitudinal Gradient Project (LGP), to describe the physical, chemical and biological patterns of the water column and their relationship with the pelagic and benthic compartments, and to determine to what extent they change with latitude. A latitudinal gradient from Cape Adare to the Terra Nova Bay–Cape Russell area was determined on the basis of abiotic and trophic factors. Cape Adare had lower values of organic matter (particulate organic carbon < 150 μg l−1) available for the benthic communities, but this organic matter had good trophic quality. In Terra Nova Bay the particulate organic matter was quantitatively higher (organic carbon > 400 μg l−1), presumably reaching the bottom via faecal pellets, but was more detrital, although its nutritive value was still high (carbon protein content nearly 40%), as confirmed by the great quantity of phytopigments in the sediments (> 4.0 μg g−1). The benthic communities changed with latitude as well, partially reflecting the environmental and trophic gradient, but also showing a large within-area variability (except for the Cape Adare area), due to a complex array of variables that did not change with latitude.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2014

Simulations of dredged sediment spreading on a Posidonia oceanica meadow off the Ligurian coast, Northwestern Mediterranean

Marco Capello; Laura Cutroneo; Maria Paola Ferranti; Giorgio Budillon; R.M. Bertolotto; A. Ciappa; Yuri Cotroneo; Michela Castellano; Paolo Povero; Sergio Tucci

The sandy deposits from dredging can have negative effects on the environment such as increase in suspended solids in the water column and their consequent transport. An experimental study was conducted to characterize water masses, dynamics, and sedimentation rates on the Ligurian continental shelf (Italy), where both a sand deposit, that could be used for beach nourishment, and a nearby Posidonia oceanica meadow coexist. The environmental plan provides a mathematical simulation of the sediment-dispersion to evaluate the possible impact on the meadow. It has been calculated that the dredging could double the concentration of suspended particles, but its scheduling will preclude a sediment accumulation. All the information obtained from this work will be used to study the environmental feasibility of the sand deposit exploitation and as starting point for drawing up the monitoring plan in case of dredging.


Cryptogamie Algologie | 2012

Interannual Variability in Ostreopsis Ovata Bloom Dynamic along Genoa Coast (North-Western Mediterranean): A Preliminary Modeling Approach

Valentina Asnaghi; Rosella Bertolotto; Valentina Giussani; L. Mangialajo; Judi E. Hewitt; Simon F. Thrush; Paolo Moretto; Michela Castellano; Anna Rossi; Paolo Povero; Riccardo Cattaneo-Vietti; Mariachiara Chiantore

Abstract The tropical genus Ostreopsis has been recorded along Italian coasts of the Mediterranean Sea since the ‘90s, but large bloom events have been reported only in recent years. In order to describe O. ovata bloom dynamics and provide a better understanding of environmental variables involved in triggering blooms, we collected a time series of data in Genoa (North Western Mediterranean) from 2006 to 2010. Cell abundances in the water column and epiphyte on the macroalgae were assessed during the summer months. Water and meteorological variables were concurrently collected. We elaborated a meaningful explanatory model, performing multiple correlations between bloom magnitude (maximum cell concentration) and length (extent of the bloom event) and water/meteorological features. Such a model highlights a significant role of water temperature, barometric pressure and wind speed in affecting bloom dynamics. It represents a good base for managers in the attempt of forecasting O. ovata blooms and, specifically, toxic events, in an ecological, economic and sanitary perspective.

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