Michele Azzarone
University of Bologna
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Featured researches published by Michele Azzarone.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Daniele Scarponi; Michele Azzarone; Michał Kowalewski; John Warren Huntley
The forecasts of increasing global temperature and sea level rise have led to concern about the response of parasites to anthropogenic climate change. Whereas ecological studies of parasite response to environmental shifts are necessarily limited to short time scales, the fossil record can potentially provide a quantitative archive of long-term ecological responses to past climate transitions. Here, we document multi-centennial scale changes in prevalence of trematodes infesting the bivalve host Abra segmentum through multiple sea-level fluctuations preserved in brackish Holocene deposits of the Po Plain, Italy. Prevalence values were significantly elevated (p < 0.01) in samples associated with flooding surfaces, yet the temporal trends of parasite prevalence and host shell length, cannot be explained by Waltherian facies change, host availability, salinity, diversity, turnover, or community structure. The observed surges in parasite prevalence during past flooding events indicate that the ongoing global warming and sea-level rise will lead to significant intensification of trematode parasitism, suppressed fecundity of common benthic organisms, and negative impacts on marine ecosystems, ecosystem services, and, eventually, to human well-being.
Data in Brief | 2018
Michele Azzarone; Patrizia Ferretti; Veronica Rossi; Daniele Scarponi; Luca Capraro; Patrizia Macrì; John Warren Huntley; Costanza Faranda
Ostracod faunal turnover and oxygen isotope data (foraminifera) along the Valle di Manche (VdM) section are herein compiled. Specifically, the material reported in this work includes quantitative palaeoecological data and patterns of ostracod fauna framed within a high-resolution oxygen isotope stratigraphy (δ18O) from Uvigerina peregrina. In addition, the multivariate ostracod faunal stratigraphic trend (nMDS axis-1 sample score) is calibrated using bathymetric distributions of extant molluscs sampled from the same stratigraphic intervals along the VdM section. Data and analyses support the research article “Dynamics of benthic marine communities across the Early-Middle Pleistocene boundary in the Mediterranean region (Valle di Manche, Southern Italy): biotic and stratigraphic implications” Rossi et al. [1].
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | 2018
Rafal Nawrot; Daniele Scarponi; Michele Azzarone; Troy A. Dexter; Kristopher M. Kusnerik; Jacalyn M. Wittmer; Alessandro Amorosi; Michał Kowalewski
Stratigraphic patterns of last occurrences (LOs) of fossil taxa potentially fingerprint mass extinctions and delineate rates and geometries of those events. Although empirical studies of mass extinctions recognize that random sampling causes LOs to occur earlier than the time of extinction (Signor–Lipps effect), sequence stratigraphic controls on the position of LOs are rarely considered. By tracing stratigraphic ranges of extant mollusc species preserved in the Holocene succession of the Po coastal plain (Italy), we demonstrated that, if mass extinction took place today, complex but entirely false extinction patterns would be recorded regionally due to shifts in local community composition and non-random variation in the abundance of skeletal remains, both controlled by relative sea-level changes. Consequently, rather than following an apparent gradual pattern expected from the Signor–Lipps effect, LOs concentrated within intervals of stratigraphic condensation and strong facies shifts mimicking sudden extinction pulses. Methods assuming uniform recovery potential of fossils falsely supported stepwise extinction patterns among studied species and systematically underestimated their stratigraphic ranges. Such effects of stratigraphic architecture, co-produced by ecological, sedimentary and taphonomic processes, can easily confound interpretations of the timing, duration and selectivity of mass extinction events. Our results highlight the necessity of accounting for palaeoenvironmental and sequence stratigraphic context when inferring extinction dynamics from the fossil record.
Marine and Petroleum Geology | 2017
Daniele Scarponi; Michele Azzarone; Kristopher M. Kusnerik; Alessandro Amorosi; Kevin M. Bohacs; Tina M. Drexler; Michał Kowalewski
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2018
Veronica Rossi; Michele Azzarone; Luca Capraro; Costanza Faranda; Patrizia Ferretti; Patrizia Macrì; Daniele Scarponi
Southeastern Section - 67th Annual Meeting - 2018 | 2018
Rafal Nawrot; Daniele Scarponi; Michele Azzarone; Alessandro Amorosi; Jacalyn M. Wittmer; Troy A. Dexter; Kristopher M. Kusnerik; Roger W. Portell; Michal Kowalewski
GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017 | 2017
Rafal Nawrot; Daniele Scarponi; Michele Azzarone; Alessandro Amorosi; Jacalyn M. Wittmer; Troy A. Dexter; Kristopher M. Kusnerik; Roger W. Portell; Michal Kowalewski
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH ABSTRACTS | 2017
Michele Azzarone; Daniele Scarponi; Kristopher M. Kusnerik; Alessandro Amorosi; Kevin M. Bohacs; Tina M. Drexler; Michał Kowalewski
GSA Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado, USA - 2016 | 2016
Daniele Scarponi; Michal Kowalewski; Michele Azzarone; Kristopher M. Kusnerik; Claudio Pellegrini; Fabiano Gamberi; Fabio Trincardi; Tina M. Drexler
GSA Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado, USA - 2016 | 2016
Kristopher M. Kusnerik; Michele Azzarone; Daniele Scarponi; Alessandro Amorosi; Kevin M. Bohacs; Michal Kowalewski; Tina M. Drexler