Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where P Di Marzio is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by P Di Marzio.


Plant Biosystems | 2015

Role of micromorphological leaf traits and molecular data in taxonomy of three sympatric white oak species and their hybrids (Quercus L.)

P. Fortini; G. Antonecchia; P Di Marzio; L. Maiuro; Vincenzo Viscosi

Hybridisation and introgression occur with high frequency in the genus Quercus and interspecific hybrid individuals show patterns of morphological traits that might be influenced in different ways. Micromorphological leaf traits appear to be positive and stable in Quercus species, and by combining genetic and micromorphological analyses, it is possible to compare the patterns of variation in micromorphological leaf traits of pure and hybrid individuals. Trichomes and stomatal traits were examined using scanning electron microscopy at 150–2000 × magnification in sympatric oak species collected in a natural deciduous wood. Q. frainetto, Q. petraea and Q. pubescens appear to have a relatively predictable complement of trichome types. Both the pattern and quantitative values of each micromorphological trait examined (stomata and trichomes) have an important role in identifying hybrids and pure species; putative hybrids show a pattern of trichomes that is a combination of the parental types. These results, combined with the fact that micromorphological traits generally exhibit higher consistency, indicate that this source of information can be an excellent clue to hybridisation and introgression and useful in taxonomical, systematic and evolutionary studies on the European white oaks.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2016

Ethnobotanical study on the medicinal plants in the Mainarde Mountains (central-southern Apennine, Italy)

P. Fortini; P Di Marzio; P.M. Guarrera; Maria Iorizzi

ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCEnNew documentation of the uses of plants in the popular medicine of the Mainarde Mountain, a protected area of the central-southern Apennine characterised by a high floristic richness, is here reported.nnnMATERIALS AND METHODSnField data were collected through semi-structured and open interviews with native People between 2011 and 2014. The plants were identified and vouchers specimens were scanned to create a Virtual Herbarium. The Ethnobotanicity Index (EI), the Relative Importance Index (RI) and the Fidelity Level Index (FL) were calculated. The plant uses surveyed in the study area were compared with those described in medical and ethnobotanical literature.nnnRESULTSnSeventy-one interviews were conducted, the age range of the informants was between 21 and 98 years. The inventory included 106 taxa belonging to 45 families; among these, 87 were wild species and 20 were cultivated species. The uses recorded were 429, among these, 69.1% of the uses concerned internal applications to treat digestive system disorders, infections and respiratory system disorders mainly, while 31.9% concerned external applications, especially to treat skin/subcutaneous cellular tissue disorders and injuries. In particular, 17 new uses and 16 unusual and rarely mentioned plants are documented.nnnCONCLUSIONnThe data collected support evidence on traditional uses for plant in the Apennine. Findings from medical flora and from new or rare medical uses reinforce the usefulness of such research efforts.


Archive | 2001

The importance of alien and native species in the urban flora of Rome (Italy).

L. C. Grapow; P Di Marzio; C. Blasi; G. Brundu; J. H. Brock; I. Camarda; L. Child; M. Wade


Folia Zoologica | 2009

Otter Lutra lutra population expansion: assessing habitat suitability and connectivity in southern Italy.

Anna Loy; M. L. Carranza; C. Cianfrani; E Dalessandro; L. Bonesi; P Di Marzio; M Minotti; G. Regiani; B. Krystufek; G. Amori; A. Mitchell-Jones; J. Zima


6th International Conference on the Ecology and Management of Alien Plant Invasions (EMAPi), 12 to 15 September 2001, Loughborough, UK. | 2003

Temporal niche separation of the alien flora of Rome (Italy).

L. Celesti-Grapow; P Di Marzio; C. Blasi; L. Child; J. H. Brock; G. Brundu; K. Prach; K. Pysĕk; P. M. Wade; M. Williamson


Archive | 1995

Analisi critica e considerazioni fitogeografiche sugli ordini e le alleanze dei querceti e boschi misti a caducifoglie dell'Italia peninsulare

A Scoppola; C. Blasi; G Abbate; Maurizio Cutini; P Di Marzio; C Fabozzi; P. Fortini


INFORMATORE BOTANICO ITALIANO | 2000

Classificazione e cartografia del paesaggio: i sistemi e i sottosistemi di paesaggio del Molise

C. Blasi; Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta; B Paura; P Di Martino; P Di Marzio; P. Fortini; M. L. Carranza


Plant Biosystems | 1999

Invited paper: Post‐fire patterns in Mediterranean maquis: A combined phytosodological and structural approach

C. Blasi; Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta; L. Filesi; P Di Marzio


Cultural Heritage and Sustainable Forest Management: The role of traditional Knowledge | 2006

The forest landscape of transhumance in Molise, Italy

P Di Martino; P Di Marzio; C Giancola; Marco Ottaviano


ATTI CONFERENZA NAZIONALE ASITA | 2002

Analisi della rete ecologica all’interno di un sistema di classificazione territoriale gerarchico

C. Blasi; Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta; M. L. Carranza; P Di Marzio; M Marignani; D. Smiraglia

Collaboration


Dive into the P Di Marzio's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. Blasi

Sapienza University of Rome

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

P. Fortini

Sapienza University of Rome

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anna Loy

University of Molise

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

G. Di Bella

Sapienza University of Rome

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

G. Dowgiallo

Sapienza University of Rome

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Tilia

Sapienza University of Rome

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge