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Dive into the research topics where Piero Franzoi is active.

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Featured researches published by Piero Franzoi.


Hydrobiologia | 2006

Fish assemblages in different shallow water habitats of the Venice Lagoon

Anita Franco; Piero Franzoi; Stefano Malavasi; Federico Riccato; Patrizia Torricelli

The small-sized fish assemblages of the Venice Lagoon were investigated and compared among five shallow subtidal habitats (seagrass beds, sparsely vegetated habitats, unvegetated sand bottoms, mudflats and saltmarsh creeks) in the Northern lagoon basin. Sampling was carried out seasonally (Spring, Summer and Autumn of 2002) in 4–7 stations for each habitat type, by means of a fine-mesh, small beach seine. Two-way analysis of variance was applied to assess the differences in species richness, fish diversity, density and standing stock amongst habitats, whereas fish assemblage composition was investigated by using multivariate analyses (MDS, ANOSIM, SIMPER). The analyses indicated that seagrass beds and saltmarsh creeks are relevant shallow habitats in structuring the small-sized fish assemblages of the Venice Lagoon, supporting specialized and recognizable fish assemblages. Those in seagrass beds, in particular, were characterized by higher species richness and standing stock with respect to all the others. The structuring role of these habitats was discussed in terms of both habitat complexity and degree of confinement. In contrast, sandy bottoms, mudflats and sparsely vegetated habitats were identified as “transition” habitats, with highly variable fish assemblages, influenced by the contribution of the adjacent habitats, and acting probably as both ‘buffer zones’ between the other habitats and migration routes for many fish species in the lagoon.


Tissue & Cell | 1997

Morphological organization of the male brood pouch epithelium of Syngnathus abaster Risso (Teleostea, Syngnathidae) before, during, and after egg incubation.

Marcella Carcupino; A. Baldacci; Massimo Mazzini; Piero Franzoi

The morphological organization of the male brood pouch epithelium of Syngnathus abaster, before, during, and after the breeding period, was observed by light and electron microscopy. Before gestation, the epithelium of the pouch wall was compact and consisted of three kinds of cells: typical epithelial cells (pavement cells), mitochondria-rich cells (MR cells), and, presumably, differentiating MR cells. In this stage, very few capillaries were observed beneath the epithelium. During egg incubation, the capillaries increased in number and size, large intercellular spaces formed among epithelial cells at their basal sides, MR cells were abundant, and differentiating MR cells were only occasionally observed. After incubation, MR cells degenerated by necrosis and apoptosis. The intercellular spaces between the epithelial cells disappeared and the number and size of the capillaries beneath the epithelium decreased. The presence of MR cells during gestation and their degeneration after incubation suggest that these cells play a pivotal role in the physiological functions of the brood pouch. The similar cytological characteristics of syngnathid pouch MR cells and chloride cells of the teleostean gills suggests that the Syngnathidae brood pouch is involved in osmoregulation of the fluid surrounding the developing embryos.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Mitochondrial DNA reveals genetic structuring of Pinna nobilis across the Mediterranean Sea.

Daria Sanna; Piero Cossu; Gian Luca Dedola; Fabio Scarpa; Ferruccio Maltagliati; Alberto Castelli; Piero Franzoi; Tiziana Lai; Benedetto Cristo; Marco Curini-Galletti; Paolo Francalacci; Marco Casu

Pinna nobilis is the largest endemic Mediterranean marine bivalve. During past centuries, various human activities have promoted the regression of its populations. As a consequence of stringent standards of protection, demographic expansions are currently reported in many sites. The aim of this study was to provide the first large broad-scale insight into the genetic variability of P. nobilis in the area that encompasses the western Mediterranean, Ionian Sea, and Adriatic Sea marine ecoregions. To accomplish this objective twenty-five populations from this area were surveyed using two mitochondrial DNA markers (COI and 16S). Our dataset was then merged with those obtained in other studies for the Aegean and Tunisian populations (eastern Mediterranean), and statistical analyses (Bayesian model-based clustering, median-joining network, AMOVA, mismatch distribution, Tajima’s and Fu’s neutrality tests and Bayesian skyline plots) were performed. The results revealed genetic divergence among three distinguishable areas: (1) western Mediterranean and Ionian Sea; (2) Adriatic Sea; and (3) Aegean Sea and Tunisian coastal areas. From a conservational point of view, populations from the three genetically divergent groups found may be considered as different management units.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2009

A habitat-specific fish-based approach to assess the ecological status of Mediterranean coastal lagoons.

Anita Franco; Patrizia Torricelli; Piero Franzoi

A habitat approach was promoted in the framework of ecological status assessment of transitional waters, assuming the importance of habitat heterogeneity to the overall system status. The approach was applied to the use of fish-based multimetric indices by adapting them to seagrass and marsh habitats in the Venice lagoon, Italy, through selection of appropriate metrics and reference conditions. While for marsh habitats, no clear patterns resulted, the index response for seagrass was consistent with the habitat degradation and loss recorded in the lagoon between 2002 and 2005 and with the higher habitat disturbance in southern and central lagoon sub-basins. The assessment of individual habitats is presented as a first step in the process of evaluating the overall condition of a Mediterranean lagoon environment, which should also take account of the diversity of habitats and their availability within the system to properly define an overall index of ecological status.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2013

Vulnerability of artisanal fisheries to climate change in the Venice lagoon

Fabio Pranovi; Alberto Caccin; Piero Franzoi; Stefano Malavasi; Matteo Zucchetta; Patrizia Torricelli

Within the context of global warming, the western coast of the northern Adriatic Sea can be regarded as an extremely vulnerable area. Owing to the local geographic features, this area has been described as the Venetian lacuna, where Mediterranean Sea climatic conditions are replaced by Atlantic Ocean ones, supporting the presence of glacial relicts, such as sprat Sprattus sprattus, flounder Platichthys flesus and brown shrimp Crangon crangon. Nektonic assemblage therefore represents a good candidate in terms of an early proxy for thermal regime alterations. It represents a dynamic component of the lagoon ecosystem, changing in space and time, actively moving through the entire system, and dynamically exchanging with the open sea. Here, the first signals of the change have been already detected, such as the presence of alien thermophilic species. Within this context, since the beginning of the century, sampling of the nektonic assemblage has been carried out, integrating them with landings data from the fish market. Vulnerabilities to thermal regime changes have been tested by (1) categorizing species according to the mean distribution area in terms of latitudinal range (over 45°, 30°-45° and below 30°), and (2) analysing both spatial and temporal variations within fishing grounds. Results indicated a high potential vulnerability of the artisanal fishery to climate change, as the commercial catch is entirely composed of species from cold (>45° N) and temperate (between 45° and 30° N) latitudes. At present no alien thermophilic species have been recorded within the lagoon, which is possibly a sign of good resilience of the assemblage. Finally, abundance of species from cold latitudes has decreased during the past decade. All of this has been discussed in the context of the mean annual temperature trend.


Marine Environmental Research | 2014

Linking food web functioning and habitat diversity for an ecosystem based management : a Mediterranean lagoon case-study

Daniele Brigolin; Chiara Facca; Anita Franco; Piero Franzoi; Roberto Pastres; Adriano Sfriso; M. Sigovini; Cecilia Soldatini; D. Tagliapietra; Patrizia Torricelli; Matteo Zucchetta; Fabio Pranovi

We propose a modelling approach relating the functioning of a transitional ecosystem with the spatial extension of its habitats. A test case is presented for the lagoon of Venice, discussing the results in the context of the application of current EU directives. The effects on food web functioning due to changes related to manageable and unmanageable drivers were investigated. The modelling procedure involved the use of steady-state food web models and network analysis, respectively applied to estimate the fluxes of energy associated with trophic interactions, and to compute indices of food web functioning. On the long term (hundred years) temporal scale, the model indicated that the expected loss of salt marshes will produce further changes at the system level, with a lagoon showing a decrease in the energy processing efficiency. On the short term scale, simulation results indicated that fishery management accompanied by seagrass restoration measures would produce a slight transition towards a more healthy system, with higher energy cycling, and maintaining a good balance between processing efficiency and resilience. Scenarios presented suggest that the effectiveness of short term management strategies can be better evaluated when contextualized in the long term trends of evolution of a system. We also remark the need for further studying the relationship between habitat diversity and indicators of food web functioning.


Chemistry and Ecology | 2006

Environmental influences on fish assemblage in the Venice Lagoon, Italy

Anita Franco; Stefano Malavasi; Matteo Zucchetta; Piero Franzoi; Patrizia Torricelli

This study aimed to investigate the small fish assemblage in the Venice Lagoon shallow waters in relation to selected environmental variables, such as water-quality parameters, sediment grain-size variables, and habitat structure factors. Fish sampling was carried out in 68 stations, seasonally, by using a small beach seine net. The results highlighted the primary importance of habitat structure variables, such as seagrass and salt marsh coverages, with regard to fish distribution in the lagoon, in association with turbidity and salinity gradients. Two distinct fish assemblages were identified, corresponding to opposite species preferences in relation to salt marsh coverage-turbidity and seagrass coverage-salinity gradients. These results confirmed the importance of the biologically mediated influence of environmental parameters over physical parameters on small fish assemblages in dynamic systems such as the Venice Lagoon.


Estuaries | 1994

Predation Impact on the Meiobenthic Harpacticoid Canuella perplexa in a Lagoon of the Po River Delta, Italy

Victor Ugo Ceccherelli; Michele Mistri; Piero Franzoi

The impact of predation by juvenile marbled gobies,Pomatoschistus marmoratus, on the meiobenthic harpacticoid copepodCanuella perplexa was investigated at a subtidal station located in a shallow-water, brackish embayment of the Po River delta, northern Italy, in summer and fall 1978. In august, predation mainly centered on adults, with a very large number of prey for each predator; the energy supplied by the harpacticoid is high enough to sustain, almost entirely, the gobies’ daily energy requirement. The situation is different in September and October, when the adult copepod population declines dramatically and predation is shifted to less energy-providing copepodites and marbled gobies sensibly widen their prey spectrum.C. perplexa showed alterations of biological parameters, such as clutch size and average brood size, to cope with such a heavy predation pressure.


Journal of Genetics | 2006

FISH mapping of 18S rDNA and (TTAGGG) n sequences in two pipefish species (Gasteroisteiformes: Syngnathidae)

Angelo Libertini; R. Vitturi; Antonella Lannino; Maria Concetta Maone; Piero Franzoi; Federico Riccato; Stella Colomba

1Istituto di Scienze Marine, Sezione di Venezia, CNR, Castello 1364/a, 30122 Venezia, Italy 2Dipartimento di Biologia Animale, Universita di Palermo, Via Archirafi 18, 90123 Palermo, Italy 3Dipartimento di Scienze Ambientali, Universita “Ca’ Foscari”, Castello 2737/b 30122 Venezia, Italy 4Istituto di Ecologia e Biologia Ambientale, Universita di Urbino “Carlo Bo”, Via I. Maggetti 22, 61029 Urbino (PU), Italy


Estuaries and Coasts | 2016

Can the Effects of Anthropogenic Pressures and Environmental Variability on Nekton Fauna Be Detected in Fishery Data? Insights from the Monitoring of the Artisanal Fishery Within the Venice Lagoon

Matteo Zucchetta; Luca Scapin; Francesco Cavraro; Fabio Pranovi; Anita Franco; Piero Franzoi

Nekton communities in transitional ecosystems are naturally adapted to stressful conditions associated with high environmental variability. Human activities in these systems are likely to determine additional stress with a possible effect on fish fauna, hence on fisheries. In order to test the relative importance of natural and anthropogenic factors in determining changes in nekton community, catches (incl. bycatch) from artisanal fisheries (fyke nets) were monitored seasonally in different areas of the Venice lagoon (Italy) between 2001 and 2013. Changes in nekton community composition and in the biomass of target and non-target species/groups were analysed, and the results were related to temporal factors, environmental characteristics and to the variability in anthropogenic pressures. Statistical tests were carried out using a model-based analysis of both univariate and multivariate data. Results highlighted that temporal factors and environmental conditions (i.e. the main chemico-physical descriptors) are more relevant than anthropogenic pressures in explaining spatial and temporal changes in the lagoon nekton assemblage, but that several characteristics of the assemblage, in particular the biomass of some particular categories and of the whole assemblage, are sensitive to human impacts. A particularly negligible effect seemed to be associated with fishing effort, thus suggesting that the monitoring of the local artisanal fishery is suitable also to provide useful information on the evaluation of the status of nekton assemblage.

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Dive into the Piero Franzoi's collaboration.

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Patrizia Torricelli

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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Matteo Zucchetta

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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Anita Franco

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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R. Rossi

University of Ferrara

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Stefano Malavasi

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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Federico Riccato

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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Fabio Pranovi

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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Riccardo Fiorin

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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Francesco Cavraro

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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Adriano Sfriso

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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