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Dive into the research topics where Pietro Volta is active.

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Featured researches published by Pietro Volta.


Hydrobiologia | 2013

Development of a fish-based index to assess the eutrophication status of European lakes

Christine Argillier; S. Caussé; M. Gevrey; Stephanie Pédron; J. De Bortoli; Sandra Brucet; Matthias Emmrich; Erik Jeppesen; Torben L. Lauridsen; Thomas Mehner; Mikko Olin; Martti Rask; Pietro Volta; Ian J. Winfield; Fiona Kelly; Teet Krause; Anu Palm; Kerstin Holmgren

The use of the CEN (European Committee for Standardization) standard method for sampling fish in lakes using multi-mesh gillnets allowed the collection of fish assemblages of 445 European lakes in 12 countries. The lakes were additionally characterised by environmental drivers and eutrophication proxies. Following a site-specific approach including a validation procedure, a fish index including two abundance metrics (catch per unit effort expressed as fish number and biomass) and one functional metric of composition (abundance of omnivorous fish) was developed. Correlated with the proxy of eutrophication, this index discriminates between heavily and moderately impacted lakes. Additional analyses on a subset of data from Nordic lakes revealed a stronger correlation between the new fish index and the pressure data. Despite an uneven geographical distribution of the lakes and certain shortcomings in the environmental and pressure data, the fish index proved to be useful for ecological status assessment of lakes applying standardised protocols and thus supports the development of national lake fish assessment tools in line with the European Water Framework Directive.


Science of The Total Environment | 2014

Concentrations and trophic interactions of novel brominated flame retardants, HBCD, and PBDEs in zooplankton and fish from Lake Maggiore (Northern Italy)

Giulia Poma; Pietro Volta; Claudio Roscioli; Roberta Bettinetti; Licia Guzzella

Following the release of the international regulations on PBDEs and HBCD, the aim of this study is to evaluate the concentrations of novel brominated flame retardants (NBFRs), including 1,2-bis(2,4,6-tribromophenoxy) ethane (BTBPE), decabromodiphenyl ethane (DBDPE), hexabromobenzene (HBB), and pentabromoethylbenzene (PBEB), in an Italian subalpine lake located in a populated and industrial area. The study investigated specifically the potential BFR biomagnification in a particular lakes pelagic food web, whose structure and dynamics were evaluated using the Stable Isotope Analysis. The potential BFR biomagnification was investigated by using the trophic-level adjusted BMFs and Trophic Magnification Factors (TMFs), confirming that HBCD and some PBDE congeners are able to biomagnify within food webs. Comparing the calculated values of BMFTL and TMF, a significant positive correlation was observed between the two factors, suggesting that the use of BMFTL to investigate the biomagnification potential of organic chemical compounds might be an appropriate approach when a simple food web is considered.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2010

The role of zooplankton in DDT biomagnification in a pelagic food web of Lake Maggiore (Northern Italy)

Roberta Bettinetti; Silvana Galassi; Licia Guzzella; Silvia Quadroni; Pietro Volta

BackgroundIn the present study, we report the analytical results of pp′DDT, pp′DDE and pp′DDD determination in lake water, plankton and zooplanktivorous fish of Lake Maggiore (Northern Italy), rather recently polluted by DDT of industrial origin, in order to understand the bottom-up pollution transfer among the abiotic and biotic components of the lake ecosystem.Materials and methodsFourteen water sampling campaigns were carried out from March 2003 to January 2009 in the water column of the deepest point (Ghiffa) of Lake Maggiore. Suspended and dissolved pollutants were determined separately. Three sampling campaigns were carried out from July 2008 to January 2009 for zooplankton and pelagic fish, and DDT residues were analysed by HRGC coupled with ECD and MS. Moreover, food items were detected in fish stomachs.Results and discussionStarting from 2007, the DDT contamination along the water column became rather homogeneous, probably because no flooding or other relevant hydrological events occurred; although steady-state condition should be expected, lipid normalised concentrations of pp′DDE and pp′DDD in zooplankton exceeded the levels of the same compounds in zooplanktivorous fishes.ConclusionAs this finding represents a thermodynamic paradox since bioaccumulative pollutant concentrations are expected to increase along the trophic chain, it was supposed that the abiotic and biotic lake components were not in a steady-state condition in Lake Maggiore.


Hydrobiologia | 2018

Fish assemblages in deep Italian subalpine lakes: history and present status with an emphasis on non-native species

Pietro Volta; Erik Jeppesen; Paolo Sala; Silvia Galafassi; Claudio Foglini; Cesare Puzzi; Ian J. Winfield

We provide a comprehensive overview of the status of fish assemblages in eight Italian subalpine lakes using multiple data sources: historical records, standardised sampling and fishery catch statistics. Thirty-four fish species were recorded, twenty of which are native, seven introduced historically and another seven introduced recently. The number of fish species in individual lakes has increased by between 25 and 65% from 1855 to the present, with the increase being higher in the larger lakes. Non-native species contributed between 4.0 and 71.5% to standardised catches by numbers and between 4.8 and 65.1% by biomass. Roach Rutilus rutilus and pumpkinseed Lepomis gibbosus dominated electrofishing and benthic catches by number, while open-water catches were dominated by the coregonids European whitefish Coregonus lavaretus and gangfish Coregonus macrophthalmus. In terms of biomass, electrofishing catches were dominated by crucian carp Carassius carassius, largemouth bass Micropterus salmoides and wels catfish Silurus glanis, benthic catches were dominated by roach, European whitefish and crucian carp, and open-water catches by coregonids. Commercial fisheries are important ecosystem services provided by subalpine lakes, with their harvests now dominated by non-native species. To deliver effective biodiversity conservation and ecosystem services provision, the prioritisation of targets and interventions of management of non-native species is needed.


Ecosystems | 2018

Non-native Fish Occurrence and Biomass in 1943 Western Palearctic Lakes and Reservoirs and their Abiotic and Biotic Correlates

Carolina Trochine; Sandra Brucet; Christine Argillier; Ignasi Arranz; Meryem Beklioglu; Lluís Benejam; Teresa Ferreira; Trygve Hesthagen; Kerstin Holmgren; Erik Jeppesen; Fiona Kelly; Teet Krause; Martti Rask; Pietro Volta; Ian J. Winfield; Thomas Mehner

Invasion of non-native species is considered a major threat to global biodiversity. Here we present a comprehensive overview of the occurrence, richness and biomass contribution of non-native fish species in 1943 standing water bodies from 14 countries of the Western Palearctic, based on standardised fish catches by multi-mesh gillnetting. We expected strong geographical gradients to emerge in the occurrence of non-natives. We further hypothesised that the contribution by non-natives to the local fish community biomass was correlated with local richness and the trophic level of native and non-native species. Non-native fish species occurred in 304 of 1943 water bodies (16%). If the average number of occupied water bodies per country was weighted by number of water bodies per country, the grand mean occurrence of non-natives in Western Palearctic water bodies was 10%. Exotic (non-native to the Palearctic) and translocated (non-native only to parts of the Palearctic) species were found in 164 (8.4%) or 235 (12.1%) of the water bodies, respectively. The occurrence and local richness of non-native fish species increased with temperature, precipitation and lake area and were substantially higher in reservoirs than in natural lakes. High local biomass contributions of non-native species were strongly correlated with low richness of native species and high richness of non-native species, whereas the trophic level of the fish species had only a weak effect. Single non-native species rarely dominated community biomass, but high biomass contributions and thus strong community and ecosystem impacts can be expected if several non-native species accumulate in a water body.


Biogeographia – The Journal of Integrative Biogeography | 2016

A geographic distribution data set of biodiversity in Italian freshwaters

Angela Boggero; Cataldo Pierri; Renate Alber; Martina Austoni; Enrico Barbone; Luca Bartolozzi; Isabella Bertani; Alessandro Campanaro; Antonella Cattaneo; Fabio Cianferoni; Paolo Colangelo; Giuseppe Corriero; Ambrosius Josef Martin Dörr; A. Concetta Elia; G. Francesco Ficetola; Diego Fontaneto; Elda Gaino; Enzo Goretti; Lyudmila Kamburska; Gianandrea La Porta; Rosaria Lauceri; Massimo Lorenzoni; Alessandro Ludovisi; Marina Manca; Giuseppe Morabito; Francesco Nonnis Marzano; Alessandro Oggioni; Nicoletta Riccardi; Giampaolo Rossetti; Paolo Tagliolato

We present a data set on the biodiversity of Italian freshwaters, including lakeshores and riverbanks of natural (N=379: springs, streams and lakes) and artificial (N=11: fountains) sites. The data set belongs partly to the Italian Long Term Ecological Research network (LTER-Italy) and partly to LifeWatch, the European e-Science infrastructure for biodiversity and ecosystem research. The data included cover a time period corresponding to the last fifty years (1962-2014). They span a large number of taxa from prokaryotes and unicellular eukaryotes to vertebrates and plants, including taxa linked to the aquatic habitat in at least part of their life cycles (like immature stages of insects, amphibians, birds and vascular plants). The data set consists of 6463 occurrence data and distribution records for 1738 species. The complete data set is available in csv file format via the LifeWatch Service Centre.


Journal of Limnology | 2016

In memory of Ettore Grimaldi

Pietro Volta; Alcide Calderoni

Ettore Grimaldi (1934-2015) was one of the brightest and active ichthyologists in Italy. He was a man of great enthusiasm, boundless energy and great curiosity. He was a person with an open mind. He originally visited the Institute of Pallanza in June 1957 as a master student at the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Milan. He was formally called back by the Director Vittorio Tonolli, as a research assistant in 1962....


Hydrobiologia | 2012

Impacts of climate warming on the long-term dynamics of key fish species in 24 European lakes

Erik Jeppesen; Thomas Mehner; Ian J. Winfield; Külli Kangur; Jouko Sarvala; Daniel Gerdeaux; Martti Rask; Hilmar J. Malmquist; Kerstin Holmgren; Pietro Volta; Susana Romo; Reiner Eckmann; Alfred Sandström; Saúl Blanco; Andu Kangur; Henrik Ragnarsson Stabo; Marjo Tarvainen; Anne-Mari Ventelä; Martin Søndergaard; Torben L. Lauridsen; Mariana Meerhoff


Journal of Limnology | 2014

Climate change impacts on lakes: an integrated ecological perspective based on a multi-faceted approach, with special focus on shallow lakes

Erik Jeppesen; Mariana Meerhoff; Thomas A. Davidson; Dennis Trolle; Martin Søndergaard; Torben L. Lauridsen; Meryem Beklioglu; Sandra Brucet Balmaña; Pietro Volta; Ivan González-Bergonzoni; Anders Lade Nielsen


Freshwater Biology | 2013

Fish diversity in European lakes: geographical factors dominate over anthropogenic pressures

Sandra Brucet; Stephanie Pédron; Thomas Mehner; Torben L. Lauridsen; Christine Argillier; Ian J. Winfield; Pietro Volta; Matthias Emmrich; Trygve Hesthagen; Kerstin Holmgren; Lluís Benejam; Fiona Kelly; Teet Krause; Anu Palm; Martti Rask; Erik Jeppesen

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Kerstin Holmgren

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Marina Manca

National Research Council

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Angela Boggero

National Research Council

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