Raffaele D’Adamo
National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Raffaele D’Adamo.
Estuaries and Coasts | 2014
Christian Ferrarin; Luca Zaggia; Elio Paschini; Tommaso Scirocco; Giuliano Lorenzetti; Marco Bajo; Pierluigi Penna; Matteo Francavilla; Raffaele D’Adamo; Stefano Guerzoni
A multidisciplinary approach that combines field measurements, artificial neural networks, water balance analyses and hydrodynamic modelling was developed to investigate the water budget and renewal capacity of semi-closed coastal systems. The method was applied to the Lesina Lagoon, a micro-tidal lagoon in the southern Adriatic Sea (Italy). Surface water flux between the lagoon and the sea was determined by neural network prediction and used as input in the analysis. Strong seasonal variations in the water budget equation were predicted. Fresh water inputs estimated by the water balance analysis were used as forcing by a calibrated finite element model to describe the water circulation and transport time scale of the lagoon’s surface waters. The model highlighted the spatial heterogeneity of the renewal behaviour of the system, with a strong east–west water renewal time gradient. Knowledge of spatial distribution of water renewal times is crucial for understanding the lagoon’s renewal capacity and explaining the high spatial variability of the biogeochemistry of the Lesina Lagoon.
Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2016
Elisa Costa; Veronica Piazza; Chiara Gambardella; Roberto Moresco; Ermelinda Prato; Francesca Biandolino; Daniele Cassin; Margherita Botter; Daniela Maurizio; Raffaele D’Adamo; Adele Fabbrocini; Marco Faimali; Francesca Garaventa
The Mar Piccolo of Taranto (Ionian Sea, Southern Italy) is a semi-enclosed and strongly polluted basin. For decades, it has been subjected to different anthropogenic impacts. These stressors caused severe sediments contamination with high concentration of different pollutants (PAHs, PCB, heavy metals). In order to assess the current status of sediments contamination, an ecotoxicological investigation combined with chemical analysis (heavy metals, PAH, and PCB) has been performed. In order to derive ecologically relevant conclusions, a multiorganisms and multiend-points approach has been applied, exposing organisms from different trophic levels to elutriate and whole sediment. The battery of bioassays consists of a microalgal growth inhibition test (Dunaliella tertiolecta), acute and sublethal assays (end-points: mortality, immobilization and swimming speed alteration) on crustaceans larvae and juveniles, and rotifers (Amphibalanus amphitrite, Artemia salina, Corophium insidiosum and Brachionus plicatilis), and embryotoxicity test on echinoderms (Paracentrotus lividus). Considering the high levels of sediment contamination highlighted from chemical analysis, an unexpected very low toxic effect was observed, even considering the sublethal end-point (larval swimming speed alteration). The results of this study suggest a very complex contaminants dynamic in the Mar Piccolo sediments that, despite a strong level of contamination, seems to not affect in a proportional manner the biological compartment.
Cryobiology | 2014
Adele Fabbrocini; Raffaele D’Adamo; Sergio Pelosi; Luis F.J. Oliveira; Fausto Silvestri; Giovanni Sansone
Gamete cryopreservation is a biotechnology that can guarantee a continuous supply of gametes, regardless of the seasonal reproductive cycle. In this study we developed a protocol for the cryopreservation of the sea urchin Paracentrotuslividus spermatozoa, with a view to the creation of cryobanks of semen to be used as a model system in laboratory research and ecotoxicological tests. All the key phases of the procedure were separately considered and the effect on sperm motility was evaluated by means of computer assisted analysis. The best results were obtained using 7% dimethylsulfoxide in 1% NaCl plus 0.04 M trehalose as the extender, at a freezing rate of -20 °C/min. On thawing, in semen samples cryopreserved in accordance with this protocol the velocity parameters of the sub-population of rapid sperm (best performing spermatozoa) did not significantly differ from semen on collection; in addition also the fertilization ability was restored, and about 50% of normal developed plutei larvae were obtained by thawed semen. The developed protocol is rapid and easy-to-perform; moreover, the use of gametes from reared urchins makes it unnecessary to continuously collect specimens from natural populations, making this procedure a promising starting point for the creation of alternative and more sustainable methodologies in laboratory research on sea urchin gametes and embryos.
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2010
Adele Fabbrocini; Michele Di Stasio; Raffaele D’Adamo
Transitional Waters Bulletin | 2010
Antonietta Specchiulli; Raffaele D’Adamo; Monia Renzi; Fabio Vignes; Adele Fabbrocini; Tommaso Scirocco; Lucrezia Cilenti; Marisa Florio; Paolo Breber; Alberto Basset
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2008
Raffaele D’Adamo; M. Di Stasio; Adele Fabbrocini; F. Petitto; L. Roselli; Maria Grazia Volpe
Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 2014
Raffaele D’Adamo; Antonietta Specchiulli; Daniele Cassin; Margherita Botter; Roberto Zonta; Adele Fabbrocini
Transitional Waters Bulletin | 2013
Alberto Basset; Enrico Barbone; Ilaria Rosati; Fabio Vignes; Paolo Breber; Antonietta Specchiulli; Raffaele D’Adamo; Monia Renzi; Silvano Focardi; Nicola Ungaro; Maurizio Pinna
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2016
Adele Fabbrocini; Raffaele D’Adamo; Francesco Del Prete; Daniela Maurizio; Antonietta Specchiulli; Luis F.J. Oliveira; Fausto Silvestri; Giovanni Sansone
Transitional Waters Bulletin | 2010
Maria Rosaria Vadrucci; Annita Fiocca; Fabio Vignes; Adele Fabbrocini; Leonilde Roselli; Raffaele D’Adamo; Nicola Ungaro; Alberto Basset