Roberta Guerra
University of Bologna
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Featured researches published by Roberta Guerra.
Chemosphere | 2001
Roberta Guerra
The aim of this paper was to evaluate the ecotoxicological response of industrial effluents containing phenolic compounds. All complex effluents collected from a chemical plant and then after both a chemical-physical and biological treatment were characterised with chemical analysis, biodegradability tests and four ecotoxicological tests (Daphnia magna, Artemia salina, Brachionus plicatilis and Vibriofisheri with Microtox). The evaluation of the chemical and ecotoxicological data was useful for predicting the effect of the raw effluent on the treatment plant and the impact of the final treated effluent on the receiving water. Besides the toxicity of the effluent from the chemical plants, the acute toxicity of its main components was also determined. The results of the tests and toxicity data from literature were transformed in Toxic Units (TUs). Effluent toxicity was under- or over-estimated by calculating the sum of the TUs of the individual components, depending on which toxicity data and test organisms were used.
Chemosphere | 2003
Federica Abbondanzi; Anabela Cachada; Tiziana Campisi; Roberta Guerra; Marco Raccagni; Antonella Iacondini
This work represents the first step to set up a toxicity testing procedure and to evaluate the sensitivity of the test microorganism to several classes of environmental pollutants. First, three different techniques were employed to standardise the microbial inoculum, then two different toxicity assessment protocols have been compared: Microtox and a dehydrogenase (DHase) activity inhibition test. The main goal was the optimisation of a microbial bioassay based on the dehydrogenase activity (DHase) inhibition in Pseudomonas fluorescens bacterial strain ATCC 13525. Triphenyl tetrazolium chloride (TTC) was used as electron acceptor and its reduction produces Triphenyl formazane (TPF). The P. fluorescens DHase inhibition bioassay was investigated for being a reliable and rapid method for assessing toxicity. The optimisation of the operating conditions resulted in a repeatable bioassay. Then, P. fluorescens and Vibrio fischeri sensitivity were firstly compared by testing Zn++, one of the reference compounds for Microtox test. In addition, other compounds (Ni++, Cd++, Cu++, phenol) were also tested with both bioassays. A high statistical significance of data was obtained with the logistic curve. The present work has demonstrated that P. fluorescens is as sensitive as Microtox culture (V. fischeri), for some of the metal ions. With reference to organic compounds, the lower sensitivity of P. fluorescens to phenol makes its use difficult in organic polluted samples.
Science of The Total Environment | 2016
Tatiane Combi; Leonardo Langone; Roberta Guerra
Sources, historical trends and inventories of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) were investigated in sediments collected in five transects along the north-south axis of the western Adriatic Sea. The concentration of total PCBs (∑28 PCBs) ranged from <LOD (limit of detection) to 9.0ngg(-1) in the sediment cores and between 0.1 and 2.2ngg(-1) in recent sediments. Chronological records of PCB concentrations displayed a common pattern with historical PCB production and use, with the maximum peak values detected between the 1960s and the 1980s. Sediments deposited within the last two decades presented a ~40% to ~80% PCB reduction in comparison to the peak levels, reflecting the ban on PCB production and use since the late 1970s. PCB levels along with the presence of high-chlorinated congeners decreased southwards, indicating the Po River as the major source of PCBs in the western Adriatic Sea. This is further corroborated by the estimated inventories of PCBs, which were ~4-7 times higher in the Po River prodelta (256ngcm(-2)) in comparison to the middle and southern Adriatic, respectively, and about 100 times higher than the in the deep Adriatic Sea.
Chemosphere | 2005
Tiziana Campisi; Federica Abbondanzi; C. Casado-Martinez; T.A. DelValls; Roberta Guerra; Antonella Iacondini
Marine Environmental Research | 2005
Federica Abbondanzi; Tiziana Campisi; Martina Focanti; Roberta Guerra; Antonella Iacondini
Radioprotection | 2009
Serena Righi; Roberta Guerra; M. Jeyapandian; Simona Verità; A. Albertazzi
Environment International | 2007
Roberta Guerra; Andrea Pasteris; Massimo Ponti; Daniele Fabbri; Luigi Bruzzi
International Biodeterioration & Biodegradation | 2006
Federica Abbondanzi; Luigi Bruzzi; Tiziana Campisi; Annalisa Frezzati; Roberta Guerra; Antonella Iacondini
Radioprotection | 2009
Simona Verità; Serena Righi; Roberta Guerra; M. Jeyapandian
Annali Di Chimica | 2002
Roberta Guerra; Antonella Iacondini; Federica Abbondanzi; Chiara Matteucci; Luigi Bruzzi