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Dive into the research topics where Rosalia Ferreri is active.

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Featured researches published by Rosalia Ferreri.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Habitat Selection Response of Small Pelagic Fish in Different Environments. Two Examples from the Oligotrophic Mediterranean Sea

Angelo Bonanno; Marianna Giannoulaki; Marco Barra; Gualtiero Basilone; Athanassios Machias; Simona Genovese; Sergey Goncharov; Sergey W. Popov; P. Rumolo; Massimiliano Di Bitetto; Salvatore Aronica; Bernardo Patti; Ignazio Fontana; Giovanni Giacalone; Rosalia Ferreri; Giuseppa Buscaino; Stylianos Somarakis; Maria-Myrto Pyrounaki; Stavroula Tsoukali; Salvatore Mazzola

A number of scientific papers in the last few years singled out the influence of environmental conditions on the spatial distribution of fish species, highlighting the need for the fisheries scientific community to investigate, besides biomass estimates, also the habitat selection of commercially important fish species. The Mediterranean Sea, although generally oligotrophic, is characterized by high habitat variability and represents an ideal study area to investigate the adaptive behavior of small pelagics under different environmental conditions. In this study the habitat selection of European anchovy Engraulis encrasicolus and European sardine Sardina pilchardus is analyzed in two areas of the Mediterranean Sea that largely differentiate in terms of environmental regimes: the Strait of Sicily and the North Aegean Sea. A number of environmental parameters were used to investigate factors influencing anchovy and sardine habitat selection. Acoustic surveys data, collected during the summer period 2002–2010, were used for this purpose. The quotient analysis was used to identify the association between high density values and environmental variables; it was applied to the entire dataset in each area in order to identify similarities or differences in the “mean” spatial behavioral pattern for each species. Principal component analysis was applied to selected environmental variables in order to identify those environmental regimes which drive each of the two ecosystems. The analysis revealed the effect of food availability along with bottom depth selection on the spatial distribution of both species. Furthermore PCA results highlighted that observed selectivity for shallower waters is mainly associated to specific environmental processes that locally increase productivity. The common trends in habitat selection of the two species, as observed in the two regions although they present marked differences in hydrodynamics, seem to be driven by the oligotrophic character of the study areas, highlighting the role of areas where the local environmental regimes meet ‘the ocean triad hypothesis’.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Spatio-temporal dynamics of a planktonic system and chlorophyll distribution in a 2D spatial domain: matching model and data

Bernardo Spagnolo; Davide Valenti; Gualtiero Basilone; Salvatore Mazzola; Angelo Bonanno; Simona Genovese; Salvatore Aronica; Rosalia Ferreri; Giovanni Denaro

Field data on chlorophyll distribution are investigated in a two-dimensional spatial domain of the Mediterranean Sea by using for phytoplankton abundances an advection-diffusion-reaction model, which includes real values for physical and biological variables. The study exploits indeed hydrological and nutrients data acquired in situ, and includes intraspecific competition for limiting factors, i.e. light intensity and phosphate concentration. As a result, the model allows to analyze how both the velocity field of marine currents and the two components of turbulent diffusivity affect the spatial distributions of phytoplankton abundances in the Modified Atlantic Water, the upper layer of the water column of the Mediterranean Sea. Specifically, the spatio-temporal dynamics of four phytoplankton populations, responsible for about 80% of the total chlorophyll a, are reproduced. Results for phytoplankton abundances obtained by the model are converted in chlorophyll a concentrations and compared with field data collected in twelve marine sites along the Cape Passero (Sicily)- Misurata (Libya) transect. Statistical checks indicate a good agreement between theoretical and experimental distributions of chlorophyll concentration. The study can be extended to predict the spatio-temporal behaviour of the primary production, and to prevent the consequent decline of some fish species in the Mediterranean Sea.


Hydrobiologia | 2018

Anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) early life stages in the Central Mediterranean Sea: connectivity issues emerging among adjacent sub-areas across the Strait of Sicily

B. Patti; R. Zarrad; O. Jarboui; Angela Cuttitta; Gualtiero Basilone; Salvatore Aronica; F. Placenti; G. Tranchida; G. M. Armeri; G. Buffa; Rosalia Ferreri; Simona Genovese; M. Musco; A. Traina; Marco Torri; Roberta Mifsud; Salvatore Mazzola

The combined use of field data on anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus, Linnaeus, 1758) egg distribution in the Central Mediterranean Sea on both sides of the Strait of Sicily (Sicilian–Maltese and Tunisian waters) and Lagrangian simulations were used to assess the pattern of connectivity between these two sub-areas as a result of spawning activity. The field data were collected during ichthyoplankton surveys carried out in summer 2008 and 2010. The simulation runs showed considerable (up to 20%) rates of particle exchange in both directions (from Tunisian to Sicilian–Maltese waters and vice versa). However, considering the typical high mortality rates of anchovy early stages, the actual larval exchange rates across the Sicily Strait are supposed to be significantly lower (<1%), supporting the hypothesis that the anchovy population sub-units in the Strait of Sicily can be considered as separate fish stocks for the evaluation of their optimum exploitation rates.


Hydrobiologia | 2018

Space utilization by key species of the pelagic fish community in an upwelling ecosystem of the Mediterranean Sea

Antonio Bonanno; Marco Barra; R. Mifsud; Gualtiero Basilone; Simona Genovese; M. Di Bitetto; Salvatore Aronica; Giovanni Giacalone; Ignazio Fontana; Salvatore Mangano; Rosalia Ferreri; Maurizio Pulizzi; P. Rumolo; Antonella Gargano; Giuseppa Buscaino; Pietro Calandrino; A. Di Maria; Salvatore Mazzola

Most of the studies carried out in the past on economically important fish species rely on single species approach. Ecosystem dynamics are characterized by complex interaction among species, sharing common habitat needs and thus forming characteristic assemblages. The analysis of spatio-temporal variability of fish community, coupled to the analysis of spatial indices, provides a synthetic view of the fish community status evidencing, if any, the way a community changes. Such considerations drive also to the development of ecosystem-based fishery management paradigm. In the present study changes in pelagic fish community structure in an upwelling ecosystem of the central Mediterranean Sea during the last 10 years was analysed, by focusing the attention on the five most abundant small pelagic species: Engraulis encrasicolus, Sardina pilchardus, Sardinella aurita, Trachurus trachurus and Boops boops. Our results evidenced a quite stable community structure, characterized by spatial occupation strongly driven by ecosystem characteristics and modulated according to specie-specific behaviour. Obtained results lead us to hypothesize that the observed stability of community could be linked to the presence of different environments leading to efficient space partitioning and resources utilization among species.


Hydrobiologia | 2018

Trophic relationships between anchovy ( Engraulis encrasicolus ) and zooplankton in the Strait of Sicily (Central Mediterranean sea): a stable isotope approach

P. Rumolo; Emanuela Fanelli; Marco Barra; Gualtiero Basilone; Simona Genovese; Serena Gherardi; Rosalia Ferreri; Antonella Gargano; Salvatore Mazzola; Angelo Bonanno

The study of the relationships among environmental factors, primary production, zooplankton community, and feeding behavior of fish species represents a key aspect to obtain a deeper knowledge of biological processes acting at ecosystem level. In this context, oceanographic data and biological samples were collected in two different surveys, carried out during late June 2011 and early July 2015 in the Strait of Sicily (Central Mediterranean Sea). Differences in abundance, biomass, and assemblage structure of zooplankton and anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus Linnaeus, 1758) population were observed between the two surveys. Still, zooplankton biomass was significantly correlated to longitude, chlorophyll a recorded during the surveys (as a proxy of primary production), and oxygen concentrations. Such differences affected the isotopic composition of anchovy, which showed changes in δ15N and δ13C values between the two surveys. Mixing models identified different contributions of food sources in the two sampling periods, i.e., major consumption on large copepods and euphausiids in 2015 with respect to 2011, which was consistent with a greater availability of these preys in the environment in 2015. The obtained results evidenced that E. encrasicolus may be affected by any environmental change that influences the plankton community, which is the basis of the diet of these fishes. Such findings highlighted the importance to further investigate the trophic relationships among different compartments of the food web, as well as the possible environmental influences, in order to obtain a more complete picture of ecosystem functioning and also in the light of an ecosystem-based approach to fisheries management.


Hydrobiologia | 2018

Effects of habitat conditions at hatching time on growth history of offspring European anchovy, Engraulis encrasicolus , in the Central Mediterranean Sea

Gualtiero Basilone; Rosalia Ferreri; Salvatore Mangano; Maurizio Pulizzi; Antonella Gargano; Marco Barra; Salvatore Mazzola; Ignazio Fontana; Giovanni Giacalone; Simona Genovese; Salvatore Aronica; Angelo Bonanno

The knowledge of the growth history in young fishes represents an important aspect of fishery ecology. This is especially relevant in short-living species like European anchovy, since they suffer a high mortality rate in their early life stages until recruitment. Although it is well known that habitat condition significantly affects spawning dynamics of fishes, it is not yet clear if these conditions affect growth trajectories during the early life stage’s critical period. Otolith microstructure analysis has been proven a useful tool to back-calculate growth history of young fishes. Thus, we analysed the effect of habitat variability on their growth history using otolith microstructures and environmental variables obtained from satellite imagery. Growth trajectories in juvenile anchovies, collected in two recruitment surveys carried out in 2004 and 2005 in the Strait of Sicily, were characterized by means of three indices within the fast growing period: the maximum increment width, the mean value of increment width, and the time extension of the fast growing period. Obtained results evidenced a clear effect of environmental conditions, particularly of sea surface temperature and chlorophyll-a concentration, on the growth histories of juveniles of anchovy. Furthermore, delayed effects of environmental conditions at hatching time on the forthcoming growth dynamics were discussed.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Yolked Oocyte Dynamics Support Agreement between Determinate- and Indeterminate-Method Estimates of Annual Fecundity for a Northeastern United States Population of American Shad.

Richard S. McBride; Rosalia Ferreri; Emilee K. Towle; Jason M. Boucher; Gualtiero Basilone

Reports of American shad fecundity identify two important themes regarding egg production in fishes. First, geographic variation occurs and is biologically meaningful. Shad annual fecundity decreases with increasing latitude, but predicted lifetime fecundity does not, because of a counter-gradient of survival probability, all of which can explain the adaptive significance of natal homing. Second, the appropriate method of measuring fecundity depends on the pattern of oocyte development. Historically, the relatively simple determinate-fecundity method was used; however, a recent study in a Virginia river indicates that this method may be biased, requiring the more complicated indeterminate method. We address both themes with collections from the 2015 shad spawning run in the Connecticut River, USA. Criteria for using a determinate method were satisfied for this northern population: 1) a size gap evident in the oocyte size frequency distribution, indicating group-synchronous development of yolked oocytes; 2) a decline, early in spawning, in the standing stock of yolked oocytes; and 3) low levels of atresia at the end of spawning. The determinate-method estimate of American shad annual (2015) fecundity (303,000 ± 73,400; mean ± sd) overlapped historic estimates for this and a neighboring river. The indeterminate-method estimate of annual (2015) fecundity (311,500 ± 4,500 sd) was not significantly different from the determinate-method estimate (Student’s t-test, P > 0.05). In contrast, indeterminate-method estimates of annual fecundity for a Virginia population were twice as high as that measured by the determinate method in the past. This can all be explained by fundamentally different patterns of oogenesis (i.e., group synchrony versus asynchrony with respect to yolk development) at different latitudes. American shad, which is distributed within its native range from the Canadian maritimes to Florida, USA (50–30°N), may be particularly well suited to evaluate intra-specific variation in oocyte development, a relatively unexplored life history trait.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2018

Liver melanomacrophage centres and CYP1A expression as response biomarkers to environmental pollution in European anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) from the western Mediterranean Sea

Gualtiero Basilone; Antonella Gargano; A. Corriero; R. Zupa; N. Santamaria; Salvatore Mangano; Rosalia Ferreri; Maurizio Pulizzi; Salvatore Mazzola; Angelo Bonanno; L. Passantino

The goal of the present study was to verify the suitability of using melanomacrophage centres (MMCs) as response biomarkers of marine pollution in European anchovy, which are short-lived, migratory, small pelagic fish. This suitability was verified by analysing the MMC density and cytochrome P450 monooxygenase 1A (CYP1A) expression in livers of anchovies from four areas of southern Italy. Age 2 anchovies sampled from three areas exposed to pollutants of industrial/agricultural origin (Gulf of Gela, Mazara del Vallo and Gulf of Naples) showed liver areas occupied by MMCs and numbers of MMCs that were significantly higher than those in the anchovies from Pozzallo, which is a marine area not subjected to any source of pollution. Anti-CYP1A immunoreactivity was observed in the hepatocytes of all specimens sampled from the Gulf of Gela. These findings suggest the utility of liver MMCs as biomarkers of exposure to pollutants in this small pelagic fish.


Ocean Science | 2014

Variability of water mass properties in the Strait of Sicily in summer period of 1998–2013

Angelo Bonanno; F. Placenti; Gualtiero Basilone; R. Mifsud; Simona Genovese; Bernardo Patti; M. Di Bitetto; Salvatore Aronica; Marco Barra; Giovanni Giacalone; Rosalia Ferreri; Ignazio Fontana; Giuseppa Buscaino; G. Tranchida; E. M. Quinci; Salvatore Mazzola


Scientia Marina | 2013

Reproductive strategy and fecundity of meagre Argyrosomus regius Asso, 1801 (Pisces: Sciaenidae): implications for restocking programs

María del Mar Gil; Amalia Grau; Gualtiero Basilone; Rosalia Ferreri; Miguel Palmer

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Simona Genovese

National Research Council

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Angelo Bonanno

National Research Council

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B. Patti

National Research Council

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