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Dive into the research topics where Salvatore Moscatello is active.

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Featured researches published by Salvatore Moscatello.


Chemistry and Ecology | 2010

Nonindigenous species along the Apulian coast, Italy

Cinzia Gravili; Genuario Belmonte; Ester Cecere; Francesco Denitto; Adriana Giangrande; Paolo Guidetti; Caterina Longo; Francesco Mastrototaro; Salvatore Moscatello; Antonella Petrocelli; Stefano Piraino; Antonio Terlizzi; Ferdinando Boero

Thirty-eight nonindigenous marine species (NIS) (macroalgae, sponges, hydrozoans, molluscs, polychaetes, crustaceans, ascidiaceans and fish), are reported from the Apulian coast of Italy. Shipping, aquaculture and migration through the Suez Canal are the main pathways of introduction of the NIS. In Apulian waters, 21% of NIS are occasional, 18% are invasive and 61% are well-established. It is highly probable that more NIS will arrive from warm-water regions, because Mediterranean waters are warming. Furthermore, some of the successful NIS must have the ability to become dormant in order to survive adverse conditions, either seasonal or during long journeys in ballast waters. The identification of NIS depends greatly on the available taxonomic expertise; hence the paucity of taxonomists hinders our knowledge of NIS in our seas. We propose the creation and maintenance of a network of observatories across the Mediterranean to monitor the changes that take place along its coasts.


Saline Systems | 2009

Egg banks in hypersaline lakes of the South-East Europe

Salvatore Moscatello; Genuario Belmonte

The cyst banks of 6 coastal hypersaline lakes of South-East Europe have been investigated. The study concerned the bottom sediments of Khersonesskoe and Koyashskoe lakes in the Crimea (Ukraine), Nartë saltworks (Albania), Vecchia Salina at Torre Colimena (Apulia, Italy), Pantano Grande and Pantano Roveto at Vendicari (Sicily, Italy). A total of 19 cyst types were recognised. The cyst banks of lakes were found to be well separated in the representation derived from a statistical multivariate data analysis. For all the lakes examined a comparison was possible between the resting community in sediments (cyst bank) and the active one in the water. The cyst banks contained more species than those recorded over a multi-year sampling effort in the water column. The study of cyst hatching, performed on 5 cyst types under lab conditions, demonstrated that cysts do not hatch under the same conditions. Furthermore, each cyst type shows a wide range of preferential hatching conditions, which allow us to confirm the ecological generalism of salt lake species.


Journal of Coastal Research | 2011

Space Distribution of Phyto- and Microzooplankton in the Vlora Bay (Southern Albania, Mediterranean Sea)

Salvatore Moscatello; Carmela Caroppo; Edmond Hajdëri; Genuario Belmonte

Abstract The Vlora Bay is the only internal sea of the Albanian coastline. The site is of paramount interest for Albanian fishing, being a natural nursery for many fish species of economic importance. The composition of the plankton community in the Vlora Bay has been analysed and particular attention devoted to the unicellular eukaryotes by collecting samples from 16 stations during 2 seasonal cruises (May–June 2007, and January 2008), an effort to date never carried out to know the plankton biodiversity of the area. The microzooplankton community was composed of 122 phytoplankton and 105 microzooplankton taxa, of which 58.2% and 25.0%, respectively, were classified as seasonal (they were recorded only in one of the two considered times). Only four categories (all phytoplanktonic, the diatom Navicula sp., “undetermined naked dinoflagellates < 15 µm”, the coccolithophorid Emiliania huxleyi, and the “undetermined phytoflagellates < 10 µm”) were recorded in all the sampling stations (at least in one period). The microzooplankton were particularly diversified and characteristic in their Ciliophora components. A statistical analysis of taxa distribution allowed us to identify three distinct areas in the Vlora Bay: internal, intermediate, and external. The extension or the border position of these areas varied with the seasons and according to the microzooplankton group examined. The microzooplankton assemblages of the Vlora Bay showed significant differences with many other sites in the Mediterranean Sea, probably due to the crucial geographic position the bay occupies among different Mediterranean basins.


International Journal of Ecology | 2013

Plankton Resting Stages in the Marine Sediments of the Bay of Vlorë (Albania)

Fernando Rubino; Salvatore Moscatello; Manuela Belmonte; Gianmarco Ingrosso; Genuario Belmonte

In the frame of the INTERREG III CISM project, sediment cores were collected at 2 stations in the Gulf of Vlore to study the plankton resting stage assemblages. A total of 87 morphotypes were identified and produced by Dinophyta, Ciliophora, Rotifera, and Crustacea. In 22 cases, the cyst belonged to a species absent from the plankton of the same period. The most abundant resting stages were those produced by Scrippsiella species (Dinophyta). Some calcareous cysts were identified as fossil species associated with Pleistocene to Pliocene sediment, although they were also found in surface sediments and some of them successfully germinated, thus proving their modern status. Total abundance generally decreased with sediment depth at station 40, while station 45 showed distinct maxima at 3 and 8 cm below the sediment surface. The depth of peak abundance in the sediment varied with species. This paper presents the first study of the plankton resting stages in the Bay of Vlore. The study confirmed the utility of this type of investigation for a more correct evaluation of species diversity. In addition, the varying distribution with sediment depth suggests that this field could be of some importance in determining the history of species assemblages.


Journal of Coastal Research | 2017

Composition and Spatial Distribution of Mesozooplankton along Confinement and Anthropogenic-Impact Gradients in the Gulf of Vlorë (Albania)

Genuario Belmonte; Salvatore Moscatello; Edmond Hajdëri; Irene Vaglio; Francesco Denitto

ABSTRACT Belmonte, G.; Moscatello, S.; Hajdëri, E.; Vaglio, I., and Denitto, F., 2018. Composition and spatial distribution of mesozooplankton along confinement and anthropogenic-impact gradients in the Gulf of Vlorë (Albania). The composition of mesozooplankton and their space-time distribution in the Gulf of Vlorë (southern Albania, Mediterranean Sea) are described for the first time. Sampling was carried out during two oceanographic cruises (May 2007, January 2008) with two replicates at each of 17 stations at each time, making a total of 68 samples. The study aimed to describe the influence of confinement (defined as distance from the open sea) and anthropogenic impact (defined as vicinity to the east coast of the gulf) on zooplankton composition. A total of 198 taxa were recognised in the whole zooplankton assemblage, with only 136 taxa common to both periods and only two species present in all samples. Statistical analysis of data distinguished the Mezokanal area (the boundary between the gulf and the open sea) from three other areas inside the gulf. Differences were also found among the areas inside the gulf at increasing degree of confinement. Mesozooplankton varied more sharply with confinement than with anthropogenic impact and yielded more-detailed space partitioning of the gulf than microzooplankton, which had been used in a previous study.


International Review of Hydrobiology | 2006

Morphological and molecular data reveal the presence of the invasive Artemia franciscana in margherita di savoia salterns (Italy)

Graziella Mura; Ilias Kappas; Athanasios D. Baxevanis; Salvatore Moscatello; Quirico D'Amico; German Medina Lopez; Francisco Hontoria; Francisco Amat; Theodore J. Abatzopoulos


Scientia Marina | 2004

Plankton biodiversity around the Salento Peninsula (South East Italy): an integrated water/sediment approach

Salvatore Moscatello; Fernando Rubino; Orestina D. Saracino; Giovanni Fanelli; Genuario Belmonte; Ferdinando Boero


Journal of Plankton Research | 2005

The use of a multidisciplinary approach for the characterization of a diploid parthenogenetic Artemia population from Torre Colimena (Apulia, Italy)

Graziella Mura; Athanasios D. Baxevanis; German Medina Lopez; Francisco Hontoria; Ilias Kappas; Salvatore Moscatello; Giovanni Fancello; Francisco Amat; Theodore J. Abatzopoulos


International Review of Hydrobiology | 2009

Updating Geographic Distribution of Artemia urmiana GÜNTHER, 1890 (Branchiopoda: Anostraca) in Europe: An Integrated and Interdisciplinary Approach

Theodore J. Abatzopoulos; Francisco Amat; Athanasios D. Baxevanis; Genuario Belmonte; Francisco Hontoria; Stefania Maniatsi; Salvatore Moscatello; Graziella Mura; Nickolaj V. Shadrin


Journal of Marine Systems | 2009

An integrated water/sediment approach to study plankton (a case study in the southern Adriatic Sea)

Fernando Rubino; O.D. Saracino; Salvatore Moscatello; Genuario Belmonte

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Graziella Mura

Sapienza University of Rome

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Athanasios D. Baxevanis

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Theodore J. Abatzopoulos

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Francisco Amat

Spanish National Research Council

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Francisco Hontoria

Spanish National Research Council

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