Sarah Caronni
University of Pavia
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sarah Caronni.
Biofouling | 2017
Jasmine Ferrario; Sarah Caronni; Anna Occhipinti-Ambrogi; Agnese Marchini
Abstract The role of commercial harbours as sink and source habitats for non-indigenous species (NIS) and the role of recreational boating for their secondary spread were investigated by analysing the fouling community of five Italian harbours and five marinas in the western Mediterranean Sea. It was first hypothesised that NIS assemblages in the recreational marinas were subsets of those occurring in commercial harbours. However, the data did not consistently support this hypothesis: the NIS pools of some marinas significantly diverged from harbours even belonging to the same coastal stretches, including NIS occurring only in marinas. This study confirms harbours as hotspots for marine NIS, but also reveals that numbers of NIS in some marinas is higher than expected, suggesting that recreational vessels effectively facilitate NIS spread. It is recommended that this vector of NIS introduction is taken into account in the future planning of sustainable development of maritime tourism in Europe.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Sarah Caronni; Chiara Calabretti; Maria Anna Delaria; Giuseppe Bernardi; Augusto Navone; Anna Occhipinti-Ambrogi; Pieraugusto Panzalis; Giulia Ceccherelli
Few field studies have investigated how changes at one trophic level can affect the invasibility of other trophic levels. We examined the hypothesis that the spread of an introduced alga in disturbed seagrass beds with degraded canopies depends on the depletion of large consumers. We mimicked the degradation of seagrass canopies by clipping shoot density and reducing leaf length, simulating natural and anthropogenic stressors such as fish overgrazing and water quality. Caulerpa racemosa was transplanted into each plot and large consumers were excluded from half of them using cages. Potential cage artifacts were assessed by measuring irradiance, scouring by leaf movement, water flow, and sedimentation. Algal invasion of the seagrass bed differed based on the size of consumers. The alga had higher cover and size under the cages, where the seagrass was characterized by reduced shoot density and canopy height. Furthermore, canopy height had a significant effect depending on canopy density. The alteration of seagrass canopies increased the spread of C. racemosa only when large consumers were absent. Our results suggest that protecting declining habitats and/or restoring fish populations will limit the expansion of C. racemosa. Because MPAs also enhance the abundance and size of fish consuming seagrass they can indirectly promote algal invasion. The effects of MPAs on invasive species are context dependent and require balancing opposing forces, such as the conservation of seagrass canopy structure and the protection of fish grazing the seagrass.
Italian Journal of Zoology | 2016
Daniele Paganelli; Sarah Caronni; Agnese Marchini; Andrea Gazzola; Renato Sconfietti
Abstract Gammarids are one of the most successful invaders in freshwater ecosystems due to both their diet plasticity and high reproductive capability. The Balkanic amphipod, Gammarus roeselii Gervais, 1835, has colonised a small canal in the southern part of the sub-lacustrine Ticino River basin (Northern Italy), where it lives in sympatry and shares the same habitat with the native species Echinogammarus stammeri (Karaman, 1931). We surveyed the populations of the two species over 12 months (from July 2014 to June 2015) to investigate their structure and dynamics. The overall densities of the two populations were similar in the study area, but we observed marked differences in the population structure: G. roeselii was in fact more successful than the native gammarid in achieving the adult stage, and E. stammeri exhibited a rather limited reproductive period, which does not justify the stable occurrence of juvenile individuals. We hypothesise that the population of the native gammarid in this small habitat is supported by a continuous upstream immigration of individuals from the Ticino River, while G. roeselii exhibits a well-structured and self-reproducing population.
Marine Biology | 2014
Sarah Caronni; Maria Anna Delaria; Augusto Navone; Pier Panzalis; Nicola Sechi; Giulia Ceccherelli
Marine Ecology | 2016
Sarah Caronni; Maria Anna Delaria; Kirsten Heimann; Giovanni Macri; Augusto Navone; Pieraugusto Panzalis; Giulia Ceccherelli
Transitional Waters Bulletin | 2008
Agnese Marchini; Sarah Caronni; Anna Occhipinti-Ambrogi
Marine Environmental Research | 2017
Sarah Caronni; Chiara Calabretti; Gianluca Cavagna; Giulia Ceccherelli; Maria Anna Delaria; Giovanni Macri; Augusto Navone; Pieraugusto Panzalis
Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2015
Sarah Caronni; Alessia Bresciani; Maria Anna Delaria; Federico Meloni; Augusto Navone; Pieraugusto Panzalis; Kirsten Heimann; Giulia Ceccherelli
Archive | 2015
Pieraugusto Panzalis; Andrea Deiana; Sarah Caronni; Augusto Navone
Archive | 2011
Sarah Caronni; Giulia Ceccherelli; S. Michelet; Augusto Navone; Anna Occhipinti Ambrogi; Renata Trevisan; Nicola Sechi