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Dive into the research topics where Silvia Barbaresi is active.

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Featured researches published by Silvia Barbaresi.


Aquatic Sciences | 2000

Spatial and temporal patterns in the movement of Procambarus clarkii, an invasive crayfish

Francesca Gherardi; Silvia Barbaresi; Gabriele Salvi

Abstract: Introduced in Italy in the 1980s for aquaculture enterprises, the red swamp crayfish, Procambarus clarkii, has invaded many water bodies, giving rise to breeding populations that now threaten freshwater ecosystems. An understanding of the spatial behaviour of this crayfish could be the baseline for future research aimed at control and management. Following the same pattern as other freshwater decapods, P. clarkii, studied in an irrigation ditch system in Florence, Tuscany, displayed stationary phases (several marked individuals were recaptured in the area) interposed with nomadic bursts of movement (many marked crayfish disappeared). With a few exceptions, nocturnal activity prevailed in almost all the seasons in two different analysed habitats (irrigation ditches and the Massaciuccoli Lake, Lucca). However, in the laboratory, locomotion occurred mostly at daytime. Although still prevailing, P. clarkiis nocturnal activity appeared puzzling, because some of its major predators are nocturnal and this species is mostly herbivorous. The intercalation between stationary and wandering phases leaves open further promising studies on social structures in the field.


Journal of Natural History | 2004

Ranging behaviour of the invasive crayfish, Procambarus clarkii (Girard)

Silvia Barbaresi; Giacomo Santini; Elena Tricarico; Francesca Gherardi

The spreading of the invasive crayfish Procambarus clarkii throughout the world is attributed to human introductions; however, the rapid and widespread diffusion of the species following its establishment is the result of its dispersal capabilities. This study aimed to provide further information for the comprehension of the invasive potential of this crayfish by underlining some aspects of its behavioural flexibility. Radio-telemetry was used to analyse locomotion, home-range faithfulness and dispersal of the species in an Italian irrigation ditch system. Space was used differently by the two sexes, females being more nomadic in their ranging behaviour probably due to their reproductive phase. In addition, an inter-individual variability was found in both speed of locomotion and dispersal pattern. By applying a simulation model, it was shown that (1) both sexes disperse, and (2) ranging behaviour is not the result of a passive dispersion, but that the occupancy of burrows may affect the rate of dispersion. Finally, an intra-individual variability is related to the occurrence of two spatial strategies within the same population.


Journal of Freshwater Ecology | 1998

Movement Patterns of the White-clawed Crayfish, Austropotamobius pallipes, in a Tuscan Stream

Francesca Gherardi; Silvia Barbaresi; Fabio Villanelli

Abstract We analyzed spatial behavior in the white-clawed crayfish, Austropotamobius pallipes, inhabiting a stream in Tuscany (Italy). Our study suggests an overall complex movement pattern, where nomadic movements are intercalated by stationary phases. There was a low rate of recapture within the stretch of stream inspected, suggesting either a tendency of the species to disperse or a mortality rate caused by predators or the loss of tags with molts. However, one part of the population showed a conservative use of space, as indicated by 1) more extensive movement during a 24-h cycle than during the one-year cycle, 2) a weak tendency to return to the “home” pool if released at a distance of 50 m, and 3) an equal distribution of up- and downstream movements. No correlation was found between either 1) the displacement from the point of first capture and the length of time the specimen was followed through recaptures or 2) the number of captures and the maximum distance traveled.


Marine and Freshwater Behaviour and Physiology | 2002

A Comparison of Trace Metal Accumulation in Indigenous and Alien Freshwater Macro-Decapods

Francesca Gherardi; Silvia Barbaresi; Orlando Vaselli; Alberto Bencini

Concentrations of Cd, Cu, Fe, Mg, Mn, Ni, Pb and Zn were determined in the exoskeleton and hepatopancreas of three freshwater macro-decapods widely distributed in Tuscany, Italy. The species were the indigenous Austropotamobius pallipes (the white-clawed crayfish) and Potamon fluviatile (the river crab) and the alien Procambarus clarkii (the red swamp crayfish, in Italy aquacultured since 1977 and invasive since 1989). Water and sediments from the three environments in which they occur were analysed for trace metals to evaluate the degree of contamination of the habitats. Procambarus clarkii showed a significantly higher accumulation of most of the metals analysed, including the non-essential cadmium, nickel and lead. Interspecific differences were not related to exposure to higher concentrations of metals, but indigenous and alien macro-decapods possibly differ in their physiological requirements for essential trace metals and/or in their rates of essential and non-essential metal uptake, accumulation, detoxification and excretion.


Biological Invasions | 2003

Genetic Variability in European Populations of an Invasive American Crayfish: Preliminary Results

Silvia Barbaresi; Renato Fani; Francesca Gherardi; Alessio Mengoni; Catherine Souty-Grosset

Since 1973, the red swamp crayfish, Procambarus clarkii, native to south-central United States and northeastern Mexico, has spread throughout Europe. Here, we surveyed the genetic variability of five European populations of the species using RAPD markers. Genetic variation was found to be so high as to uniquely fingerprint most of the surveyed individuals. Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) of the RAPD markers showed that 1) a large part of the genetic variation can be attributed to the differentiation among localities, and 2) the differentiation was mainly due to the separation of the samples from Louisiana with respect to the European set. A hypothesis emerged in which subsequent introductions of crayfish from different sources were performed. This hypothesis might explain the high genetic diversity observed within each population and the genetic differentiation among populations, as the result, respectively, of the introduction of different sets of crayfish and the casual bias of introductions. Although preliminary, our results suggest that RAPDs could be helpful in providing information about human-mediated introduced populations.


Marine and Freshwater Behaviour and Physiology | 2000

The significance of chelae in the agonistic behaviour of the white‐clawed crayfish, a Ustropotamobius pallipes

Francesca Gherardi; Patrizia Acquistapace; Silvia Barbaresi

As in other benthic decapods, crayfish have chelae that are important for intra‐specific agonistic encounters. In Austropotamobius pallipes, scars and mutilations are present mostly on the chelae, these being the main targets of agonistic contacts. Because males participate in more aggressive interactions than females do and compete with other males for acquiring females in escalating contests, selection for large chelae should be stronger in males. Thus, in A. pallipes (i) chelae are longer, wider and higher in males than in females; (ii) chelar size in males increases allometrically with cephalothorax length; (iii) male specimens are more often deprived of at least one cheliped and (iv) large males have the highest frequency of scars. Males with one regenerated cheliped, when opposed to a competitor with both large chelipeds, display the same motivation to fight, but perform less chelae threat displays than normal crayfish and immediately get a lower hierarchical rank. In these contests, Resource Holding Potential (= chelar size) is highly different between the crayfish and the information of this asymmetry is correctly transferred between the two opponents.


Archive | 2007

Genetics and invasion biology in fresh waters: a pilot study of Procambarus clarkii in Europe

Silvia Barbaresi; Francesca Gherardi; Alessio Mengoni; Catherine Souty-Grosset

Since Charles Elton, ecologists have struggled to account for the distribution and spread of non-indigenous species (NIS). They now realize that the key factor is ‘‘opportunity’’. The more frequently and persistently a foreign plant or animal is exposed to a new environment, the better its odds of invading. Ecologists call this ‘‘propagule pressure’’ (also termed introduction effort), a composite measure expressing the number of individuals released into a region to which they are non-native. It incorporates estimates of the absolute number of individuals involved in any one release event (propagule size) and the number of discrete release events (propagule number) (Lockwood et al. 2005). Propagule pressure has rarely been documented for freshwater organisms except in fish. Duggan et al. (2006), for example, using data on aquaria in stores and historical records of fish introduced into Canadian and US waters, showed a clear relationship between their occurrence in shops and the likelihood of their introduction and eventual establishment.


Marine and Freshwater Behaviour and Physiology | 1994

Activity patterns in Thalamita crenata Portunidae, decapoda): A shaping by the tidal cycles

Roberto Vezzosi; Silvia Barbaresi; Diana Anyona; Marco Vannini

The activity rhythms of the swimming Portunid Thalamita crenata have been studied on the basis of crab sightings in surveys along three transects of a mangrove swamp in Kenya. Activity is well matched to the environmental regime and is prevalent during the high tides. However, activity does not occur over the whole of the high tide, but is confined to “temporal windows”; corresponding to a water level between 10 and 30 cm. Our findings suggest that activity in Thalamita crenata is shaped by the tidal cycles and we propose that variation in hydrostatic pressure as the tide changes is the cue which elicits activity.


Biological Invasions | 2000

The Invasion of the Alien Crayfish Procambarus Clarkii in Europe, with Particular Reference to Italy

Silvia Barbaresi; Francesca Gherardi


Fundamental and Applied Limnology | 2000

Invasive crayfish: activity patterns of Procambarus clarkii in the rice fields of the Lower Guadalquivir (Spain)

Francesca Gherardi; Silvia Barbaresi

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