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Featured researches published by Simone Orsenigo.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2017

Conserving plant diversity in Europe: outcomes, criticisms and perspectives of the Habitats Directive application in Italy

Giuseppe Fenu; Gianluigi Bacchetta; V. Giacanelli; Domenico Gargano; C. Montagnani; Simone Orsenigo; Donatella Cogoni; Graziano Rossi; Fabio Conti; Annalisa Santangelo; Maria Silvia Pinna; Fabrizio Bartolucci; Gianniantonio Domina; G. Oriolo; C. Blasi; P. Genovesi; Thomas Abeli; S. Ercole

Habitat Directive is the core strategy of nature conservation in Europe aiming at halting biodiversity loss. In this study the results of the third Italian assessment regarding the conservation status (CS) of plants listed in the Habitat Directive (Flora of community interest—FCI) was presented. Data was collected from several sources related to plant distribution, population data, habitats and pressures. Following the official European procedure, all parameters were evaluated and combined to give the CS of each taxon in each biogeographical region of presence. A comparison between the recent Italian IUCN and Reporting assessments was performed in order to evaluate the consistency between these two assessments. The official EU checklist comprises 113 Italian plant taxa, 107 of which were examined in this study. Our results showed a critical situation with only 34% of favourable CS, while 50% were unfavourable (40% inadequate plus 10% bad) and 16% unknown, in particular in the Mediterranean bioregion, where the unfavourable assessments reach the 65%. The results of the Report were consistent with those of the IUCN assessment, in which 41.9% of plants were threatened with extinction. This report highlighted some benefits and criticisms at national level, but it may have a wider significance. Although a general advance of knowledge, a great effort is needed to reach the Habitats Directive goals. Despite the limited resources, monitoring activities needs to be improved in order to close information gaps for several plants. A positive outcome was the development of a specific national project funded by the Italian Ministry of Environment, with the ambitious target to set future monitoring activities for FCI and optimize monitoring efforts.


Ecology and Evolution | 2018

Habitat-related seed germination traits in alpine habitats

Maria Tudela-Isanta; Eduardo Fernández-Pascual; Malaka Wijayasinghe; Simone Orsenigo; Graziano Rossi; Hugh W. Pritchard; Andrea Mondoni

Abstract Understanding the key aspects of plant regeneration from seeds is crucial in assessing species assembly to their habitats. However, the regenerative traits of seed dormancy and germination are underrepresented in this context. In the alpine zone, the large species and microhabitat diversity provide an ideal context to assess habitat‐related regenerative strategies. To this end, seeds of 53 species growing in alpine siliceous and calcareous habitats (6230 and 6170 of EU Directive 92/43, respectively) were exposed to different temperature treatments under controlled laboratory conditions. Germination strategies in each habitat were identified by clustering with k‐means. Then, phylogenetic least squares correlations (PGLS) were fitted to assess germination and dormancy differences between species’ main habitat (calcareous and siliceous), microhabitat (grasslands, heaths, rocky, and species with no specific microhabitats), and chorology (arctic–alpine and continental). Calcareous and siliceous grasslands significantly differ in their germination behaviour with a slow, mostly overwinter germination and high germination under all conditions, respectively. Species with high overwinter germination occurs mostly in heaths and have an arctic–alpine distribution. Meanwhile, species with low or high germinability in general inhabit in grasslands or have no specific microhabitat (they belong to generalist), respectively. Alpine species use different germination strategies depending on habitat provenance, species’ main microhabitat, and chorotype. Such differences may reflect adaptations to local environmental conditions and highlight the functional role of germination and dormancy in community ecology.


Plant Biosystems | 2017

Acute and chronic ozone exposure temporarily affects seed germination in alpine plants

Thomas Abeli; D. B. Guasconi; Andrea Mondoni; D. Dondi; A. Bentivoglio; A. Buttafava; P. Cristofanelli; P. Bonasoni; Graziano Rossi; Simone Orsenigo

Abstract This study was the first to investigate the direct effects of anomalous concentrations of ozone mediated by summer heat waves on seed germination in alpine plants. During germination, the seeds were exposed to three peaks of O3 concentration (125 ppb for 5 and 10 days; 185 ppb for 5 days), derived from measurements taken close to the species growing site. High O3 concentration delayed the first germination time, increased the mean germination time, and reduced the germination percentage during and immediately after the treatment, but, in most cases, effects were weak and had almost vanished three weeks after the treatments. In few cases, chronic exposure to O3 (125 for 10 days’ treatment) enhanced seed germination compared to the control, suggesting that ozone may induce antioxidant and DNA-repair mechanisms or dormancy-breaking effects in hydrated seeds. Although seed mortality increased during O3 treatments in four species, the effect of O3 on seed germination is mostly limited to the period of exposure, indicating that it is unlikely to produce permanent negative effects on seeds, during the germination phase. Our results show that the direct effect of O3 on seeds of alpine plants may have minor impacts on plant reproductive performance during seed germination.


Annals of Applied Biology | 2017

Fertiliser application positively affects plants performance but reduces seed viability in seashore mallow (Kosteletzkya pentacarpos): implication for biomass production and species conservation

Thomas Abeli; Lisa Brancaleoni; R. Marchesini; Simone Orsenigo; Graziano Rossi; Renato Gerdol

Kosteletzkya pentacarpos seashore mallow, is recognised as an important plant species for several industrial applications, especially in North America and Asia. In Europe, seashore mallow is highly threatened and subject of conservation actions (e.g. reintroduction). In order to define appropriate multipurpose cultivation protocols, suitable for biomass production and for conservation purposes, we investigated the effect of varying levels of soil salt content and nutrient availability on seashore mallow. As expected, seashore mallow had the best performance in terms of growth rate, flowering and fruit production when fertiliser was applied, while salt had only limited effects. Interestingly, seeds produced by fertilised plants showed a lower germination performance and higher mortality than seeds developed from non-fertilised plants. Our results highlight a trade-off between parental plant growth and seed performance, the former being enhanced and the latter being reduced by fertiliser application. The causes of this trade-off are related to a transgenerational maternal effect of fertiliser application that has important implications for seashore mallow cultivation. Biomass production benefits from fertiliser application but if the quality of seeds and the fitness of the next generation are major objectives (e.g. seed production and species conservation), fertiliser application is not recommended.


Plant Biosystems | 2016

Festuca and allied genera (Poaceae) as Crop Wild Relatives: Checklists and Red Lists are urgently required

Nmg Ardenghi; Bruno Foggi; Simone Orsenigo; L. Maggioni; Paolo Cauzzi; Graziano Rossi

Abstract Festuca s.l. is a crucial group of Crop Wild Relatives (CWR) genera, globally employed as fodder, lawn grasses and for habitat restoration. Lists elaborated strictly on the basis of a taxonomic approach are urgently needed to be used to find gaps in existing ex situ collections, to assess the conservation status of taxa of ascertained utility and include them in national Red Lists and to identify the most valuable taxa to be included in “preservation mixtures”, as per Commission Directive 2010/60/EU. As an example, the first taxonomically based priority list of Italian CWRs of Festuca s.l. is here provided.


Insect Conservation and Diversity | 2016

Nestedness of habitat specialists within habitat generalists in a butterfly assemblage

Guido Trivellini; Carlo Polidori; Cristian Pasquaretta; Simone Orsenigo; Giuseppe Bogliani

The habitat requirements of a species are the resources, conditions and space required for survival and reproduction. The habitat requirements of butterflies have been well studied, but the extent to which individuals within a species and between species utilise and share the habitat is poorly known. In a butterfly assemblage in northern Italy, we found that adults from 30 species avoid deciduous high‐density forests and their ecotones, and they were positively related to open areas and their ecotones. Besides these common features, five groups of species can be discriminated in relation to a gradient from open area to forest, and species within groups were not equally specialised, as observed from a bipartite network analysis. In particular, some species appeared to be specialised and others appeared to be generalist, suggesting a nested pattern of resource use, rather than a clustered pattern in which each species uses a different subset of habitat types. The degree of variation in specialisation among species varied with the number of species falling in each group. Thus, an increased number of species, and thus possibly competition, is more likely to promote the co‐occurrence of generalist and specialised species (nested patterns) rather than an increased niche segregation among species. Ascertaining how species overlap their habitat use at a local scale can be relevant for conservation purposes, because specialised populations are potentially more susceptible to network distortions.


Archive | 2013

Lista Rossa della Flora Italiana. 1. Policy Species e altre specie minacciate.

Graziano Rossi; C. Montagnani; Domenico Gargano; Lorenzo Peruzzi; Thomas Abeli; S. Ravera; Annalena Cogoni; Giuseppe Fenu; Sara Magrini; Matilde Gennai; Bruno Foggi; Rp Wagensommer; G. Venturella; C. Blasi; F. M. Raimondo; Simone Orsenigo


INFORMATORE BOTANICO ITALIANO | 2014

Schede per una Lista Rossa della Flora vascolare e crittogamica italiana

Graziano Rossi; Thomas Abeli; Gianluigi Bacchetta; Giuseppe Fenu; Bruno Foggi; Domenico Gargano; Matilde Gennai; C. Montagnani; Simone Orsenigo; Lorenzo Peruzzi


Aquatic Conservation-marine and Freshwater Ecosystems | 2017

Reintroduction of a dioecious aquatic macrophyte (Stratiotes aloides L.) regionally extinct in the wild. Interesting answers from genetics

Simone Orsenigo; Rodolfo Gentili; A.J.P. Smolders; Andrey Efremov; Graziano Rossi; Nicola M. G. Ardenghi; Sandra Citterio; Thomas Abeli


Plant Biology | 2017

Comparative germination responses to water potential across different populations of Aegilops geniculata and cultivar varieties of Triticum durum and Triticum aestivum

Simone Orsenigo; Filippo Guzzon; Thomas Abeli; Graziano Rossi; Ilda Vagge; Alma Balestrazzi; Andrea Mondoni; Jonas V. Müller

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Bruno Foggi

University of Florence

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C. Montagnani

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Fabio Conti

University of Camerino

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