27 research outputs found

    Impact of maritime traffic on polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, metals and particulate matter in Venice air

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    Harbours are important hubs for economic growth in both tourism and commercial activities. They are also an environmental burden being a source of atmospheric pollution often localized near cities and industrial complexes. The aim of this study is to quantify the relative contribution of maritime traffic and harbour activities to atmospheric pollutant concentration in the Venice lagoon. The impact of ship traffic was quantified on various pollutants that are not directly included in the current European legislation for shipping emission reduction: (i) gaseous and particulate PAHs; (ii) metals in PM10; and (iii) PM10 and PM2.5. All contributions were correlated with the tonnage of ships during the sampling periods and results were used to evaluate the impact of the European Directive 2005/33/EC on air quality in Venice comparing measurements taken before and after the application of the Directive (year 2010). The outcomes suggest that legislation on ship traffic, which focused on the issue of the emissions of sulphur oxides, could be an efficient method also to reduce the impact of shipping on primary particulate matter concentration; on the other hand, we did not observe a significant reduction in the contribution of ship traffic and harbour activities to particulate PAHs and metals

    Are the ancient forests of the Eastern Po plain large enough for a long term conservation of herbaceous nemoral species?

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    We analysed the effects of patch configuration and site history on vascular plants in ancient forests of the Eastern Po Plain, documented back to 1740. Despite their reduced size, all the forests are part of Natura 2000 Network and significantly contribute to the maintenance of a threatened habitat and support biological diversity of the Continental biogeographic region. The presence of some functional ecological plant species groups was correlated with patch configuration and age. Habitat quality, in terms of suitability for forest species, was found to be important in explaining the presence of species of high conservation value, but patch age (as an indicator for habitat quality) played a major role too. For core forest species, patch area is a redundant variable in explaining species richness relative to habitat quality and patch age and the extinction of specialists seems to occur mainly in a deterministic way. Even small forest fragments can be very important for maintaining plant species diversity, at least if they are of high habitat quality and if the forest management is appropriate. However, to achieve a long term conservation, management plans should also aim at an improvement of the anthropogenic matrix surrounding forest remnants

    The dark side of the tradition: The polluting effect of Epiphany folk fires in the eastern Po Valley (Italy)

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    In the Veneto Region (Po Valley, Northeastern Italy) on the eve of Epiphany, an important religious celebration, during the night between January 5th and 6th thousands of folk fires traditionally burn wooden material. The object of this study is to characterize the 2013 episode, bymonitoring the effects on the air quality in the region's lowlands. The daily concentrations ofPM2.5 and PM10 exceeded 250 and 300 ÎŒg m−3, respectively and the PM10 hourly values were above 600 ÎŒg m−3 in many sites. The levels of total carbon, major inorganic ions, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and biomass burning tracers (levoglucosan and K+)weremeasured in 84 samples of PM10 and 38 of PM2.5 collected at 32 sites between January 4th and 7th. Total carbon ranged from 11 ÎŒg m−3 before the pollution episode to 131 ÎŒg m−3 a day afterwards, K+ from 0.6 to 5.1 ÎŒg m−3, benzo(a)pyrene from 2 to 23 ng m−3, and levoglucosan from 0.5 to 8.3 ÎŒg m−3. The dispersion of the particulate matter was traced by analyzing the levels of PM10 and PM2.5 in 133 and 51 sites, respectively, in the Veneto and neighboring regions. In addition to biomass burning the formation of secondary inorganic aerosol was revealed to be a key factor on a multivariate statistical data processing. By providing direct information on the effects of an intense and widespread biomass burning episode in the Po Valley, this study also enables some general considerations on biomass burning practices

    Lo stato del sistema delle agenzie ambientali. La situazione al 31 Dicembre 2000

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    With the collaboration of Paola Salmaso and Maria CartaConsiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche - Biblioteca Centrale - P.le Aldo Moro, 7, Rome / CNR - Consiglio Nazionale delle RichercheSIGLEITItal

    Modelling climate change impacts on nutrients and primary production in coastal waters

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    There is high confidence that the anthropogenic increase of atmospheric greenhouse gases (GHGs) is causing\ud modifications in the Earth's climate. Coastal waterbodies such as estuaries, bays and lagoons are among those\ud most affected by the ongoing changes in climate. Being located at the land-sea interface, such waterbodies are\ud subjected to the combined changes in the physical-chemical processes of atmosphere, upstreamland and coastal\ud waters. Particularly, climate change is expected to alter phytoplankton communities by changing their environmental\ud drivers (especially climate-related), thus exacerbating the symptoms of eutrophication events, such as\ud hypoxia, harmful algal blooms (HAB) and loss of habitat. A better understanding of the links between climaterelated\ud drivers and phytoplankton is therefore necessary for projecting climate change impacts on aquatic\ud ecosystems.\ud Herewe present the case study of the Zero river basin in Italy, one of the main contributors of freshwater and nutrient\ud to the salt-marsh Palude di Cona, a coastalwaterbody belonging to the lagoon of Venice. To project the impacts\ud of climate change on freshwater inputs, nutrient loadings and their effects on the phytoplankton\ud community of the receiving waterbody, we formulated and applied an integrated modelling approach made\ud of: climate simulations derived by coupling a General Circulation Model (GCM) and a Regional Climate Model\ud (RCM) under alternative emission scenarios, the hydrological model Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT)\ud and the ecological model AQUATOX. Climate projections point out an increase of precipitations in the winter period\ud and a decrease in the summermonths,while temperature shows a significant increase over thewhole year.\ud Water discharge and nutrient loads simulated by SWAT show a tendency to increase (decrease) in the winter (summer) period. AQUATOX projects changes in the concentration of nutrients in the salt-marsh Palude di Cona, and variations in the biomass and species of the phytoplankton community

    Effect of stocking density on growth and survival of juvenile Manila clams (Ruditapes philippinarum) farmed in suspended lanterns in a North Italian lagoon

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    To evaluate the effect of stocking density on pre-fattening growth and survival, Manila clam seeds from three different batches (B1, B2, and B3) were farmed in plastic net lanterns at two sites (western and northern) in Sacca degli Scardovari (Italy). Different stocking densities were compared, i.e. EXTRA (50,000 clams m-2), HIGH (30,000), and MEDIUM (20,000) for B1 and B2 clams; HIGH, MEDIUM, and LOW (10,000 clams m-2) for B3 clams. At the end of pre-fattening at the western site, the shell length decreased with increasing stocking density of both B1 (14.2 mm vs. 13.6 mm vs. 12.9 mm at HIGH vs. MEDIUM vs. EXTRA density; P < 0.001) and B2 (14.9 mm vs. 13.6 mm vs. 12.5 mm at MEDIUM vs. HIGH vs. EXTRA density; P < 0.001) clams. At the northern site, the shell length decreased in the following manner: MEDIUM to HIGH to EXTRA density for B1 clams (P < 0.001) and MEDIUM to EXTRA to HIGH density for B2 clams (P < 0.001). The same trend was recorded for B3 clams at both western (16.1 mm vs. 14.3 mm vs. 12.7 mm at LOW vs. MEDIUM vs. HIGH density; P < 0.001) and northern (15.6 mm vs. 13.9 mm vs. 13.2 mm; P < 0.001) sites. The stocking density did not affect the survival rate at the northern site and of the B3 clams, whereas the survival rate significantly decreased from MEDIUM and HIGH to EXTRA density for B1 (84.8 % and 85.4 % vs. 52.8 %; P < 0.05) and B2 (92.5 % and 87.6 % vs. 67.0 %; P < 0.01) clams at the western site where pre-fattening ended one week later than at the northern site. In the present conditions, clams in suspended lanterns reached the minimum sowing size (shell length 11 mm, weight 0.3 g) in 10 weeks. However, an increase in stocking density decreased clam growth and drastically increased mortality when water conditions became less favourable
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