Her research is mainly focused on GIS, geostatistical and trend analyses applications, recently applied to coastal zones and in the past applied to river dynamics. She is also skilled in geographical modeling using a variety of Open Source GIS software. One of her main interests is spreading the philosophy of Open Source.
Abstract. In this paper we describe a 50-year (1965–2015) ecological database
containing data collected in the northern Adriatic Sea (NAS) at one of the 25
research parent sites belonging to the Italian Long Term Ecological Research
Network (LTER-Italy, http://www.lteritalia.it, last access: February 2020). LTER-Italy is a formal
member of the International (https://www.ilter.network, last access: February 2020) and
European (http://www.lter-europe.net/, last access: February 2020) LTER networks. The NAS
is undergoing a process, led by different research institutions and
projects, of establishing a marine ecological observatory, building
on the existing facilities, infrastructure, and long-term ecological data.
During this process, the implementation of open-access and open-science
principles has been started by creating an open-research life cycle that involves
sharing ideas and results (scientific papers), data (raw and processed),
metadata, methods, and software. The present data paper is framed within
this wider context. The database is composed of observations on abiotic
parameters and phytoplankton and zooplankton abundances, collected during 299 cruises
in different sampling stations, in the Gulf of Venice in particular. Here we
describe the sampling and analytical activities, the parameters, and
the structure of the database. The database is available at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3516717 (Acri et al., 2019), and it was also
uploaded in the DEIMS-SDR repository (Dynamic Ecological Information
Management System – Site and Dataset Registry, https://deims.org/), which is the official site and data registry for the
International LTER network.
The Mediterranean Sea is recognized today as the World’s most invaded marine region, but observations of species occurrences remain scattered in the scientific literature and scarcely accessible. Here we introduce the ORMEF database: a first comprehensive and robust compilation of exotic fish observations recorded over more than a century in the Mediterranean. ORMEF consists today of 4015 geo-referenced occurrences from 20 Mediterranean Countries, extracted from 670 scientific published papers. We collated information on 188 fish taxa that are thus divided: 106 species entered through the Suez Canal; 25 species introduced by shipping, mariculture, aquarium release or by means of other human activities; 57 Atlantic species, whose arrival in the Mediterranean has been attributed to the unassisted immigration through the strait of Gibraltar. Each observation included in the ORMEF database was submitted to a severe quality control and checked for geographical and taxonomic biases. ORMEF is a new authoritative reference for Mediterranean bio-invasion research and a living archive to inform management strategies and policymakers in a period of rapid environmental transformation.
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