Analysis of seasonal biomass variation of the three main seagrass species in the Venice Lagoon along different environmental gradients in urban and natural sites

reserved Seagrasses are a small group of marine angiosperms that colonize the majority of coastal and estuarine habitats worldwide, from the tropics to subarctic regions. These plants are fully adapted to live submerged in shallow waters, provide crucial ecosystem services, such as carbon sequestrat...

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Main Author: LIONELLO, JACOPO
Other Authors: DE BATTISTI, DAVIDE
Language:unknown
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/79669
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author LIONELLO, JACOPO
author2 DE BATTISTI, DAVIDE
author_facet LIONELLO, JACOPO
author_sort LIONELLO, JACOPO
collection Padua Thesis and Dissertations Archive (Università degli Studi die Padova)
description reserved Seagrasses are a small group of marine angiosperms that colonize the majority of coastal and estuarine habitats worldwide, from the tropics to subarctic regions. These plants are fully adapted to live submerged in shallow waters, provide crucial ecosystem services, such as carbon sequestration, primary and oxygen production, and act as nursery for fish of commercial importance. However, since the past century, seagrass meadows have dramatically declined in density, even disappearing entirely from many coastal regions around the world due to significant human impact, and unfortunately, this trend continues today. Since the late 20th century the importance of seagrasses has become widely recognized, leading to numerous efforts to protect the remaining seagrass meadows and restore those lost, such as in the Venice Lagoon. Since then, many studies have focused on seagrass physiology, behaviour, and restoration, crucial to ongoing conservation efforts. For this reason, this study aims to understand how the three main seagrasses of the Venice Lagoon - Zostera marina, Zostera noltii and Cymodocea nodosa - behave in different levels of stress in terms of biomass and primary production, starting from natural (low level of stress), periurban (intermediate level of stress) and urban environments (high level of stress). Also, the seasonal influences over the seagrass biomass will be caried out, giving importance also to the mutual interactions between the three species, to include all possible reason in biomass variations in their habitats. The biomass data for the three species reveal clear correlations with the environmental gradient they live in. Z. noltii and Z. marina are the most sensitive to stressful conditions, showing reduced biomasses for both AG (above ground) and BG (below ground) in urban sites. In contrast, C. nodosa exhibits the opposite trend, achieving its highest AG and BG biomasses in urban areas. The results also highlight seasonal biomass patterns and demonstrate how changes in water ...
genre Subarctic
genre_facet Subarctic
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institution Open Polar
language unknown
op_collection_id ftunivpadodiss
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.12608/79669
op_relation Dipartimento di Biologia - DiBio
BIOLOGIA Laurea di Primo Livello (D.M. 270/2004)
2023
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/79669
publishDate 2024
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spelling ftunivpadodiss:oai:thesis.unipd.it:20.500.12608/79669 2025-04-13T14:27:20+00:00 Analysis of seasonal biomass variation of the three main seagrass species in the Venice Lagoon along different environmental gradients in urban and natural sites LIONELLO, JACOPO DE BATTISTI, DAVIDE 2024-12-12T15:09:51Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/79669 unknown Dipartimento di Biologia - DiBio BIOLOGIA Laurea di Primo Livello (D.M. 270/2004) 2023 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/79669 Seagrasses Venice Lagoon Biomass variation 2024 ftunivpadodiss https://doi.org/20.500.12608/79669 2025-03-18T05:35:42Z reserved Seagrasses are a small group of marine angiosperms that colonize the majority of coastal and estuarine habitats worldwide, from the tropics to subarctic regions. These plants are fully adapted to live submerged in shallow waters, provide crucial ecosystem services, such as carbon sequestration, primary and oxygen production, and act as nursery for fish of commercial importance. However, since the past century, seagrass meadows have dramatically declined in density, even disappearing entirely from many coastal regions around the world due to significant human impact, and unfortunately, this trend continues today. Since the late 20th century the importance of seagrasses has become widely recognized, leading to numerous efforts to protect the remaining seagrass meadows and restore those lost, such as in the Venice Lagoon. Since then, many studies have focused on seagrass physiology, behaviour, and restoration, crucial to ongoing conservation efforts. For this reason, this study aims to understand how the three main seagrasses of the Venice Lagoon - Zostera marina, Zostera noltii and Cymodocea nodosa - behave in different levels of stress in terms of biomass and primary production, starting from natural (low level of stress), periurban (intermediate level of stress) and urban environments (high level of stress). Also, the seasonal influences over the seagrass biomass will be caried out, giving importance also to the mutual interactions between the three species, to include all possible reason in biomass variations in their habitats. The biomass data for the three species reveal clear correlations with the environmental gradient they live in. Z. noltii and Z. marina are the most sensitive to stressful conditions, showing reduced biomasses for both AG (above ground) and BG (below ground) in urban sites. In contrast, C. nodosa exhibits the opposite trend, achieving its highest AG and BG biomasses in urban areas. The results also highlight seasonal biomass patterns and demonstrate how changes in water ... Other/Unknown Material Subarctic Padua Thesis and Dissertations Archive (Università degli Studi die Padova)
spellingShingle Seagrasses
Venice Lagoon
Biomass variation
LIONELLO, JACOPO
Analysis of seasonal biomass variation of the three main seagrass species in the Venice Lagoon along different environmental gradients in urban and natural sites
title Analysis of seasonal biomass variation of the three main seagrass species in the Venice Lagoon along different environmental gradients in urban and natural sites
title_full Analysis of seasonal biomass variation of the three main seagrass species in the Venice Lagoon along different environmental gradients in urban and natural sites
title_fullStr Analysis of seasonal biomass variation of the three main seagrass species in the Venice Lagoon along different environmental gradients in urban and natural sites
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of seasonal biomass variation of the three main seagrass species in the Venice Lagoon along different environmental gradients in urban and natural sites
title_short Analysis of seasonal biomass variation of the three main seagrass species in the Venice Lagoon along different environmental gradients in urban and natural sites
title_sort analysis of seasonal biomass variation of the three main seagrass species in the venice lagoon along different environmental gradients in urban and natural sites
topic Seagrasses
Venice Lagoon
Biomass variation
topic_facet Seagrasses
Venice Lagoon
Biomass variation
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/79669