F
Ferdinando Boero
Researcher at University of Salento
Publications - 249
Citations - 9311
Ferdinando Boero is an academic researcher from University of Salento. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mediterranean sea & Hydrozoa. The author has an hindex of 54, co-authored 237 publications receiving 8474 citations. Previous affiliations of Ferdinando Boero include European Atomic Energy Community & Central Maine Community College.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The life cycle of Hydrichthys mirus (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa: Anthomedusae: Pandeidae)
TL;DR: The previously unknown life cycle of the parasitic hydroid Hydrichthys mirus is described and it is suggested that Stomotoca has hitherto constituted a polyphyletic taxon, embracing parallel lineages of pandeids, each retaining juvenile features.
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Missing species among Mediterranean non-Siphonophoran Hydrozoa.
TL;DR: Hydrozoa of the Mediterranean Sea are well known and a recent monograph covers 457 species, but many species reported in the past are not recorded in recent times, and 60 % of the 53 missing species are extinct, and 11 % are putatively extinct from the basin.
Journal Article
Non-Siphonophoran Hydrozoa: what are we talking about?
TL;DR: 6 paginas.-- Contribucion a "Aspects of hydrozoan biology", J. Bouillon, F. Cicogna, J.G. Hughes; (eds.)
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Spatio‐temporal variability in abundance of the parrotfish, Sparisoma cretense, in SE Apulia (SE Italy, Mediterranean Sea)
Paolo Guidetti,Ferdinando Boero +1 more
TL;DR: Evidence is provided that this parrotfish lives exclusively between about 5 and 15 m depth, suggesting that it could have specific habitat requirements in terms of physical conditions and substrate features, and the low winter water temperature did not affect survivorship of this ther‐mophilous fish.
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Observational articles: a tool to reconstruct ecological history based on chronicling unusual events
TL;DR: It is important that scientists are able to publish potentially important observations, particularly those that are unrelated to their current projects that have no sufficient grounds to be framed into a classical eco-evolutionary paper, and could feasibly impact on the history of the systems in which they occurred.