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Maria Cristina Mangano

Researcher at Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

Publications -  25
Citations -  403

Maria Cristina Mangano is an academic researcher from Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Climate change. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 25 publications receiving 233 citations. Previous affiliations of Maria Cristina Mangano include University of Palermo.

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Predicting shifting sustainability trade-offs in marine finfish aquaculture under climate change

TL;DR: The results indicate that optimizing aquaculture practices by minimizing impact will become increasingly difficult under climate change, and an increasing temperature will produce a poleward shift in sustainability trade‐offs, suggesting that future sustainable management strategies and plans will need to account for the effects of climate change across scales.
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The Synergistic Impacts of Anthropogenic Stressors and COVID-19 on Aquaculture: A Current Global Perspective

Gianluca Sarà, +53 more
TL;DR: The rapid, global spread of COVID-19, and the measures intended to limit or slow its propagation, are having major impacts on diverse sectors of society as mentioned in this paper, and these impacts are occurring in the...
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Collating science-based evidence to inform public opinion on the environmental effects of marine drilling platforms in the Mediterranean Sea.

TL;DR: The map was aimed as a useful model to standardise a "minimal informational threshold", which can inform public opinion at the beginning of any public consultation, and represents a reliable layer for any future sustainable strategy in the Mediterranean basin.
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Multiple stressors facilitate the spread of a non-indigenous bivalve in the Mediterranean Sea

TL;DR: In this article, a species distribution model was run to determine key drivers of invasion, quantify interactive impacts arising from a range of trophic states, salinity conditions and climatic scenarios and forecast future trajectories for the spread of NIS into new regions under multiple-parameter scenarios.
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Monitoring of persistent organic pollutants in the polar regions: knowledge gaps & gluts through evidence mapping

TL;DR: This work presents the outcome of a systematic map (SM) to scope, screen and chart evidences from literature dealing with POPs in Polar regions, based on 125 polar studies focussing on the most studied target species among those listed in the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List.