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S. Pesaresi

Researcher at Marche Polytechnic University

Publications -  42
Citations -  1038

S. Pesaresi is an academic researcher from Marche Polytechnic University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vegetation & Vegetation (pathology). The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 40 publications receiving 809 citations. Previous affiliations of S. Pesaresi include Roma Tre University.

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Plant communities of Italy: The Vegetation Prodrome

TL;DR: The Prodrome that is presented in this paper is the first full organic synthesis of the vegetation of Italy at the alliance syntaxonomic level and fulfils several needs, the main one being a unified and comprehensive national framework that may make an important contribution to the definition of the European Vegetationprodrome.
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Bioclimate of Italy: application of the worldwide bioclimatic classification system

TL;DR: In this paper, the WBCS of Rivas-Martinez was applied to the Italian territory and surrounding areas between latitudes 35°47′-46°60′ N and longitudes 5°92′-21°39′ E.
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Bioclimates of Italy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors defined two major updates to the WBCS map of Italy: improvements to the surface spatial accuracy for the climate, especially for precipitation; and detailed mapping of the Submediterraneity Index and its levels, which mainly characterize the ecotone area between the Mediterranean and the Temperate macrobioclimates.
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VegItaly: The Italian collaborative project for a national vegetation database

TL;DR: The VegItaly database as discussed by the authors is a collaborative project supported by the Italian scientific community and developed by a large group of scientists, which contains data from all the Italian regions and stands as an optimal candidate for the development of an Italian national vegetation database.
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Alien brown trout invasion of the Italian peninsula: the role of geological, climate and anthropogenic factors

TL;DR: The reevaluation of genetic data regarding the spread of alien brown trout lineage into Mediterranean salmonids populations with a landscape approach allowed us to reveal the role of important factors implicated with the current pattern of distribution of remnant native populations of salmonids.