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Simone Priori

Researcher at Canadian Real Estate Association

Publications -  61
Citations -  751

Simone Priori is an academic researcher from Canadian Real Estate Association. The author has contributed to research in topics: Soil quality & Vineyard. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 51 publications receiving 567 citations. Previous affiliations of Simone Priori include Consiglio per la ricerca e la sperimentazione in agricoltura & University of Siena.

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Soil erosion risk, Sicilian Region (1:250,000 scale)

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors estimate the rate of soil erosion by water (tons'ha−1 year−1) applying the Universal Soil Loss Equation model, using the map of soil content to the effective rooting depth.
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Using the ARP-03 for high-resolution mapping of calcic horizons

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a fast and cheap method for high-resolution mapping of calcic horizons in vineyards based on geoelectrical proximal sensing, which is used for vine vigour assessment.
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Tracing the 87Sr/86Sr from rocks and soils to vine and wine: An experimental study on geologic and pedologic characterisation of vineyards using radiogenic isotope of heavy elements.

TL;DR: The findings of the experiments indicate that the biological activity of the vine is not able to change the original 87Sr/86Sr composition up-taken from the bio-available fraction of the soil, thus, the 87SR/ 86Sr of the wine is an unadulterated feature of the terroir.

A combined geophysical-pedological approach for precision viticulture in the Chianti hills

TL;DR: In this paper, a combination of both geophysical and pedological survey techniques was used to identify areas with uniform soil properties within 4 test vineyards of the “Barone Ricasoli” farm, located in the Chianti wine district (Tuscany, central Italy) and to evaluate the relationships between soil properties and wine quality.
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Assessment of color response and activity rhythms of the invasive black planthopper Ricania speculum (Walker, 1851) using sticky traps.

TL;DR: Strategies for controlling the black planthopper Ricania speculum should consider concentrating trapping effort during the activity peak, using green sticky traps to enhance the capture success of each trap, with the lowest impact over non-target species.