Institution
Roma Tre University
Education•Rome, Lazio, Italy•
About: Roma Tre University is a education organization based out in Rome, Lazio, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Large Hadron Collider & Galaxy. The organization has 4434 authors who have published 15352 publications receiving 374888 citations. The organization is also known as: Universita degli Studi Roma Tre & RomaTre.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
30 Dec 2015
TL;DR: The main objectives of this review are the compilation and updating of a reference database for Italian saproxylic beetles, useful to assess the trend of their populations and communities in the next decades and the creation of a baseline for future evaluations of the trends in biodiversity conservation in Italy.
Abstract: The main objectives of this review are: 1) the compilation and updating of a reference database for Italian saproxylic beetles, useful to assess the trend of their populations and communities in the next decades; 2) the identification of the major threats involving the known Italian species of saproxylic beetles; 3) the evaluation of the extinction risk for all known Italian species of saproxylic beetles; 4) the or- ganization of an expert network for studying and continuous updating of all known species of saproxylic beetle species in Italy; 5) the creation of a baseline for future evaluations of the trends in biodiversity conservation in Italy; 6) the assignment of ecological categories to all the Italian saproxylic beetles, useful for the aims of future researches on their communities and on forest environments. The assess- ments of extinction risk are based on the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria and the most updated guidelines. The assessments have been carried out by experts covering different regions of Italy, and have been evaluated according to the IUCN standards. All the beetles whose larval biology is sufficiently well known as to be considered saproxylic have been included in the Red List, either the autochtho- nous species (native or possibly native to Italy) or a few allochthonous species recently introduced or probably introduced to Italy in his- toric times. The entire national range of each saproxylic beetle species was evaluated, including large and small islands; for most species, the main parameters considered for evaluation were the extent of their geographical occurrence in Italy, and the number of known sites of presence. 2049 saproxylic beetle species (belonging to 66 families) have been listed, assigned to a trophic category (Table 3) and 97% of them have been assessed. On the whole, threatened species (VU + EN + CR) are 421 (Fig. 6), corresponding to 21 % of the 1988 as- sessed species; only two species are formally recognized to be probably Regionally Extinct in Italy in recent times. Little less than 65% of the Italian saproxylic beetles are not currently threatened with extinction, although their populations are probably declining. In forest environments, the main threats are habitat loss and fragmentation, pollution due to the use of pesticide against forest pests, and habitat simplification due to economic forest management. In coastal environments, the main threats are due to massive touristic exploitation such as the excess of urbanization and infrastructures along the seashore, and the complete removal of woody materials as tree trunks stranded on the beaches, because this kind of intervention is considered an aesthetic amelioration of seaside resorts. The number of spe- cies whose populations may become impoverished by direct harvest (only a few of large forest beetles frequently collected by insect traders) is very small and almost negligible. The Red List is a fundamental tool for the identification of conservation priorities, but it is not a list of priorities on its own. Other elements instrumental to priority setting include the cost of actions, the probability of success,and the proportion of the global population of each species living in Italy, which determines the national responsibility in the long-term conservation of that species. In this scenario, information on all species endemic to Italy, to Corso-Sardinia, to the Tuscan-Corsican ar- eas, and to the Siculo-Maltese insular system are given. A short analysis on relationships among beetle species traits, taxonomy, special- ist approaches, and IUCN Categories of Risk is also presented.
94 citations
••
TL;DR: The first complete amino acid sequence of a flavin‐containing polyamine oxidase was solved by a combined approach of nucleotide and peptide sequence analysis, and its primary structure was independently confirmed by extensive amino acid sequencing.
94 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, two main morphotypes of Quaternary thermal travertines are reconsidered to understand the reasons for their differential growth: the fissure ridge travertine of Denizli Basin, western Turkey, and the travertin plateau of Tivoli, central Italy.
94 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, the existence of families of small-amplitude, reducible, elliptic, analytic, invariant tori of Hamiltonian derivative wave equations is proved.
Abstract: We prove an infinite dimensional KAM theorem which implies the existence of Cantor families of small-amplitude, reducible, elliptic, analytic, invariant tori of Hamiltonian derivative wave equations.
94 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, the efficiency of detecting b-hadrons was measured using a high purity sample of dileptonic top quark-antiquark pairs selected from the 36.1 fb$^{−1}$ of data collected by the ATLAS detector in 2015 and 2016 from proton-proton collisions produced by the Large Hadron Collider at a centre-of-mass energy of 13 $ TeV.
Abstract: The efficiency to identify jets containing b-hadrons (b-jets) is measured using a high purity sample of dileptonic top quark-antiquark pairs ( $ t\overline{t} $ ) selected from the 36.1 fb$^{−1}$ of data collected by the ATLAS detector in 2015 and 2016 from proton-proton collisions produced by the Large Hadron Collider at a centre-of-mass energy $ \sqrt{s}=13 $ TeV. Two methods are used to extract the efficiency from $ t\overline{t} $ events, a combinatorial likelihood approach and a tag-and-probe method. A boosted decision tree, not using b-tagging information, is used to select events in which two b-jets are present, which reduces the dominant uncertainty in the modelling of the flavour of the jets. The efficiency is extracted for jets in a transverse momentum range from 20 to 300 GeV, with data-to-simulation scale factors calculated by comparing the efficiency measured using collision data to that predicted by the simulation. The two methods give compatible results, and achieve a similar level of precision, measuring data-to-simulation scale factors close to unity with uncertainties ranging from 2% to 12% depending on the jet transverse momentum.
94 citations
Authors
Showing all 4598 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Andrew White | 149 | 1494 | 113874 |
Sw. Banerjee | 146 | 1906 | 124364 |
Fuqiang Wang | 145 | 1518 | 95014 |
Stefano Giagu | 139 | 1651 | 101569 |
Silvia Masi | 139 | 669 | 97618 |
Filippo Ceradini | 131 | 1016 | 82732 |
Mattias Ellert | 131 | 1022 | 82637 |
Francesco Lacava | 130 | 1042 | 79680 |
Giovanni Organtini | 129 | 1438 | 85866 |
Georg Zobernig | 129 | 1125 | 83321 |
Monica Verducci | 129 | 896 | 76002 |
Marzio Nessi | 129 | 1046 | 78641 |
Cristian Stanescu | 128 | 922 | 76446 |
Domizia Orestano | 128 | 982 | 78297 |
Lashkar Kashif | 128 | 782 | 74072 |