Università degli Studi di Bari

Il Dipartimento di Biologia dell’Università degli Studi di Bari Aldo Moro è storicamente caratterizzato da numerosi settori scientifici disciplinari (14 SSD) e dalla relativa diversificazione delle tematiche di ricerca (29 laboratori) tra le sedi di Bari e di Taranto, rispetto alle quali esistono interazioni e sinergie tra i settori, con la diffusione, valorizzazione e trasferimento dei risultati a livello nazionale e internazionale.

L' Università degli Studi di Bari in LifeWatch Italia

Il Dipartimento di Biologia ha contribuito sin dall’inizio alla creazione della infrastruttura di LifeWatch Italia. Ha contribuito alla realizzazione ed al coordinamento delle attività del Centro Tematico Mediterraneo (CTM) collegando i nodi di una fitta rete di istituzioni e consentendo, attraverso la realizzazione di strumenti e servizi, di promuove lo studio della relazione tra biodiversità e processi ecosistemici. Ha contribuito alla realizzazione degli strumenti di gestione dei dati di biodiversità sul data portal LifeWatch Italia e del Virtual Research Environment “Alien Species” (AS-VRE) all’interno del quale è stato testato il caso di studio “Ecosystem vulnerability to alien and invasive species”. Attualmente vede coinvolti i gruppi di ricerca su “Biodiversità animale”, “Ecologia”, “Sistematica, ecologia e sviluppo delle piante” che hanno contribuito a realizzare la base di dati di biodiversità primaria di una ampia gamma di organismi, grazie alla compartecipazione a numerosi progetti di ricerca nazionali ed internazionali su ambienti terrestri, dulciacquicoli, lagunari e marini. Il Dipartimento ha contribuito con dati su specie vegetali e vertebrati terrestri, specie ittiche e risorse alieutiche, invertebrati acquatici, distribuite negli ecosistemi del Mediterraneo centrale. Il Dipartimento si avvale delle più moderne tecniche di monitoraggio strumentale per indagare la biodiversità degli ecosistemi marini dalla fascia costiera al piano batiale. Dispone, inoltre, di una base dati di 35 anni sulle risorse demersali del Mar Ionio e la relativa biodiversità.

Contatti

Nome: Giuseppe Corriero
Ruolo: Coordinatore del Centro Tematico Mediterraneo, membro della JRU, coordinatore casi di studio del CTM
Email: giuseppe.corriero@uniba.it

Nome: Gianfranco D’Onghia
Ruolo: membro dell' Assemblea Generale della JRU
Email: gianfranco.donghia@uniba.it

Segui Università degli Studi di Bari Aldo Moro

Marco A. Bologna

Born in Torino (1954), resident in Roma. Zoologist at the Ministry for Cultural Assets and Environments, before university career as a Zoologist at Sapienza University of Rome (Fellowship), L’Aquila (Researcher), Tuscia (Associate Professor), Roma Tre (Associate and Full Professor). Academic appointments at Roma Tre University: currently Director of the Department of Science and Member of the Academic Senate.  “A. Garbini” national award in Zoogeography. Associate in Research at the University of California, Riverside, department of Entomology. Fellowship of the Center for Systematic Entomology, Gainesville, Florida. Reviewer of several international biological journals. Member of the Council of the Majella National Park; Member of the Committee of the State Reserve of Roman Shore. Secretary and President of the “Fauna d’Italia” Editorial Board and Scientific Committee. Member of the Italian National Academy of Entomology. Already Vice President of the Italian Herpetological Society, Vice President of the Roman Entomological Society, appointed President of the Italian Entomological Society.  Coordinator of several research projects financed by the Ministry of Education, University and Research and other institutions, and of LIFE project (CE). Research activity in Systematics, Biogeography, Animal Ecology, Conservation Biology. Author of more than 400 scientific contributions, including more than 200 international papers (or chapters of books), and of 15 monographs and books.

Marzio Zapparoli

Born in Mantova (1955). He lives in Rome. Biologist (1979). Executive Zoologist at the Ministry of Cultural and Environmental Heritage (1985-1986). His university career took place at the University of Tuscia (Viterbo), first as a researcher (1986-2001, Agricultural Entomology), then (since 2001) as associate professor of Zoology. Currently affiliated with the Department for Innovation in Biological, Agri-food and Forestry systems (DIBAF) of the same University. Treasurer Secretary of the Scientific Committee for Italian Fauna since 2012. Member of the Board of the Italian Society of Biogeography since 2019. Former member of the Board of the Italian Zoological Union and President of the Fauna Commission (2014-2018). Ordinary member of the Italian National Academy of Entomology since 2012. Its scientific activity mainly deals with systematics, fauna, ecology and zoogeography of centipedes. Other areas of interest are terrestrial zoocoenoses in forest environments and urban areas, alien and invasive species, nature conservation, biospeleology.

Alessandro Minelli

Born in Treviso (1948), Alessandro Minelli has been full professor of Zoology at the University of Padova, vice-president (1997-99) of the European Society for Evolutionary Biology as well as a member (1989-2013) and president (1996-2001) of the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature.  Member of the Accademia Nazionale delle Scienze detta dei XL; honorary member of the Italian Embryological Group; honorary fellow of the Royal Entomological Society (London); Sherborn Award 2008 for outstanding service to biodiversity informatics; Medal for the Physical and Natural Sciences of the Accademia Nazionale delle Scienze detta dei XL (2002); Ferrari-Soave Award for Animal Biology (2005) of the Accademia delle Scienze di Torino. Coordinator of the Italian Fauna Checklist (1991-95). He has worked for a long time on biological systematics and biodiversity. More recently, his main interest has been turned towards evolutionary developmental biology and the philosophy of biology. His books include the monograph on Hirudinea in Fauna d’Italia; Biological Systematics; The Development of Animal Form; Forme del divenire; Perspectives in Animal Phylogeny and Evolution; Plant Evolutionary Developmental Biology; Biologia, la scienza di tutti i viventi; Understanding Development.

Marco Oliverio

Born in Rome on 31.10.1964. MSc in Biology. PhD in Evolutionary Biology. Full Professor of Zoology at the Faculty of Sciences (Sapienza University of Rome). Teaching: Animal Diversity, Adaptive Zoology, Evolutionary Zoology, Zoologia, Systematic Zoology, Principles and Methods of Phylogenetic Systematics, Evolutionary Biology, Malacology, Systematic Biology, Animal Biology, Marine Biodiversity. Seminars for the Universities of Palermo, Tuscia (Viterbo), Roma Tre, Tor Vergata, Padova, New Mexico, Utah, Madrid (Autonoma) and Wien. Collaboration in the SOCRATES and ERASMUS Programmes. Member of the Board for PhDs in Environmental and Evolutionary Biology (Sapienza). Tutor of over 80 theses for Biology degrees and 5 PhD theses. Research – Collaboration in national and international research programmes. Research campaigns and oceanographic cruises (national and international) in the Mediterranean, Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans and Antarctica. Member of editorial boards and referee of national and international scientific journals. “Maître de conférence” at the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle of Paris. Research activities can be summarised under the following main headings: Evolutionary Biology; Population Genetics and Molecular Systematics; Animal Ecology; Biodiversity (patterns and dynamics). Over 150 scientific papers (mostly as single, first or last author), and over 60 congress abstracts. Bibliometrics [Scopus/GScholar] Number of papers – Scopus: 97 GScholar: 169 //  Citations- Scopus: 1477 GScholar: 2473 // H – Scopus: 23 Gscholar: 27

Lucio Bonato

Naturalist and Zoologist, Associate Professor at the Department of Biology of the University of Padua. His research activity is mainly focused on the phylogeny and systematics of Chilopoda, but also on the faunistic studies and ecology of Amphibia and Rhopalocera. He coordinated wildlife surveys at regional and national level as well as species monitoring, in mountain terrestrial habitats in particular. He also promoted training and knowledge dissemination on biodiversity at regional and national level.

Fabio Stoch

Research contractor at the Italian National Research Council (CNR-IRET). Previous activities in the field of zoological database management include, among others: EU Project PASCALIS (“Protocols for the assessment and conservation of aquatic life in the subsurface” 2002–2004, as db workpackage leader); IT Project CKmap (“Checklist and distribution of the Italian fauna – 10,000 terrestrial and inland water species” 2003-2006, as volume and database co-editor); EU Project PESI (“Pan-European Species-directories infrastructure” 2009-2011, as the Italian Focal Point manager for PESI databases); EU 7th PCRD project BIOFRESH (“Biodiversity of Freshwater Ecosystems” 2009-2013, as a member of the team of groundwater crustacean db); IT Project “Implementation of a National Monitoring Plan for the species of Community interest included in the Habitats Directive” 2015-2016, ISPRA and the Italian Ministry for the Environment, as a task leader for animal species, and 3rd (2013 – 2014) and 4th (2018-2019) “National Reports ex art. 18 Habitats Directive”, as a national coordinator of freshwater and terrestrial faunal reports and checklists. Specialist in freshwater crustaceans (over 300 publications) and member of the Ecological & Evolutionary Genomics team at the Université libre de Bruxelles since 2016, working on crustacean molecular taxonomy, phylogeny and biogeography.

Fabio Cianferoni

Fabio Cianferoni was born in Florence in 1981. Researcher at the Italian National Research Council (CNR), Research Institute on Terrestrial Ecosystems (IRET), Florence, Italy. After graduating in Biological Sciences, he got a PhD in Ethology, Animal Ecology and Anthropology at the University of Florence. He collaborated for several years with the Natural History Museum of the University of Florence (ongoing) and with the National Forestry Corps and the CNR (research fellow). His main fields of study are entomology, zoology, systematics, taxonomy, nomenclature, biodiversity, distribution and faunistic, in particular concerning aquatic Hemiptera Heteroptera, a taxon of which he is a world specialist, as well as dealing with other zoological groups. He participated in several international projects (e.g., Catalogue of Life, Fauna Europaea, i4Life, DEST, LifeWatch), international collaborations and scientific missions (e.g., in Malaysia, Ecuador, Vietnam). He authored more than 140 scientific publications and described some taxa that were new to science.