10 Maggio 2023

Una review elaborata dai ricercatori del CNR-ISP di Messina, recentemente pubblicata sulla rivista Science of the Total Environment, ha preso in esame i dati relativi all’inquinamento causato da microplastiche nelle acque dolci dell'Artico, dell'Antartide e nell’altopiano in Tibet, un habitat denominato Terzo Polo che racchiude il 15% dei ghiacci di tutto il Pianeta. I risultati mettono in evidenza una crescente diffusione di questi polimeri, e la conseguente creazione di microecosistemi artificiali basati sulla plastica. Tale tipologia di inquinamento rappresenta, oggi, una minaccia a livello globale, anche in considerazione del grande aumento di produzione della plastica, che è passata da 1,5 milioni di tonnellate negli anni Cinquanta del secolo scorso, ai 359 milioni di tonnellate nel 2018.  

Comunicato stampa CNR - DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.161847 - Maurizio Azzaro (CNR-ISP)

Veduta sul campo remoto del progetto EastGRIP - Groenlandia -  © Helle Kjær - East Greenland Ice-core Project

12 Maggio 2023

Il mercurio, inquinante globale estremamente tossico per salute e ambiente, è al centro di un nuovo studio a guida italiana appena pubblicato sulla rivista scientifica Nature Geoscience. Condotto dall’Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, in collaborazione con il CNR-ISP e altri partner internazionali, l'articolo mostra come i livelli di mercurio in Artico siano fortemente influenzati dal cambiamento climatico. I ricercatori hanno osservato, analizzando una carota estratta in Groenlandia nel contesto del progetto EastGRIP (East GReenland Ice core Project), la dinamica del mercurio tra 9.000 e 16.000 anni fa, durante la transizione tra l’ultimo periodo glaciale e l’attuale periodo climatico, l’Olocene. Secondo il lavoro, la fusione del ghiaccio marino a seguito dell’aumento di temperature durante l’ultima transizione glaciale-interglaciale ha causato un rilascio più elevato di mercurio in atmosfera. Inoltre, la sostituzione del ghiaccio marino pluriannuale con quello stagionale, favorisce complesse reazioni chimiche che promuovono la deposizione di questo elemento nelle regioni polari.  Comunicato stampa CNR  - DOI:10.1038/s41561-023-01172-9  - Andrea Spolaor (CNR-ISP)

Veduta sul campo remoto del progetto EastGRIP - Groenlandia -  © Helle Kjær - East Greenland Ice-core Project

12 Maggio 2023

Il mercurio, inquinante globale estremamente tossico per salute e ambiente, è al centro di un nuovo studio a guida italiana appena pubblicato sulla rivista scientifica Nature Geoscience. Condotto dall’Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, in collaborazione con il CNR-ISP e altri partner internazionali, l'articolo mostra come i livelli di mercurio in Artico siano fortemente influenzati dal cambiamento climatico. I ricercatori hanno osservato, analizzando una carota estratta in Groenlandia nel contesto del progetto EastGRIP (East GReenland Ice core Project), la dinamica del mercurio tra 9.000 e 16.000 anni fa, durante la transizione tra l’ultimo periodo glaciale e l’attuale periodo climatico, l’Olocene. Secondo il lavoro, la fusione del ghiaccio marino a seguito dell’aumento di temperature durante l’ultima transizione glaciale-interglaciale ha causato un rilascio più elevato di mercurio in atmosfera. Inoltre, la sostituzione del ghiaccio marino pluriannuale con quello stagionale, favorisce complesse reazioni chimiche che promuovono la deposizione di questo elemento nelle regioni polari.  Comunicato stampa CNR  - DOI:10.1038/s41561-023-01172-9  - Andrea Spolaor (CNR-ISP)

10 Maggio 2023

Una review elaborata dai ricercatori del CNR-ISP di Messina, recentemente pubblicata sulla rivista Science of the Total Environment, ha preso in esame i dati relativi all’inquinamento causato da microplastiche nelle acque dolci dell'Artico, dell'Antartide e nell’altopiano in Tibet, un habitat denominato Terzo Polo che racchiude il 15% dei ghiacci di tutto il Pianeta. I risultati mettono in evidenza una crescente diffusione di questi polimeri, e la conseguente creazione di microecosistemi artificiali basati sulla plastica. Tale tipologia di inquinamento rappresenta, oggi, una minaccia a livello globale, anche in considerazione del grande aumento di produzione della plastica, che è passata da 1,5 milioni di tonnellate negli anni Cinquanta del secolo scorso, ai 359 milioni di tonnellate nel 2018.  

Comunicato stampa CNR - DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.161847 - Maurizio Azzaro (CNR-ISP)

Icebergs in the Kongsfjorden (Svalbard Island) © Luisa Patrolecco CNR-ISP The research activities carried out within the Thematic Area Contaminants and Ecosystems are aimed at studying the sources, transport dynamics, diffusion and fate of regulated and emerging contaminants, including micro/nano-plastics and trace elements, in polar ecosystems. These ecosystems are particularly sensitive to external perturbations, such as human activities and climate change. In fact, the Polar regions constitute the final sink for many pollutants emitted at mid-latitudes and transported on a regional and global scale (long-range) through atmospheric and oceanic circulation and migratory animals: all drivers influenced by the ongoing climate change. Global warming has also favored a growing anthropic impact in the polar areas due to the development of tourist activities, mining and maritime traffic with a consequent increase in the local input of contamination, including noise pollution. The direct and indirect effects of these changes combined with the different dynamics of contamination are causing the fragmentation and destruction of habitats, the alteration of aquatic and terrestrial food webs, as well as loss of diversity with repercussions also on Arctic populations.
Valley at the base of the Austre-Vestre Brøggerbreen glaciers © Francesca Spataro CNR-ISP In this context, the multidisciplinary skills that converge in this Thematic Area constitutes an indispensable requirement for understanding the effects due to anthropic impact and climate change in polar ecosystems by following a One Health approach and aiming at a sustainable management of these vulnerable environments in the near future.

The main lines of investigation refer to the following areas: development and optimization of highly sensitive analytical methods for the detection of pollutants in the abiotic and biotic environmental compartments, understanding of transport and distribution processes in ecosystems, evaluation of the interactions with biota and the ecological effects, study of the capability of ecosystems to adapt and respond to contamination.

 

 

Main ERC panels:
• LS8 - Environmental Biology, Ecology and Evolution
• PE4 - Physical and Analytical Chemical Sciences
• PE10 - Earth System Science
 
Referents: Elena Barbaro, Maria Papale, Luisa Patrolecco, Francesca Spataro
 
Contact: info-impacts AT isp.cnr.it 

Sottotematiche

The ‘Blue Marble’, taken by NASA/Apollo 17 crew in 1972 The main activities of the thematic area Earth Observation (EO) and Polar Ecosystem Modeling include remote and proximal sensing, spatial analysis, thematic mapping, and geographic and environmental knowledge organization. The activity focuses on three main methodological pillars: remote and in situ observations, information organization, and representation by numerical and conceptual models. The Spegazzini Glacier (Los Glaciares National Park, Santa Cruz, Argentina, January 2010), together with the Upsala and the Perito Moreno Glaciers, feeds the Lago Argentino in the Los Glaciares National Park © Chiara Venier CNR-ISP The research of this thematic area focuses on the responses of polar ecosystems to changes in air and sea temperature, in polar ice caps, in sea level height, and in persistence and thickness of snowpack and ice, also through the comparisons of climate belts. Analyses also cover permafrost evolution, coastal erosion, accretion processes, release and segregation of climate-altering gases, biogeochemical cycles, and biodiversity. The observational methodologies aim to detect environmental and climate dynamics at different spatial and temporal scales by identifying and studying multiple essential variables and their biological and geophysical interactions by integrating information from different platforms. The continuous comparison allows the combination of spatial and ecological models with observations.

 

Example of hyeraricacal structure for the term "ice" in the thesaurus "SnowTerm" for the Cryosphere The team has a group dedicated to organizing multilingual terminological knowledge, thesauri, and metadata to support data description and environmental information, focusing on polar environments. The subject area develops, by Findable Accessible Interoperable Reusable (FAIR) principles, data chains and products to support the study of terrestrial, aquatic, and cryosphere systems and the development of interoperable GIS, thematic mapping, and operational services. Figure 1: the Spegazzini Glacier (Los Glaciares National Park, Santa Cruz, Argentina, January 2010), together with the Upsala and the Perito Moreno Glaciers, feeds the Lago Argentino in the Los Glaciares National Park, in this photo, the calving-type glacier front is visible, characterized by abundant seracs, which can reach 135 m in height.

 

Main ERC Panels:
• LS8 - Environmental Biology, Ecology and Evolution
• PE10 - Earth System Science
• SH7 - Human Mobility, Environment, and Space
• SH2 - Institutions, Values, Environment and Space

Referents: Francesco De Biasio, Francesco Filiciotto, Emiliana Valentini, Matteo Zucchetta
 
Contacts: info-observation AT isp.cnr.it

Sub-Theme

The Anthropocene Epoch is a novel, yet unofficial, unit of geologic time, used to describe the most recent period in Earth’s history when human activity started to have a significant impact on the planet’s climate and ecosystems. The Anthropocene is also a period characterized by an unprecedented technology level that allows us to measure essential variables of the climate system (ECVs) at high temporal resolution (e.g. satellites) and forecast future climate scenarios using state-of-the-art supercomputers based on Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs). However, instrumental records exist only since the mid XX century while simulations are time-limited to a few centuries. Thus, it remains elusive whether the documented and predicted changes are part of the long-term natural variability of the climate system. In this respect, climate archives such as ice cores, marine/lake sediment cores, corals, speleothems and tree-rings offer an extraordinary perspective of the past climate evolution and, thus, they represent a fundamental benchmark to place on-going climate change into a larger context of long-term natural climate variability. In particular, the past climate is punctuated by important climate events that can be used as examples (not necessarily analogues) to assess the rate of natural changes and understand the interactions between critical components of the climate system including external and internal forcings. Thus, paleo-climatology is a fundamental research field for the study of the Anthropocene as it provides insight into how Earth's climate system works and how it may change in the future. This, ultimately, improves climate models by lowering uncertainties on future projections.
Natural archives of past climate history are pillars for paleoclimatologists as they literally represent time machines. Scientists look for clues of past events in these records as biological, geochemical, and sedimentary indicators used for the empirical quantification of climatic and environmental parameters, something generally referred to as proxies. Each type of archive comes with its benefits and drawbacks. Thus, paleo-studies greatly benefit from the integration of complementary archives together to have an interdisciplinary overview on how the climate system works.

Main ERC Panels:
• PE4_5 - Analytical chemistry
• PE4_18 - Environment chemistry
• PE10_1 - Atmospheric chemistry, atmospheric composition, air pollution
• PE10_3 - Climatology and climate change
• PE10_6 - Palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology
• PE10_8 - Oceanography (physical, chemical, biological, geological)
• PE10_9 - Biogeochemistry, biogeochemical cycles, environmental chemistry
• PE10_11 - Geochemistry, cosmochemistry, crystal chemistry, isotope geochemistry, thermodynamics
• PE10_18 - Cryosphere, dynamics of snow and ice cover, sea ice, permafrosts and ice sheets

Referents: Andrea Spolaor, Tommaso Tesi

Contact: info-paleoclimate AT isp.cnr.it

Sub-themes

Changes and evolution of polar systems: processes, feedback mechanisms and interactions on a global scale
 
Remote camp © CNR-ISP The Earth system is highly interconnected. In this thematic area research activities are aimed at deepening our understanding of the processes and interactions among the different components of the climate system and assessing its responses to global changes. A more comprehensive and holistic understanding of the polar system is needed to guide future climate policy decisions. The knowledge of the characteristics of the polar atmosphere is crucial for studying the biogeochemical cycles of natural chemical species, the long-range transport processes of pollutants and climate-altering compounds and the feedback mechanisms triggered by the atmospheric warming and the interaction of the atmosphere with the cryosphere and oceans.
Sea ice forming - Ross Sea Antarctica © Federico Giglio PNRA The cryosphere constitutes a very fragile portion of the Earth system, made even more vulnerable by climate change. Through multidisciplinary and interconnected research activities, the study of snow and ice, their chemical composition and their main physical parameters, the evolution of the permafrost and the increased melting impact on the atmosphere, biosphere and hydrosphere at both regional and global levels is being pursued.
The hydrosphere consists largely of the oceans, which influence the Earth system in all its spheres by storing and redistributing fresh water, heat, climate-altering gases, and other particulate and dissolved substances. Oceanographic research supports more accurate predictions of global changes by studying the chemical and physical properties of seas and oceans, their movements, energy exchanges with the atmosphere, the organisms that inhabit them, and the geological structure of ocean basins. Polar limnological environments are studied as both sentinels of climate change and to investigate the responses of their short trophic net to these changes, including anthropogenic perturbations.
Polar ecosystems are an important reservoir of natural resources and can partly mitigate the effects of climate change from which they are threatened today. The study of biodiversity and resilience to global changes with an ecosystem approach, integrating the influence of environmental factors, community-level interspecific relationships, and socio-economic aspects is a challenge for effective and sustainable management of natural resources.

Main ERC Panels:
• LS8 - Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology
• PE4 - Physical and Analytical Chemical Sciences
• PE10 - Earth System Science
• SH2 - Institutions, Values, Environment and Space
• SH7 - Human Mobility, Environment, and Space
 
Referentes: Nicoletta Ademollo, Maurizio Azzaro, Fabiana Corami, Federico Giglio, Stefania Gilardoni
 
Contact: info-polarchanges AT isp.cnr.it
 
Sub-themes

Thursday, 04 May 2023 13:43

Thematic Area 5 - BIOSCIENCES

Sampling at Don Juan Pond - East Antarctic region © Angelo Odetti - PNRA The Biosciences thematic area deals with the study of the biosphere in polar areas at different levels of biological complexity, from molecules to ecosystems and up to biomes. In particular, the attention is focused on the description and quantification of the biodiversity of the organisms that inhabit polar environments, to evaluate their structural and functional complexity. In this regard, scenarios of population shifts, changes in biodiversity and biogeochemical processes deriving from climate change and human impact are evaluated. The main interest is focused on the interactions between biological and ecological aspects, together with abiotic processes and effects on the carbon cycle and energy flows in the polar regions. Further fields of investigation concern the research of biomolecules of microbial origin, the ability of polar microorganisms to degrade organic contaminants and astrobiological aspects linked to life in extreme environments.
The central themes of the research carried out within the Biosciences Thematic Area are (1) structural and functional organization of polar ecosystems and dynamics of populations and communities; (2) response of individuals, populations and communities to external influences of climatic and anthropogenic origin (including loss and fragmentation of habitat, withdrawal, extraction, pollution, etc.); (3) biotechnological implications deriving from adaptation to low temperatures and/or other physical-chemical factors.
Salinity measurement at Don Juan Pond - East Antarctic region © Angelo Odetti - PNRA Research objectives include:
• the study of structural and functional diversity and the ecophysiology of polar organisms, to shed light on the limits of adaptation, also in relation to climate change and human impacts;
• the study of biogeochemistry and ecology in marine and terrestrial habitats at the Poles, including the environmental factors controlling biological interactions;
• the estimation of the biotechnological potential of organisms adapted to life at low temperatures and/or other physical-chemical factors;
• the exploration of behavior and evolution of polar ecosystems, through spatial-temporal analyses of ecological processes;
• the management and conservation of polar marine resources;
• comparison between trends observed in polar areas and middle latitudes. The Thematic Area Biosciences is organized into the 4 sections, i.e. Biodiversity and adaptation, Biogeochemistry, Biotechnology and Astrobiology.

Main ERC Panels:
• LS8 - Environmental Biology, Ecology and Evolution
• LS9 - Biotechnology and Biosystems Engineering
• PE10 - Earth System Science
 
Referents: Angelina Lo Giudice, Mario La Mesa, Cairns Warren Raymond Lee
 
Contact: info-biosciences AT isp.cnr.it

Sub-themes

Thursday, 04 May 2023 09:24

HALOPHARM

Title: HALOarchaea as the source of novel enzymes for PHARMaceutics
Acronym: HALOPHARM
Principal investigator ISP: Violetta La Cono
Leading Institution: Institute of Polar Sciences (CNR-ISP)
Funding: Bilateral Agreement CNR/VAST
Period of activity: 2023 - 2024

Page 26 of 83

ministero Ministero degli Affari Esteri e della Cooperazione Internazionale
L'Italia e l’Artico
L’Italia e l’Antartide

logo pnra trasparente piccolo logo  PRA

   CNR-ISP
   National Research Council
   Institute of Polar Sciences
   c/o Scientific Campus - Ca' Foscari University Venice - Via Torino, 155 - 30172 VENEZIA MESTRE (VE)
   Phone: +39 041 2348547 - E-mail: protocollo.isp AT pec.cnr.it
   Fax: +39 041 2348 549 - Codice Fiscale: 80054330586 - P.I.:02118311006

   Unless otherwise indicated, the content of this site is licensed : Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

   Privacy policy e Cookie policy - Transparent administration (CNR)