Lorenzo Marini
University of Padua
169 Papers
500 Citations
Lorenzo Marini is an academic researcher from University of Padua. The author has contributed to research in topics: Species richness & Biodiversity. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 151 publications. Previous affiliations of Lorenzo Marini include University of Sheffield & Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences.
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Papers
Efficacy of Two Common Methods of Application of Residual Insecticide for Controlling the Asian Tiger Mosquito, Aedes albopictus (Skuse), in Urban Areas.
Lorenzo Marini,Alberto Baseggio,Andrea Drago,Simone Martini,Paolo Manella,Roberto Romi,Luca Mazzon +6 more
TL;DR: Emergency measures to locally reduce the vector populations should adopt adulticide treatments using stretcher sprayers, but more research is still needed to evaluate the potential negative effects of adulticide applications on non-target organisms.
Oviposition site preference of Barbitistes vicetinus (Orthoptera, Tettigoniidae) during outbreaks
TL;DR: Although B. vicetinus is commonly found in vineyards, where it can cause severe damage, these habitats did not offer to the species suitable oviposition sites and these results provide useful insights with respect to the management of B. Vicetinus outbreaks.
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A multi-scale study of Orthoptera species richness and human population size controlling for sampling effort.
Elena Cantarello,Claude E. Steck,Paolo Fontana,Diego Fontaneto,Lorenzo Marini,Marco Pautasso +5 more
TL;DR: The hypothesis that broad-scale human population–biodiversity correlations can in some cases be artefactual is confirmed, and more systematic sampling of less studied taxa such as invertebrates is necessary to ascertain whether biogeographical patterns persist when sampling effort is kept constant or included in models.
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Testing indicators of epiphytic lichen diversity: a case study in N Italy
TL;DR: The predictability of a standardized and widely used biomonitoring method for estimating total lichen diversity on trunks (LDV-index) was tested and suggests that the LDV standard methodology can be used also for estimates of Lichen diversity.
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