Automated Author Profile

Scarponi, Daniele

Current S-Index

16.0

Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets

Average Dataset Index per Dataset

0.8

Average Dataset Index per dataset

Total Datasets

20

Total datasets for this author

Average FAIR Score

37.4%

Average FAIR Score per dataset

Total Citations

2

Total citations to the author's datasets

Total Mentions

0

Total mentions of the author's datasets

S-Index Interpretation

S-Index Over Time

Cumulative Citations Over Time

Cumulative Mentions Over Time

Datasets

Data from Spatial patterns of trematode-induced pits on Chamelea gallina

These datasets provide spatially explicit information on trematode-induced malformations in late Holocene samples of the commercially relevant bivalve Chamelea gallina from the northern Adriatic, Italy. Abbreviations: Bx = Bookstein shape coordinate x, By = Bookstein shape coordinate y. All linear measurements are in millimeters (mm). Supplementary Data S1. Assembled point data on trematode-induced pits on C. gallina. This dataset provides the locations and sizes of trematode-induced pits in the examined valves. It includes the original landmark coordinates as well as the rotated, scaled, and translated coordinates obtained through Bookstein baseline registration.Supplementary Data S2. Outer area. This dataset provides rotated, scaled, and translated coordinates of the observation window obtained through Bookstein baseline registration.Supplementary Data S3. Internal area. This dataset provides rotated, scaled, and translated coordinates of the area used as a reference, obtained through Bookstein baseline registration.

Authors

  • Rojas, Alexis ;
  • Scarponi, Daniele ;
  • Huntley, John Warren
0 Citations0 Mentions65% FAIR1.4 Dataset Index
10.17632/yvk95x9nxc.2February 2025

Data from Spatial patterns of trematode-induced pits on Chamelea gallina

These datasets provide spatially explicit information on trematode-induced malformations in late Holocene samples of the commercially relevant bivalve Chamelea gallina from the northern Adriatic, Italy. Abbreviations: Bx = Bookstein shape coordinate x, By = Bookstein shape coordinate y. All linear measurements are in millimeters (mm). Supplementary Data S1. Assembled point data on trematode-induced pits on C. gallina. This dataset provides the locations and sizes of trematode-induced pits in the examined valves. It includes the original landmark coordinates as well as the rotated, scaled, and translated coordinates obtained through Bookstein baseline registration.Supplementary Data S2. Outer area. This dataset provides rotated, scaled, and translated coordinates of the observation window obtained through Bookstein baseline registration.Supplementary Data S3. Internal area. This dataset provides rotated, scaled, and translated coordinates of the area used as a reference, obtained through Bookstein baseline registration.

Authors

  • Rojas, Alexis ;
  • Scarponi, Daniele ;
  • Huntley, John Warren
0 Citations0 Mentions65% FAIR1.4 Dataset Index
10.17632/yvk95x9nxcJanuary 2025

Data from Spatial patterns of trematode-induced pits on Chamelea gallina

These datasets provide spatially explicit information on trematode-induced malformations in late Holocene samples of the commercially relevant bivalve Chamelea gallina from the northern Adriatic, Italy. Abbreviations: Bx = Bookstein shape coordinate x, By = Bookstein shape coordinate y. All linear measurements are in millimeters (mm). Supplementary Data S1. Assembled point data on trematode-induced pits on C. gallina. This dataset provides the locations and sizes of trematode-induced pits in the examined valves. It includes the original landmark coordinates as well as the rotated, scaled, and translated coordinates obtained through Bookstein baseline registration.Supplementary Data S2. Outer area. This dataset provides rotated, scaled, and translated coordinates of the observation window obtained through Bookstein baseline registration.Supplementary Data S3. Internal area. This dataset provides rotated, scaled, and translated coordinates of the area used as a reference, obtained through Bookstein baseline registration.

Authors

  • Rojas, Alexis ;
  • Scarponi, Daniele ;
  • Huntley, John Warren
0 Citations0 Mentions65% FAIR1.4 Dataset Index
10.17632/yvk95x9nxc.1January 2025

Source code in R for size analyses from Ecological regime shift preserved in the Anthropocene stratigraphic record

Palaeoecological data are unique historical archives that extend back far beyond the last several decades of ecological observations. However, the fossil record of continental shelves has been perceived as too coarse (with centennial-millennial resolution) and incomplete to detect processes occurring at yearly or decadal scales relevant to ecology and conservation. Here, we show that the youngest (Anthropocene) fossil record on the northern Adriatic continental shelf provides decadal-scale resolution that accurately documents an abrupt ecological change affecting benthic communities during the twentieth century. The magnitude and the duration of the twentieth century shift in body size of the bivalve Corbula gibba is unprecedented given that regional populations of this species were dominated by small-size classes throughout the Holocene. The shift coincided with compositional changes in benthic assemblages, driven by an increase from approximately 25% to approximately 70% in median per-assemblage abundance of C. gibba. This regime shift increase occurred preferentially at sites that experienced at least one hypoxic event per decade in the twentieth century. Larger size and higher abundance of C. gibba likely reflect ecological release as it coincides with an increase in the frequency of seasonal hypoxia that triggered mass mortality of competitors and predators. Higher frequency of hypoxic events is coupled with a decline in the depth of intense sediment mixing by burrowing benthic organisms from several decimetres to less than 20 cm, significantly improving the stratigraphic resolution of Anthropocene fossil record and making it possible to detect sub-centennial ecological changes on continental shelves.

Authors

  • Tomašových, Adam ;
  • Albano, Paolo G. ;
  • Tomáš Fuksi ;
  • Gallmetzer, Ivo ;
  • Haselmair, Alexandra ;
  • Michał Kowalewski ;
  • Rafał Nawrot ;
  • Nerlović, Vedrana ;
  • Scarponi, Daniele ;
  • Zuschin, Martin
0 Citations0 Mentions13% FAIR0.3 Dataset Index
10.6084/m9.figshare.12429350.v1January 2020

Source code in R for size analyses from Ecological regime shift preserved in the Anthropocene stratigraphic record

Palaeoecological data are unique historical archives that extend back far beyond the last several decades of ecological observations. However, the fossil record of continental shelves has been perceived as too coarse (with centennial-millennial resolution) and incomplete to detect processes occurring at yearly or decadal scales relevant to ecology and conservation. Here, we show that the youngest (Anthropocene) fossil record on the northern Adriatic continental shelf provides decadal-scale resolution that accurately documents an abrupt ecological change affecting benthic communities during the twentieth century. The magnitude and the duration of the twentieth century shift in body size of the bivalve Corbula gibba is unprecedented given that regional populations of this species were dominated by small-size classes throughout the Holocene. The shift coincided with compositional changes in benthic assemblages, driven by an increase from approximately 25% to approximately 70% in median per-assemblage abundance of C. gibba. This regime shift increase occurred preferentially at sites that experienced at least one hypoxic event per decade in the twentieth century. Larger size and higher abundance of C. gibba likely reflect ecological release as it coincides with an increase in the frequency of seasonal hypoxia that triggered mass mortality of competitors and predators. Higher frequency of hypoxic events is coupled with a decline in the depth of intense sediment mixing by burrowing benthic organisms from several decimetres to less than 20 cm, significantly improving the stratigraphic resolution of Anthropocene fossil record and making it possible to detect sub-centennial ecological changes on continental shelves.

Authors

  • Tomašových, Adam ;
  • Albano, Paolo G. ;
  • Tomáš Fuksi ;
  • Gallmetzer, Ivo ;
  • Haselmair, Alexandra ;
  • Michał Kowalewski ;
  • Rafał Nawrot ;
  • Nerlović, Vedrana ;
  • Scarponi, Daniele ;
  • Zuschin, Martin
0 Citations0 Mentions13% FAIR0.3 Dataset Index
10.6084/m9.figshare.12429350January 2020

Source code in R for analyses of sensitivity of shifts to time averaging from Ecological regime shift preserved in the Anthropocene stratigraphic record

Palaeoecological data are unique historical archives that extend back far beyond the last several decades of ecological observations. However, the fossil record of continental shelves has been perceived as too coarse (with centennial-millennial resolution) and incomplete to detect processes occurring at yearly or decadal scales relevant to ecology and conservation. Here, we show that the youngest (Anthropocene) fossil record on the northern Adriatic continental shelf provides decadal-scale resolution that accurately documents an abrupt ecological change affecting benthic communities during the twentieth century. The magnitude and the duration of the twentieth century shift in body size of the bivalve Corbula gibba is unprecedented given that regional populations of this species were dominated by small-size classes throughout the Holocene. The shift coincided with compositional changes in benthic assemblages, driven by an increase from approximately 25% to approximately 70% in median per-assemblage abundance of C. gibba. This regime shift increase occurred preferentially at sites that experienced at least one hypoxic event per decade in the twentieth century. Larger size and higher abundance of C. gibba likely reflect ecological release as it coincides with an increase in the frequency of seasonal hypoxia that triggered mass mortality of competitors and predators. Higher frequency of hypoxic events is coupled with a decline in the depth of intense sediment mixing by burrowing benthic organisms from several decimetres to less than 20 cm, significantly improving the stratigraphic resolution of Anthropocene fossil record and making it possible to detect sub-centennial ecological changes on continental shelves.

Authors

  • Tomašových, Adam ;
  • Albano, Paolo G. ;
  • Tomáš Fuksi ;
  • Gallmetzer, Ivo ;
  • Haselmair, Alexandra ;
  • Michał Kowalewski ;
  • Rafał Nawrot ;
  • Nerlović, Vedrana ;
  • Scarponi, Daniele ;
  • Zuschin, Martin
0 Citations0 Mentions13% FAIR0.1 Dataset Index
10.6084/m9.figshare.12429356January 2020

Source code in R for analyses of sensitivity of shifts to time averaging from Ecological regime shift preserved in the Anthropocene stratigraphic record

Palaeoecological data are unique historical archives that extend back far beyond the last several decades of ecological observations. However, the fossil record of continental shelves has been perceived as too coarse (with centennial-millennial resolution) and incomplete to detect processes occurring at yearly or decadal scales relevant to ecology and conservation. Here, we show that the youngest (Anthropocene) fossil record on the northern Adriatic continental shelf provides decadal-scale resolution that accurately documents an abrupt ecological change affecting benthic communities during the twentieth century. The magnitude and the duration of the twentieth century shift in body size of the bivalve Corbula gibba is unprecedented given that regional populations of this species were dominated by small-size classes throughout the Holocene. The shift coincided with compositional changes in benthic assemblages, driven by an increase from approximately 25% to approximately 70% in median per-assemblage abundance of C. gibba. This regime shift increase occurred preferentially at sites that experienced at least one hypoxic event per decade in the twentieth century. Larger size and higher abundance of C. gibba likely reflect ecological release as it coincides with an increase in the frequency of seasonal hypoxia that triggered mass mortality of competitors and predators. Higher frequency of hypoxic events is coupled with a decline in the depth of intense sediment mixing by burrowing benthic organisms from several decimetres to less than 20 cm, significantly improving the stratigraphic resolution of Anthropocene fossil record and making it possible to detect sub-centennial ecological changes on continental shelves.

Authors

  • Tomašových, Adam ;
  • Albano, Paolo G. ;
  • Tomáš Fuksi ;
  • Gallmetzer, Ivo ;
  • Haselmair, Alexandra ;
  • Michał Kowalewski ;
  • Rafał Nawrot ;
  • Nerlović, Vedrana ;
  • Scarponi, Daniele ;
  • Zuschin, Martin
0 Citations0 Mentions13% FAIR0.3 Dataset Index
10.6084/m9.figshare.12429356.v1January 2020

Size data of Corbula gibba from Ecological regime shift preserved in the Anthropocene stratigraphic record

Palaeoecological data are unique historical archives that extend back far beyond the last several decades of ecological observations. However, the fossil record of continental shelves has been perceived as too coarse (with centennial-millennial resolution) and incomplete to detect processes occurring at yearly or decadal scales relevant to ecology and conservation. Here, we show that the youngest (Anthropocene) fossil record on the northern Adriatic continental shelf provides decadal-scale resolution that accurately documents an abrupt ecological change affecting benthic communities during the twentieth century. The magnitude and the duration of the twentieth century shift in body size of the bivalve Corbula gibba is unprecedented given that regional populations of this species were dominated by small-size classes throughout the Holocene. The shift coincided with compositional changes in benthic assemblages, driven by an increase from approximately 25% to approximately 70% in median per-assemblage abundance of C. gibba. This regime shift increase occurred preferentially at sites that experienced at least one hypoxic event per decade in the twentieth century. Larger size and higher abundance of C. gibba likely reflect ecological release as it coincides with an increase in the frequency of seasonal hypoxia that triggered mass mortality of competitors and predators. Higher frequency of hypoxic events is coupled with a decline in the depth of intense sediment mixing by burrowing benthic organisms from several decimetres to less than 20 cm, significantly improving the stratigraphic resolution of Anthropocene fossil record and making it possible to detect sub-centennial ecological changes on continental shelves.

Authors

  • Tomašových, Adam ;
  • Albano, Paolo G. ;
  • Tomáš Fuksi ;
  • Gallmetzer, Ivo ;
  • Haselmair, Alexandra ;
  • Michał Kowalewski ;
  • Rafał Nawrot ;
  • Nerlović, Vedrana ;
  • Scarponi, Daniele ;
  • Zuschin, Martin
0 Citations0 Mentions13% FAIR0.1 Dataset Index
10.6084/m9.figshare.12429359January 2020

Genus-level compositional data from Ecological regime shift preserved in the Anthropocene stratigraphic record

Palaeoecological data are unique historical archives that extend back far beyond the last several decades of ecological observations. However, the fossil record of continental shelves has been perceived as too coarse (with centennial-millennial resolution) and incomplete to detect processes occurring at yearly or decadal scales relevant to ecology and conservation. Here, we show that the youngest (Anthropocene) fossil record on the northern Adriatic continental shelf provides decadal-scale resolution that accurately documents an abrupt ecological change affecting benthic communities during the twentieth century. The magnitude and the duration of the twentieth century shift in body size of the bivalve Corbula gibba is unprecedented given that regional populations of this species were dominated by small-size classes throughout the Holocene. The shift coincided with compositional changes in benthic assemblages, driven by an increase from approximately 25% to approximately 70% in median per-assemblage abundance of C. gibba. This regime shift increase occurred preferentially at sites that experienced at least one hypoxic event per decade in the twentieth century. Larger size and higher abundance of C. gibba likely reflect ecological release as it coincides with an increase in the frequency of seasonal hypoxia that triggered mass mortality of competitors and predators. Higher frequency of hypoxic events is coupled with a decline in the depth of intense sediment mixing by burrowing benthic organisms from several decimetres to less than 20 cm, significantly improving the stratigraphic resolution of Anthropocene fossil record and making it possible to detect sub-centennial ecological changes on continental shelves.

Authors

  • Tomašových, Adam ;
  • Albano, Paolo G. ;
  • Tomáš Fuksi ;
  • Gallmetzer, Ivo ;
  • Haselmair, Alexandra ;
  • Michał Kowalewski ;
  • Rafał Nawrot ;
  • Nerlović, Vedrana ;
  • Scarponi, Daniele ;
  • Zuschin, Martin
0 Citations0 Mentions15% FAIR0.4 Dataset Index
10.6084/m9.figshare.12429365January 2020

Genus-level compositional data from Ecological regime shift preserved in the Anthropocene stratigraphic record

Palaeoecological data are unique historical archives that extend back far beyond the last several decades of ecological observations. However, the fossil record of continental shelves has been perceived as too coarse (with centennial-millennial resolution) and incomplete to detect processes occurring at yearly or decadal scales relevant to ecology and conservation. Here, we show that the youngest (Anthropocene) fossil record on the northern Adriatic continental shelf provides decadal-scale resolution that accurately documents an abrupt ecological change affecting benthic communities during the twentieth century. The magnitude and the duration of the twentieth century shift in body size of the bivalve Corbula gibba is unprecedented given that regional populations of this species were dominated by small-size classes throughout the Holocene. The shift coincided with compositional changes in benthic assemblages, driven by an increase from approximately 25% to approximately 70% in median per-assemblage abundance of C. gibba. This regime shift increase occurred preferentially at sites that experienced at least one hypoxic event per decade in the twentieth century. Larger size and higher abundance of C. gibba likely reflect ecological release as it coincides with an increase in the frequency of seasonal hypoxia that triggered mass mortality of competitors and predators. Higher frequency of hypoxic events is coupled with a decline in the depth of intense sediment mixing by burrowing benthic organisms from several decimetres to less than 20 cm, significantly improving the stratigraphic resolution of Anthropocene fossil record and making it possible to detect sub-centennial ecological changes on continental shelves.

Authors

  • Tomašových, Adam ;
  • Albano, Paolo G. ;
  • Tomáš Fuksi ;
  • Gallmetzer, Ivo ;
  • Haselmair, Alexandra ;
  • Michał Kowalewski ;
  • Rafał Nawrot ;
  • Nerlović, Vedrana ;
  • Scarponi, Daniele ;
  • Zuschin, Martin
0 Citations0 Mentions15% FAIR0.3 Dataset Index
10.6084/m9.figshare.12429365.v1January 2020