Distribution, occupancy, and habitat associations of the gray-faced sengi (Rhynchocyon udzungwensis) as revealed by camera traps
- F. Rovero, L. Collett, S. Ricci, Emanuel H. Martin, D. Spitale
- Environmental Science
- 13 August 2013
Abstract Three of the 4 species of giant sengis or elephant shrews (genus Rhynchocyon) have restricted geographic distributions in eastern Africa and are threatened by anthropogenic habitat loss.…
Population dynamics and trophic ecology of two species of Australian desert rodents
- S. Ricci
- Environmental Science
- 2003
Evolutionary History of the Grey-Faced Sengi, Rhynchocyon udzungwensis, from Tanzania: A Molecular and Species Distribution Modelling Approach
- Lucinda P. Lawson, C. Vernesi, S. Ricci, F. Rovero
- Environmental Science, BiologyPLoS ONE
- 27 August 2013
Rhynchocyon udzungwensis is a recently described and poorly understood sengi (giant elephant-shrew) endemic to two small montane forests in Southern Tanzania, and surrounded in lower forests by R.…
Arthropods as bioindicators of the red fox foraging activity in a Mediterranean beach-dune system
- S. Ricci, I. Colombini, M. Fallaci, C. Scoccianti, L. Chelazzi
- Environmental Science
- 1 March 1998
The results confirm the great behavioural plasticity of the fox which prefers to exploit food resources found in an undisturbed environment, modulating its feeding both in space and in time, rather than searching for food outside the protected area.
Diversity of the sponge fauna associated with white coral banks from two Sardinian canyons (Mediterranean Sea)
- M. Bertolino, S. Ricci, M. Bo
- Environmental Science, GeographyJournal of the Marine Biological Association of…
- 12 November 2019
Abstract The three-dimensional coral scaffolds formed by the skeletons of the cold-water corals Madrepora oculata and Lophelia pertusa represent an important deep-sea hard substratum and create an…
Sponge fauna associated to white coral banks from the Tyrrhenian Sea
- M. Bertolino, M. Bo, S. Ricci, S. Canese, G. Bavestrello, M. Pansini
- Environmental Science
- 2014
Populations of Apis mellifera L. in the “Oltrepò pavese” (Northern Italy): results of a morphometric study
- G. B. Serini, S. Ricci, E. Daolio
- Biology
- 1994
By means of a morphometric study, worker bees coming from three localities in the Oltrepo pavese (Northern Italy) were compared with specimens of Apis mellifera ligustica Spinola, from the apiary of the ‘Istituto Nazionale di Apicoltura’ of Bologna, situated in Reggio Emilia.