2 resultados para Telemetria acústica

em Repositório Institucional da Universidade de Aveiro - Portugal


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O presente estudo tem como objetivo a caraterização acústica da voz normal para os falantes do Português Europeu, em termos de frequência fundamental, jitter, shimmer e relação sinal-ruído. São também analisadas as caraterísticas individuais que possam ter influência sobre a qualidade vocal, nomeadamente idade, género, índice de massa corporal, hábitos tabágicos e uso da voz no canto. Para tal, foram recolhidas amostras de fala de 363 indivíduos com uma voz avaliada como normal: 113 homens e 250 mulheres com idades compreendidas entre os 18 e os 91 anos. Amostras da produção sustentada da vogal /a/ foram analisadas acusticamente com o programa Praat, tendo sido extraídos os valores da média, mediana e desvio-padrão da frequência fundamental, jitter (ppq5), shimmer (apq11) e relação sinal-ruído. Os resultados obtidos apontam no sentido do género e a idade do indivíduo serem os fatores que maior influência exercem na voz, sendo que ambos os géneros apresentam um declínio da qualidade vocal ao longo da vida. As mulheres, globalmente, apresentam valores de frequência fundamental de 193,4±28,5 Hz (média ± desvio padrão da média), significativamente mais elevados que os homens, com valores de 120,7±22,3 Hz. Em termos de jitter, as mulheres obtiveram valores de 0,214±0,126 %, significativamente mais reduzidos que os 0,247±0,190 % obtidos para os homens. O shimmer não apresentou diferenças significativas entre géneros, sendo que os valores apresentados foram de 5,403±2,652 % para homens e 5,174±2,696 % para as mulheres. Relativamente à relação sinal-ruído, foram obtidos valores significativamente mais elevados nas mulheres, com 17,335±3,958 dB, tendo-se obtido para os homens 16,315±3,267 dB. Não foi encontrado um efeito significativo do índice de massa corporal, hábitos tabágicos e uso da voz no canto. Este trabalho disponibiliza novos dados para que a avaliação da voz em contexto clínico seja mais objetiva e eficaz.

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During the last years tropical forest has been a target of intense study especially due to its recent big scale destruction. Although a lot still needs to be explored, we start realizing how negative can the impact of our actions be for the ecosystem. Subsequently, the living community have been developing strategies to overcome this problem avoiding bottlenecks or even extinctions. Cooperative breeding (CB) has been recently pointed out as one of those strategies. CB is a breeding system where more than two individuals raise one brood. In most of the cases, extra individuals are offspring that delay their dispersal and independent breeding what allows them to help their parents raising their siblings in the subsequent breeding season. Such behavior is believed to be due, per example, to the lack of mates or breeding territories (ecological constraints hypothesis), a consequence of habitat fragmentation and/or disturbance. From this point, CB is easily promoted by a higher reproductive success of group vs pairs or single individuals. Accordingly, during this thesis I explore the early post-fledging survival of a cooperative breeding passerine, namely the impact of individual/habitat quality in its survival probability during the dependence period of the chicks. Our study species is the Cabanis’s greenbul (Phyllastrephus cabanisi), a medium-sized, brownish passerine, classified within the Pycnonotidae family. It is found over part of Central Africa in countries such as Angola, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mozambique and Kenya, inhabiting primary and secondary forests, as well as woodland of various types up to 2700m of altitude. Previous studies have concluded that PC is a facultative cooperative breeder. This study was conducted in Taita Hills (TH) at the Eastern Arc Mountains (EAM), a chain of mountains running from Southeast Kenya to the South of Tanzania. TH comprises an area of 430 ha and has been suffering intense deforestation reflecting 98% forest reduction over the last 200 years. Nowadays its forest is divided in fragments and our study was based in 5of those fragments. We access the post-fledging survival through radio-telemetry. The juvenile survey was done through the breeding females in which transmitters were placed with a leg-loop technique. Ptilochronology is consider to be the study of feather growth bars and has been used to study the nutritional state of a bird. This technique considers that the feather growth rate is positively proportional to the individual capability of ingesting food and to the food availability. This technique is therefore used to infer for individual/habitat quality. Survival was lowest during the first 5 days post-fledging representing 53.3%. During the next 15 days, risk of predation decreased with only 14.3% more deceased individuals. This represents a total of only 33% survived individuals in the end of the 50 days. Our results showed yet a significant positive relationship between flock size and post-fledging survival as well as between ptilochronology values and post-fledgling survival. In practice, these imply that on this population, as bigger the flock, as greater the post fledging survival and that good habitat quality or good BF quality, will lead to a higher juvenile survival rate. We believe that CB is therefore an adaptive behaviour to the lack of mates/breeding territory originated from the mass forest destruction and disturbance. Such results confirms the critical importance of habitat quality in the post-fledging survival and, for the first time, demonstrates how flock size influences the living probability of the juveniles and therefore how it impacts the (local) population dynamics of this species. In my opinion, future research should be focus in disentangle individual and habitat quality from each other and verify which relationship exist between them. Such study will allow us to understand which factor has a stronger influence in the post-fledging survival and therefore redirect our studies in that direction. In order to confirm the negative impact of human disturbance and forest fragmentation, it would be of major relevance to compare the reproductive strategies and reproductive success of populations living in intact forests and disturbed patches.