3 resultados para Shark
em Universidade Federal do Pará
Resumo:
ABSTRACT: Carcharhinus limbatus has a cosmopolitan distribution and marked genetic structuring, mainly because of its philopatric behavior. However, analysis of this structuring has not previously included South American populations. In the present study, we analyzed a sample of adult individuals collected on the northern coast of Brazil and compared the sequences of the mitochondrial control region with those of populations already genotyped. Relatively high haplotype diversity (12 haplotypes, genetic diversity of 0.796) was observed, similar to that in other populations but with a much larger number of private alleles. In contrast to populations studied previously, which were represented by neonates, the pronounced allelic variability found in the South American individuals may have resulted from migrations from other populations in the region that have yet to be genotyped. This population was also genetically distinct from the other Atlantic populations (Fst > 0.8), probably because of female philopatry, and apparently separated from the northwestern Atlantic group 1.39 million years ago. These findings indicate that the C. limbatus population from northern Brazil is genetically distinct from all other populations and should be considered as a different management unit for the protection of stocks.
Resumo:
The ongoing decline in abundance and diversity of shark stocks, primarily due to uncontrolled fishery exploitation, is a worldwide problem. An additional problem for the development of conservation and management programmes is the identification of species diversity within a given area, given the morphological similarities among shark species, and the typical disembarkation of processed carcasses which are almost impossible to differentiate. The main aim of the present study was to identify those shark species being exploited off northern Brazil, by using the 12S-16S molecular marker. For this, DNA sequences were obtained from 122 specimens collected on the docks and the fish market in Bragança, in the Brazilian state of Pará. We identified at least 11 species. Three-quarters of the specimens collected were either Carcharhinus porosus or Rhizoprionodon sp, while a notable absence was the daggernose shark, Isogomphodon oxyrhyncus, previously one of the most common species in local catches. The study emphasises the value of molecular techniques for the identification of cryptic shark species, and the potential of the 12S-16S marker as a tool for phylogenetic inferences in a study of elasmobranchs.
Resumo:
A comunidade de tubarões (Selachii:Galea) proveniente da Formação Pirabas pode ser considerada como uma das mais representativas e de maior diversidade entre as unidades do Neógeno da América do Sul. A presença de 8 gêneros permitiu elaborar hipóteses sobre a reconstrução da cadeia trófica envolvendo outros elementos da paleofauna de vertebrados, assim como também serviu como um indicador paleoecológico adicional que corrobora dados anteriores sobre a reconstituição dos parâmetros paleoambientais da unidade geológica. Foi realizado uma revisão taxonômica das espécies previamente conhecidos para a Formação Pirabas, cuja composição da paleocomun idade de tubarões foi a seguinte: Carcharhinus spl Carcharhinus sp2, Carcharhinus sp3, Carcharhinus priscus, Sphyma magna, Hemipristis serra, Carcharodon megalodon, Isurus sp, Ginglyrnostoma serra, Ginglymostoma obliquum. Novas coletas possibilitaram a expansão de 31 exemplares depositados em museus brasileiros para 231 novos indivíduos, incluindo material microscópico. Esta coleta serviu para aumentar o conhecimento sobre a diversidade e aspectos paleoecológicos dos grupos representados.