35 resultados para Bull Mountains
Resumo:
A ocorrência de Myxomycetes sobre plantas vivas de Hedychium coronarium Koenig foi registrada nos Municípios de Botucatu (22o52 S e 48o26 W) e Itatinga (23o08 S e 48o38 W), São Paulo, região Sudeste do Brasil. Foram encontrados esporóforos sobre brácteas florais, restos de flores e sobre folhas adjacentes às inflorescências em plantas vivas, evidenciando ser este um ambiente favorável ao desenvolvimento de Myxomycetes. Cinco espécies foram encontradas: Didymium bahiense Gottsb., D. nigripes (Link) Fr. (Didymiaceae), Physarum compressum Alb. & Schwein., P. pusillum (Berk. & M. A. Curtis) G. Lister (Physaraceae) e Arcyria cinerea (Bull.) Pers. (Arcyriaceae). Todas podem ser consideradas espécies florícolas, embora haja registros mais freqüentes de sua ocorrência sobre componentes da serapilheira. Este é o primeiro relato da ocorrência de Myxomycetes neste tipo de microhabitat para o Brasil.
Resumo:
This paper overviews the special issue of the Brazilian Journal of Botany dedicated to "Rock outcrop vegetation in Brazil". The main topics covered by this issue are phytogeography and vegetation ecology, plant life on shallow soils, plant reproduction and auto-ecology, morpho-physiology and plant adaptation, and finally conservation and global change. This collection of studies, in addition to other recent publications on Brazilian rocky outcrop vegetation, show that measurements of most of the relevant ecological and evolutionary parameters are under way and that scientific attention is now given to most Brazilian regions. However, there are still several gaps to be bridged: 1) inselbergs and high mountains in the Amazon and the Brazilian northeast, in particular, are still largely unknown to science; 2) long-term studies are almost totally unavailable, which hinders global change monitoring and assessment; 3) national and international networking are urgently needed to speed up scientific production about such habitats.
Resumo:
The high species richness and diversity found in tropical montane habitats are often related to: 1) an effect of climatic and geological history on biotic evolution; 2) the various environmental impacts on species adaptation mechanisms; and 3) the continuous dispersal of fauna and flora in time. However, little is known about how these factors shaped species richness in Brazilian mountains. Official documents on biodiversity in Brazil make no explicit reference to mountains, even though there is a mountain work programme of the Convention on Biological Diversity, which Brazil is a signatory of. This paper discusses the importance of mountain ecosystems in Brazil to show the urgent need to include mountain biodiversity in the national agenda of biodiversity research and conservation.
Resumo:
(Mixobiota de Floresta Atlântica: novas referências de Physarales para o Estado da Paraíba, Nordeste do Brasil). A ordem Physarales engloba as famílias Elaeomyxaceae, Didymiaceae e Physaraceae, reunindo 16 gêneros e aproximadamente 371 espécies, muitas bem representadas nos Neotrópicos. Um estudo sobre a presença de representantes desta ordem na mixobiota da Floresta Atlântica foi desenvolvido na Área de Preservação Permanente Mata do Pau Ferro, localizada na Mesorregião do Brejo Paraibano (6°58'12' S e 35°42'15' W, 400-650 m.s.m., 600 ha). As coletas foram realizadas entre junho e dezembro de 2005, abrangendo o período chuvoso e o de estiagem, explorando diferentes substratos. Exsicatas representativas do material estudado estão depositadas no Herbário UFP. Dentre as Physarales assinaladas, constituem nova referência para a Paraíba o gênero Fuligo e as seguintes espécies: Diderma hemisphaericum (Bull.) Hornem., Didymium clavus (Alb. & Schwein.) Rabenh., D. nigripes (Link) Fr. (Didymiaceae), Fuligo septica (L.) F. H. Wigg., Physarum echinosporum Lister, P. pulcherrimum Berk. & Ravenel e P. viride (Bull.) Pers. (Physaraceae). São apresentadas descrições de cada espécie, baseadas no material estudado, acompanhadas de comentários e distribuição geográfica no Brasil.
Resumo:
The objective of this study was to analyze retinol equivalent and iron content in different food composition tables and nutritional evaluation software programs. A literature search was conduct to identify tables and software available in Brazil containing information about retinol equivalent and iron content that are currently used by nutritionists. Ten tables and five software programs were selected for this study. The methodology used to present the retinol equivalent and iron content was evaluated and no pattern to obtain such content was found in the tables and software programs analyzed. Only one of the tables had enough information for the calculation of retinol equivalents; this table is recommended to all Latin America As for the iron content, three of the tables analyzed stand out and therefore should be used; two of them are based on national foods and the other is recommended for use in all Latin America countries. None of the software programs evaluated use the conversion factors suggested by IVACG to assess the vitamin A content in foods. Special attention should be given to the content of iron provided in the software programs since they use tables as international sources and fortified foods.