968 resultados para COMMUNITY COMPOSITION
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This is a floristic survey of Myrtaceae in the Serra do Caraça, Minas Gerais. Fifty two species were found belonging to 12 genera - Myrcia with 17 species, Eugenia with nine, Campomanesia and Myrciaria with five species each, Psidium with four, Siphoneugena with three, Blepharocalyx, Calyptranthes, Marlierea and Myrceugenia with two species each, and Accara and Plinia with one species each. Descriptions of the genera and species, identification keys, geographical distributions, illustrations and comments are provided. © 2005 Instituto de Ciências Biológicas - UFMG.
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Ecologists usually estimate means, but devote much less attention to variation. The study of variation is a key aspect to understand natural systems and to make predictions regarding them. In community ecology, most studies focus on local species diversity (alpha diversity), but only in recent decades have ecologists devoted proper attention to variation in community composition among sites (beta diversity). This is in spite of the fact that the first attempts to estimate beta diversity date back to the pioneering work by Koch and Whittaker in the 1950s. Progress in the last decade has been made in the development both of methods and of hypotheses about the origin and maintenance of variation in community composition. For instance, methods are available to partition total diversity in a region (gamma diversity), in a local component (alpha), and several beta diversities, each corresponding to one scale in a hierarchy. The popularization of the so-called raw-data approach (based on partial constrained ordination techniques) and the distance-based approach (based on correlation of dissimilarity/distance matrices) have allowed many ecologists to address current hypotheses about beta diversity patterns. Overall, these hypotheses are based on niche and neutral theory, accounting for the relative roles of environmental and spatial processes (or a combination of them) in shaping metacommunities. Recent studies have addressed these issues on a variety of spatial and temporal scales, habitats and taxonomic groups. Moreover, life history and functional traits of species such as dispersal abilities and rarity have begun to be considered in studies of beta diversity. In this article we briefly review some of these new tools and approaches developed in recent years, and illustrate them by using case studies in aquatic ecosystems.
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Faunal impoverishment and distorted species compositions are common phenomena in oceanic islands; however, many land-bridge islands are poorly inventoried, especially in the Neotropics. We sampled a small mammal community on a land-bridge island (Anchieta Island) along the Brazilian coast. We found only one marsupial Didelphis aurita (Wied-Neuwied, 1826) and two rodent species Oligoryzomys nigripes (Olfers, 1818) and Trinomys iheringi (Thomas, 1911) during 12 months of live trapping and 9195 trap-nights. The diversity of rodents and marsupials was not explained by species-area relations, indicating possible past extinctions. The abundance of D. aurita and O. nigripes was approximately three times higher, while the abundance of T. iheringi was approximately four times lower than abundances reported from other Brazilian Atlantic Forest sites. The population of D. aurita exhibited many phenotypic changes; males were on average 8 % smaller and females produced 30 % less litters than those from the mainland and other land-bridge islands. The long history of forest disturbance, habitat loss, reduction in forest productivity, and the recent introduction of mesopredators may be the major drivers that explain the small mammal community composition on this island. © 2013 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.
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Copepod assemblages from two cascade reservoirs were analyzed during two consecutive years. The upstream reservoir (Chavantes) is a storage system with a high water retention time (WRT of 400 days), and the downstream one (Salto Grande) is a run-of-river system with only 1. 5 days WRT. Copepod composition, richness, abundance, and diversity were correlated with the limnological variables and the hydrological and morphometric features. Standard methods were employed for zooplankton sampling and analysis (vertical 50-μm net hauls and counting under a stereomicroscope). Two hypotheses were postulated and confirmed through the data obtained: (1) compartmentalization is more pronounced in the storage reservoir and determines the differences in the copepod assemblage structure; and (2) the assemblages are more homogeneous in the run-of-river reservoir, where the abundance decreases because of the predominance of washout effects. For both reservoirs, the upstream zone is more distinctive. In addition, in the smaller reservoir the influence of the input from tributaries is stronger (turbid waters). Richness did not differ significantly among seasons, but abundance was higher in the run-of-river reservoir during summer. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht.
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Local extinctions have cascading effects on ecosystem functions, yet little is known about the potential for the rapid evolutionary change of species in human-modified scenarios. We show that the functional extinction of large-gape seed dispersers in the Brazilian Atlantic forest is associated with the consistent reduction of the seed size of a keystone palm species. Among 22 palm populations, areas deprived of large avian frugivores for several decades present smaller seeds than nondefaunated forests, with negative consequences for palm regeneration. Coalescence and phenotypic selection models indicate that seed size reduction most likely occurred within the past 100 years, associated with human-driven fragmentation. The fast-paced defaunation of large vertebrates is most likely causing unprecedented changes in the evolutionary trajectories and community composition of tropical forests.
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Background: How to maintain gut health is a goal for scientists throughout the world. Therefore, microbiota management models for testing probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics have been developed.Methods: The SHIME® model was used to study the effect of Lactobacillus acidophilus 1014 on the fermentation pattern of the colon microbiota. Initially, an inoculum prepared from human feces was introduced into the reactor vessels and stabilized over 2-wk using a culture medium. This stabilization period was followed by a 2-wk control period during which the microbiota was monitored. The microbiota was then subjected to a 4-wk treatment period by adding 5 mL of sterile peptone water with L. acidophilus CRL1014 at the concentration of 108 CFU/mL to vessel one (the stomach compartment). Plate counts, Denaturing Gradient Gel Electrophoresis (DGGE), short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) and ammonium analyses were carried out for monitoring of the microbial community from the colon compartments.Results: A significant increase (p < 0.01) in the Lactobacillus spp. and Bifidobacterium spp. populations was observed during the treatment period. The DGGE obtained showed changes in the lactobacilli community from the colon compartments of the SHIME® reactor. The (SCFA) concentration increased (p < 0.01) during the treatment period, due mainly to significant increased levels of acetic, butyric, and propionic acids. However, ammonium concentrations decreased during the same period (p < 0.01).Conclusions: This study showed the beneficial influence of L. acidophilus CRL 1014 on microbial metabolism and lactobacilli community composition for improving human health. © 2013 Sivieri et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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Synthesis Despite theoretical criticisms, the ubiquity of linear relationships between local and regional species richness has long been used to justify it as a valid framework to conclude that local communities are not saturated with species. However, we reanalyzed published studies with a new unbiased method and found no prevalence of linear relationships and more than 40% of misclassifications, including textbook examples. We thus conclude that the prevailing argument in favor of associating a valid ecological interpretation to local-regional species richness plots, its ubiquity, is not sustained, and that ecologists could use for instance metacommunity theory to make inference on the strength of local and regional processes. Identifying the relative importance of regional and local processes to local species diversity is a central issue to many questions in basic and applied ecology. One widely-used method is to plot local species richness against its regional richness to infer whether regional or local processes determine local diversity. However, this method increases the tendency to find regional prevalence as suggested by a recent simulation. We reanalyzed studies in the literature with an unbiased method and found no prevalence of either regional or local processes. In addition, almost 40% of the studies and 50% of the ecology textbook examples using the traditional method were misclassified. Our findings reinforce the need of alternative, novel tools identified by for instance metacommunity theory to go beyond the studies of local-regional relationships in the ecological literature that focus on the interdependence of regional and local processes.© 2013 The Authors. Oikos © 2013 Nordic Society Oikos.
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Produção Vegetal) - FCAV
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Nos lagos de várzea da Amazônia a oscilação do nível da água e as variações sazonal e diária nos parâmetros determinam a estrutura da comunidade íctica. Este trabalho teve como objetivo caracterizar a estrutura das comunidades de peixes em quatro lagos de várzea da Reserva de Desenvolvimento Sustentável Mamirauá (Médio Solimões), no estado do Amazonas, em diferentes fases do ciclo sazonal. O estudo foi desenvolvido durante um ano, com coletas bimestrais em quatro lagos da RDSM. Foram analisadas a riqueza de espécies e biomassa dos peixes, e investigados em que medidas os padrões das comunidades foram regulados pelas variáveis ambientais. Foi coletado um total de 6.059 indivíduos, distribuídos em 117 espécies, 76gêneros, 21 famílias e seis ordens. As ordens Characiformes e Siluriformes foram as que apresentaram maior número de famílias e espécies, juntas representando cerca de 90% dos indivíduos capturados. A composição da ictiofauna variou entre os períodos de coleta e entre os lagos, sendo os maiores valores de riqueza e biomassa encontrados no período da vazante, com exceção do lago Taracoá que apresentou maior riqueza na enchente. As espécies Potamorhina latior, Potamorhina altamazonica, Mylossoma duriventre, Amblydoras hancokii, Amblydoras sp., Liposarcus pardalis, Psectrogaster amazonica e Osteoglossum bicirrhosum dominaram a amostragem em número de indivíduos coletados, enquanto que Oxydoras niger, Colossoma macropomum, Cichla monoculus, Osteoglossum bicirrhosum, Arapaima gigas e Pseudoplatystoma tigrinum a dominam em termos de sua biomassa. A análise dos parâmetros físico-químicos mostra que a variação ao longo do ano e do pulso de alagamento, determinam a estrutura das comunidades ícticas nos lagos, sendo que o efeito conjunto do oxigênio dissolvido, pH e temperatura da água parece explicar melhor o padrão de composição da ictiofauna. A análise de similaridade mostra que, no mesmo período do ciclo hidrológico em anos consecutivos, a composição da ictiofauna se assemelha. Logo, é provável que a composição da comunidade íctica se restabeleça a cada ciclo, com o estabelecimento da conexão dos corpos d’água durante a cheia.
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O objetivo deste trabalho foi o de conhecer a comunidade de insetos bentônicos em 17 igarapés do Nordeste Paraense, Amazônia Oriental, sob diferentes usos do solo e investigar as variações na abundância, riqueza e diversidade da comunidade de insetos aquáticos com a cobertura vegetal do seu entorno imediato (zona ripária) e de paisagem (vertentes das microbacias onde se insere o igarapé amostrado). Os macroinvertebrados bentônicos foram coletados entre julho e outubro de 2010, época de menor precipitação. Em cada ponto foram feitas 10 amostragens com Surber para análise quantitativa e três com rede de mão de caráter apenas qualitativo. Para avaliar diferenças entre a riqueza, índice EPT, abundância e a diversidade, foram utilizadas análises de variância e de agrupamento para sumarizar os dados bióticos. Para avaliar as diferenças quanto às escalas de estudo foi empregada a análise ANOSIM seguida da rotina SIMPER. As características ambientais foram avaliadas buscando-se correlacioná-las à composição taxonômica e à distribuição dos táxons através da Análise de Correspondência Canônica (ACC). Um total de 46.371 indivíduos foi coletado, sendo 11.384 com o Surber, distribuídos em 61 táxons com predomínio de insetos aquáticos. As maiores abundâncias observadas foram de Chironomidae, Ephemeroptera, Trichoptera e Coleoptera. Abundância, riqueza e EPT foram maiores nos trechos de igarapés com vegetação ripária de floresta antropizada de igapó e microbacias com predomínio de Floresta. As variáveis ambientais de maior influência sobre a comunidade foram porcentagem de ambiente florestal na zona ripária, temperatura média da água, turbidez, porcentagem de liteira grossa e fina, pH, vazão do canal e coeficiente de variação da largura do canal. Os resultados mostraram diferenças quanto à composição da comunidade em relação aos diferentes usos do solo. Através dos descritores ecológicos, foi detectado que as microbacias com maior percentagem de área de floresta antropizada e sucessional e maior percentagem de vegetação ripária de entorno (30m) apresentaram melhores condições ambientais que aqueles onde predominam as pastagens.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)