855 resultados para Habitat (Ecologia)
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Aspectos da ecologia da capivara (Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris) foram estudados na Reserva Biológica do Lami, Rio Grande do Sul, Brasil, de janeiro de 2000 a maio de 2002. A área abrange 210,3 ha, onde são encontrados seis categorias de vegetação (matas, campos úmidos, campos arenosos, banhados arbustivos, banhados herbáceos e juncais) em interface com corpos hídricos (arroio Lami e lago Guaíba). O clima da região é subtropical úmido sem estação seca, com temperatura média anual de 18°C. Foram realizadas contagens diretas dos indivíduos, com identificação de classes etárias, ao longo de transecções fixas que percorriam as cinco categorias de hábitat mais expressivas (excluindo o juncal), totalizando 7.245 m de extensão. Acada indivíduo contactado, registravase a posição espacial e o hábitat em que se encontrava, para identificação dos padrões de uso do espaço e dos hábitats A densidade foi calculada para cada ano de estudo, considerando o maior número de capivaras registrado, resultando em uma densidade de adultos de 0,24 ind/ha em 2000 e 0,21 ind/ha em 2001 e 2002, enquanto que a densidade geral foi de 0,28 ind/ha em 2000, 0,24 ind/ha em 2001 e 0,33 ind/ha em 2002. A proporção de adultos foi, em média, de 67 a 98% da população. O maior número de nascimentos foi registrado no período de primavera/verão. A abundância relativa, em número de indivíduos registrados por quilômetro percorrido, diferiu significativamente entre quatro zonas da área de estudo. Os hábitats mais utilizados foram a mata, o campo úmido e o banhado arbustivo, sendo que, de forma geral, o primeiro foi positivamente selecionado, o segundo apresentou seleção positiva a neutra, e o terceiro foi negativamente selecionado. Não foi verificado um padrão sazonal de uso dos hábitats. Foram registradas, adicionalmente, informações sobre comportamento, interações com aves e causas de mortalidade.
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Os mares e oceanos vêm sendo intensamente impactados por diversas atividades antrópicas, as quais vêm provocando a diminuição dos recursos naturais devido a sobrepesca, poluição e o aumento do tráfego de embarcações. A perda de hábitat crítico, decorrente do intenso uso das zonas litorâneas, tem sido uma das maiores ameaças aos cetáceos costeiros. O Chile possui uma grande diversidade de baleias e golfinhos, porém o golfinho-chileno (Cephalorhynchus eutropia) é a única espécie endêmica às águas costeiras deste país. Na porção sul da distribuição de C. eutropia (fiordes e canais) há uma grande sobreposição da indústria de aqüicultura (uma das atividades antrópicas mais importantes no sul do Chile) aos principais locais de ocorrência desta espécie. Observações a partir de terra foram realizadas com o objetivo de estudar a seleção de hábitat dos golfinhos-chilenos em pequena escala espacial e avaliar as reações comportamentais desta espécie em relação ao tráfego de embarcações presente na Baía Yaldad, local onde há intenso cultivo de mexilhão e de salmão. Utilizou-se um teodolito para marcar a posição dos golfinhos e um total de 293,5 horas de esforço foram realizadas entre os meses de janeiro a abril de 2002. O padrão de uso de hábitat, concentrado a uma pequena porção da área de estudo, mostrou que os golfinhos selecionam locais rasos, próximos à costa e próximo aos rios. As atividades dos golfinhos foram influenciadas pelo regime de maré e o forrageio foi a principal atividade realizada na baía. . A aqüicultura representou um impacto negativo, devido à redução de espaço disponível aos animais e ao aumento do tráfego de embarcação, que afetou consideravelmente os padrões comportamentais de C. eutropia. A presença, os padrões de movimento e uso de hábitat dos golfinhos-chilenos devem ser levados em consideração na regulamnetação das atividades de aqüicultura e nas políticas de manejo dos ecossistemas costeiros. Visto que predadores topo de cadeia podem ser considerados indicadores ambientais, a conservação dos ecossistemas marinhos poderia ser abordada pela descrição dos movimentos e seleção de hábitat de cetáceos que atuariam como “espécies guarda-chuva”.
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Os sistemas de monitoramento utilizando diatomáceas foram desenvolvidos, em sua maioria, para monitorar os efeitos da poluição orgânica e da eutrofização, adotando como parâmetros de referência a demanda biológica de oxigênio após cinco dias e a concentração de fósforo total. Entretanto, vários fatores naturais têm sido apontados como causadores de variação na composição destas comunidades em rios. Por isso, grandes mudanças estruturais não provam necessariamente a hipótese de que tenha ocorrido algum evento poluidor. Neste contexto, a partir da relação entre a estrutura da comunidade de diatomáceas epilíticas da microbacia do arroio Schmidt, RS, Brasil, mudanças na qualidade da água e alterações físicas do meio, como fluxo, sombreamento ripário, largura e profundidade, objetivou-se colher subsídios para aplicação em programas de manejo e conservação de ecossistemas aquáticos. Durante os meses de janeiro e fevereiro de 2004, foram realizadas quatro excursões científicas a seis estações, totalizando 24 amostragens, para medição das seguintes variáveis: condutividade elétrica, oxigênio dissolvido em saturação, pH, turbidez, demanda biológica de oxigênio em cinco dias (DBO5), demanda química de oxigênio (DQO), fósforo total, nitrato, sólidos totais dissolvidos, sólidos suspensos, sílica, profundidade de submersão do substrato, velocidade da correnteza, diâmetro dos seixos, largura do rio e sombreamento em função da vegetação ripária. Para as análises qualitativas e quantitativas das diatomáceas epilíticas, uma área de 25 cm2 foi raspada de cinco replicatas O material foi oxidado com dicromato de potássio, ácido sulfúrico e clorídrico para confecção de lâminas permanentes. Padrões de distribuição e abundância das espécies foram explorados através da Análise de Espécies Indicadoras e os fatores ambientais responsáveis por esta distribuição foram evidenciados pela Análise de Correspondência Canônica. Os resultados confirmaram a preferência de Cymbella e Encyonema por águas lentas e elevada luminosidade, bem como a adaptabilidade de Cocconeis ao sombreamento. Nitzschia acicularis, Surirella tenera e Planothidium rupestoides revelaram-se indicadoras de ambientes meso-eutróficos. Encyonema perpusilum destacou-se no habitat oligo/β- mesossapróbico, e Sellaphora pupula no sítio de maior concentração de eletrólitos. Pelo cruzamento das respostas das espécies à saturação de oxigênio, DBO5, DQO, condutividade, fósforo total, sólidos totais dissolvidos e turbidez, foi possível estabelecer dois grupos sinalizadores de qualidade: Achnanthes sp. 3, Cocconeis fluviatilis, Navicula angusta, Nitzschia acicularis, Tryblionella victoriae, Pinnularia cf. obscura, Planothidium rupestoides, Sellaphora pupula, Stenopterobia sp. e Surirella tenera, relacionadas com maior impacto antropogênico, e Achnanthes sp. 2, Encyonema perpusilum, Geissleria aikenensis, Luticola goeppertiana, Navicula symmetrica e Nitzschia amphibia, referindo-se a ambientes mais oxigenados, pouco mineralizados e com reduzidos teores de compostos orgânicos. Estas informações também constituem subsídios para estudos paleolimnológicos envolvendo a reconstituição de paleoambientes (e.g. maior abundância de Cymbella indicando ambientes lênticos) e a concentração de paleonutrientes (e.g. Nitzschia acicularis designando períodos de maior eutrofização).
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The inherent complexity of natural communities is a challenge to our understanding about how the habitat influences the abundance, local distribution and species diversity. The habitat can influence community structure in multiple ways and elucidate these relationships has provoked a lot of debate in ecology. The habitat heterogeneity hypothesis states that an increase in habitat heterogeneity (number of habitats) leads to an increase in species diversity in the landscape due to an expansion in niche dimensions. This study aims to identify whether this hypothesis is valid for the spiders that inhabit a locality in the Caatinga of northeastern Brazil. Cursorial and arboreal spiders were sampled in 30 plots within an area of Caatinga together with measures of environmental complexity, habitat heterogeneity and environmental parameters related to multiple aspects of vegetation architecture and species composition of woody plants. Stepwise multiple regressions were used to define which local environmental parameters best explain the variation in arboreal and cursorial spiders richness. Then a NMDS (Nonmetric multidimensional scaling) was used to reduce the number of predictive variables to those who are the most important and best represent the variation in spiders richness associated with the environment they were sampled. The results show a clear segregation between the guilds of arboreal and cursorial spiders, both related to what kind of environmental variables best explain its variation as well as in relation to what part of the vegetation they occupy
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This study investigated factors that influence the group size during the behavior foraging of estuarine dolphin Sotalia guianensis in the coast south of the state Rio Grande do Norte (RN), it also characterized the diet of estuarine dolphins and elaborated an otoliths catalog for aid in the identification of the preys found in the stomach contents. In relation to the group size during behaviour foraging, inside of the Curral Bay, larger frequency of solitary hunt was observed. Factors as tide variation, group composition and seasons didn't present correlation with the number of animals observed during a feeding episode. Capture success for participant was shown significantly larger when the animals hunted alone, what possibly explains the largest frequency of solitary hunt inside of the Curral Bay. About diet, were identified 18 bone fishes species, with predominance of species the families Haemulidae and Sciaenidae and five cephalopods species, including two new species in the diet of Sotalia guianensis in Brazil. Our results indicated that estuarine dolphin in the coast oriental from Rio Grande do Norte (RN) feeds predominantly of fish that form shoal, of habitat estuarino and producing of sounds. The analysis of the images, otoliths of 43 species of coastal fish of the coast of the state of Rio Grande do Norte (RN), aided by the offered descriptions, demonstrated to be an effective methodology for the knowledge of those structures, as well as it represented a form of reducing the subjectivity in the identification of the bone fishes found in stomach content
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This study evaluated the spatial, time and alimentary niches of Tropidurus hispidus and Tropidurus semitaeniatus in sympatry in a caatinga of Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil, as well as their foraging and termoregulatory behaviors, the activity body temperature and their reproductive and fat body cycles. Monthly excursions, from October 2006 to May 2008, were conducted at the Ecological Station of the Seridó (ESEC Seridó), Serra Negra do Norte municipality, using specific methodology for investigation of the aforementioned objectives. The two species presented similarities in space niche use, mainly in rocky habitat, however they differed in vertical microhabitat use with T. hispidus using a larger vertical microhabitat range. In the dry season the time of activity of both species was bimodal. In the wet season T. semitaeniatus showed a unimodal activity period, while T. hispidus maintained an bimodal activity period. In terms of importance in the diet, to both species, Hymenoptera/Formicidae and Isoptera predominated during the dry season. In the wet season, although Hymenoptera/Formicidae had larger importance among the prey items, lizards opportunistically predated on Lepidoptera larvae, Coleoptera larvae/adults and Orthoptera nymphs/adults. The foraging intensity revealed differences between the species, mainly in the wet season, when T. semitaeniatus was more active than T. hispidus. The mean activity body temperature of T. semitaeniatus was significantly higher than that of T. hispidus. The thermoregulatory behavior showed that during the dry season T. hispidus and T. semitaeniatus spent more time in shade or under filtered sun. In the wet season, T. hispidus did not show differences in the amount of time spent among the light exposure locations, however T. semitaeniatus spent most of their time exposed to direct sun or filtered sun. The reproductive cicle of T. hispidus and T. semitaeniatus occurred from the middle of the dry season to the beginning of the wet season. In both species, female reproductive activity was influenced by precipitation, whereas males exhibited spermatozoa in their testes throughout the year, and their reproductive activity was not related with any of the climatic variables analysed. In the two species, the fat storage varied inversely with reproductive activity, and there was no difference in fat body mass between females and males. We concluded that the segregation between T. hispidus and T. semitaeniatus in this caatinga area occurs in vertical space use, in the largest vagility of T. hispidus in microhabitat use and larger range size of their alimentary xviii items. Additionally, significant seasonal differences in relation to the activity period, body temperature, and foraging and termoregulatory behaviors between these two Tropidurus species facilitate their coexistence.
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Lemon sharks, Negaprion brevirostris, are common in the Fernando de Noronha Archipelago, but detailed information about the species in this site is lacking. The aim of this study was to describe the spatial distribution, grouping behavior, habitat use and behavioral ecology of juvenile lemon sharks in the archipelago, and their interaction with some environmental and ecological factors. During 2006 and 2007, the presence and spatial distribution of juvenile sharks were quantified through scuba diving and snorkeling at several sites of the archipelago. In 2008 the habitat use of juvenile sharks was quantified through visual census while snorkeling along 300 x 8 m strip transects. During these transects the grouping behavior of lemon sharks was quantified by ad libitum. Results indicate that Fernando de Noronha Archipelago is used as a nursery area for lemon sharks, and the parturition occurs from November to April. Juveniles preferred using shallower areas available by the tide variation and formed groups only in the presence of adult conspecifics. This preference for shallower habitats and the group behavior probably are anti-predatory tactics used by juvenile lemon sharks, in response to the low availability of shelter and high predation risk of the studied areas. Quantifications of prey availability and predation risk of juveniles showed that, in general, lemon sharks are trading-off food by security and investing in sites with higher possibility of energetic return. Behavioral observations enabled to record juvenile carangid fishes following juvenile lemon sharks, remora host-parasite and juvenile sharks foraging on schools of herrings and octopuses. We also recorded the behavior of juvenile sharks following conspecifics of similar size, circling with two or three individuals and smaller individuals giving way to larger juveniles. When adults are present, juvenile lemon sharks are more social than solitary, indicating that predation is one of the factors that contribute to social behaviors of the species. Results also suggest that when grouped the juveniles have a hierarchical organization according to body size. Furthermore, observation of large adult females with several fresh mating bites and scars in the same habitats used by juvenile lemon sharks, indicates that Fernando de Noronha Archipelago is used as nursery and mating grounds by this species
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The physical and environmental factors presented by each habitat and the rhythm of behavior patterns strongly influence the ecology and behavior of the all living beings. At same time this factors may provide clues about the structure of a population and its ecological balance. The organizational structure, ecology and behavior of a species appraised in a region if we know be in balance when compared to the same type of appraisal made in a degraded area can provide a clear view of how the anthropogenic influences acted on these species and what steps can be taken in order to mitigate the effects and keep the population. The region where this study was conducted is, like most areas of port, subject to intense physical and environmental degradation. With the emerging interest of change in the quality of these environments also by the companies themselves that use the port services, the proposed study aimed to characterize the use of habitat, the distribution of behavioral activities carried out throughout the day and influence of geomorphology of the bed, depth and variation of tide on the expression of the behavior of Sotalia guianensis in the port of Maceio - Alagoas. From this information will be possible establish parameters for comparison with other populations of S. guianensis and establish conservation measures for the population occurring in the port of Maceio - AL, serving also as a basis for conservation actions future performed in other port regions
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Coastal and marine protected areas are created to protect habitat, avoid biodiversity loss, and to help maintain viable fisheries. However, most of these areas in tropical countries occurs in impoverished regions and directly affect the livelihood and survival of coastal communities which directly depend on fisheries and shellfisheries. Therefore, socioeconomic and conservation goals overlap. In this context, fishers should have a central place in resource management. They are critical resource users and their behavior directly affects the system. Shellfish resources are important sources of food, employment and income to fishing communities in Latin America. But despite its widespread use for food and income, there is an urgent need of more research on shellfish management. This research discusses the artisanal fisheries of Venus clam (Anomalocardia brasiliana) (Gmelin, 1791) (Bivalvia: Veneridae) in Brazil, and points out strategies to improve the system. Venus clam is a small and commonly exploited species for food and income on the Brazilian coast. This research was carried out at Ponta do Tubarão Sustainable Development Reserve (Brazilian Northeast coast), where there was no information available about who harvest, where or how much Venus clam has been harvested, despite this resource being exploited for generations. Clam fishery follows the pattern of socio-economic invisibility that general clam exploitation has in Brazil. Methods used were interviews, participatory monitoring and focal follow observation from January 2010 to May 2011. Results include: (a) the identification of shell fishers, (b) how harvest and meat processing are performed (mollusk beds, time spent, gross and net production), (c) the analisis of shell fisher income and their economic sustentability, and (d) the involvement of shell fisher families in data gathering and analyses for the first time. Based on the acquired knowledge, we propose a new institutional arrangement for clam fishery including co-management, fisheries agreement, compensatory arrangements and improvements for the Venus clam value chain such as the establishment of a minimum price for clam meat. This research also includes two other results: a general description for Venus clam harvesting in the Brazilian Northeast coast and a specific discussion about co-management of Venus clam in Brazil. The first one was possible through the meeting of several shell fisherwomen from other states during activities promoted by People of the Tides (PoT) project. PoT was an international initiative aiming to develop coastal communities that depend on mollusk for their livelihood. The second one is a comparison between PoT and Venus clam management at Pirajubaé Marine Extractive Reserve (Santa Catarina). It evaluates the success and failures of these only two initiatives involving co-management of A. brasiliana in Brazil
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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The reptile fauna in the municipality of São Paulo is well sampled due to intensive collection in the last 100 years. In the present work we provide a checklist of reptile species in São Paulo municipality based on preserved specimens in scientific collections. The reptile fauna was also characterized by three ecological parameters: habitat use, substrate use, and diet. We recorded a total of 97 reptile species (two turtles, one crocodilian, 19 lizards, seven amphisbaenians, and 68 snakes). Approximately 70% of the lizards and 40% of the snakes are typical of forest habitats of the Serra do Mar mountain range. Other squamates are typical of open formations that occur mainly on inland Cerrado habitats. All turtles and the crocodilian are associated to riparian habitats. Approximately 63% of the lizards are predominantly terrestrial, and the remaining species are arboreal. Most species of snakes are terrestrial (38%) or subterranean/criptozoic (25%) whereas a smaller proportion are arboreal (18%) or aquatic (9%). Lizards feed upon arthropods. Almost 50% of the snake species are specialized or feed mainly upon anuran amphibians. Other important items consumed by snakes are mammals (24%), lizards (18%), subterranean vertebrates (10%), and invertebrates (earthworms, mollusks and arthropods; 15%). A total of 51 reptile species have not been recorded for the last six years. Probably many of these species are extinct in the region due the intense local urbanization and habitat loss. The survey of species collected in São Paulo municipality and received in the Instituto Butantan in recent years allowed the identification of 10 lizards at least 42 snake species already occurring in the region. The high species richness of the original fauna seems related to the geographic location of the municipality, in a contact zone between forested areas of the Atlantic Forest (ombrophilous forest) and open formations (savannas, high-altitude grassland). Thus, the original habitat composition probably allowed sympatry among different species pools typical of both open and forested formations. The extant snake fauna recorded in the last three years indicates a higher loss of the species in open formations when compared to the forested areas.