986 resultados para competitive interactions


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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)

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O reservatório da UHE Coaracy Nunes no rio Araguari esta localizado entre os municípios de Ferreira Gomes e Porto Grande no estado do Amapá-Brasil, distando 200 km do Oceano Atlântico. A usina Coaracy Nunes foi a primeira hidrelétrica a ser construída na Amazônia brasileira, tendo suas obras iniciadas em 1967. O rio Araguari e o principal rio do estado do Amapá e representa fonte de geração de renda através da pesca, atividades agropecuárias em sua várzea, navegação, mineração, geração de energia e lazer. O presente estudo teve por objetivo avaliar as alterações impostas pela construção do reservatório da UHE Coaracy Nunes, através das assembleias de peixes de quatro áreas de influencia direta desta usina. Para isso, no período de maio de 2009 a julho de 2010, foram realizadas coletas bimensais, de peixes, com redes de malhas padronizadas variando de 1,0 a 10,0 cm entre nos adjacentes e outras técnicas auxiliares. A partir destas coletas, no capitulo 1 foi verificado a composição, abundancia (CPUEn) e biomassa (CPUEp) relativas da ictiofauna, eficiência amostral (curva do coletor, curva de rarefação e Jacknife) e descritores ecológicos de comunidades (riqueza, diversidade, equitabilidade e dominância) das assembleias das quatro áreas. Foram efetuadas analises de variância (ANOVA: bifatorial), Kruskal-Wallis, teste-T e Mann-Whitney para verificar se havia diferenças significativas dos descritores entre as áreas e períodos sazonais. Estas análises foram corroboradas por analises multivariadas de agrupamento (cluster), ordenamento (MDS), Anosim e Simper. No capitulo 2, os estados ecológicos das quatro áreas foram verificados utilizando como indicadores: curvas espécie abundancia, curvas K-dominância e curvas ABC, assim como modelos espécie-abundancia serie geométrica, log serie, log normal e broken stick, e modelo de regressão linear de espectros de tamanho. No capitulo 3, a estrutura trófica foi estimada a partir da categorização das espécies de cada área em 5 guildas: piscívora, onívora, detritívora, carnívora e herbívora. A abundancia, biomassa e índices ecológicos destas guildas foram estimados e verificados suas variações espaço-temporais, por analises de variância (ANOVA: bifatorial e Kruskal-Wallis) e teste t. No capitulo 4, a dieta das espécies mais abundantes das assembleias de cada área foi verificada e suas variações espaço-temporais detectadas por analise de variância (ANOVA: bifatorial e Kruskal-Wallis). Também foram estimados a amplitude e sobreposição de nicho das espécies mais abundantes, assim como a existência de competição entre as espécies através de modelagem nula. No capitulo 5 foi realizada a avaliação ecossistêmica das quatro áreas através de modelos de fluxo de biomassa na rede trófica do ecossistema, usando como instrumento de modelação o software Ecopath. Essas análises tinham por objetivo descrever as variações dos atributos ecológicos que quantificam as propriedades de maturidade, estabilidade e resiliência ecossistêmica que pudessem refletir os estados ecológicos dessas áreas. O modelo incluiu compartimentos funcionais desde produtores primários ate predadores de topo. No geral, todas as análises indicaram sensíveis alterações na ictiofauna atribuídas a implantação da UHE Coaracy Nunes, que se refletem nos três níveis de organização: ecossistema, comunidade (assembleia) e guilda. Os resultados indicaram a captura de 1.977 peixes distribuídos em 2 classes, 9 ordens, 23 famílias, 73 gêneros e 108 espécies. As curvas de acumulação de espécies e curvas de rarefação individualizadas demonstraram que houve suficiência amostral nas áreas Reservatório e Lacustre. Os resultados mostraram que a área Jusante foi mais rica, diversa e equitativa em relação as demais e que a sazonalidade não influenciou na variação destes índices. A abundancia relativa (CPUEn) foi superior nas áreas Reservatório e Lacustre e a biomassa relativa (CPUEb) foi superior na área Jusante, não havendo diferenças sazonais para esses descritores em todas as áreas. As analises de agrupamento (cluster) e ordenamento (MDS) da ictiofauna permitiram identificar a formação de três assembleias distintas: Jusante, Montante e uma assembleia que compreende as áreas Reservatório e Lacustre, ratificando a similaridade dessas duas áreas. Os resultados das curvas whitakeplot, ABC e K-dominância, assim como o ajuste satisfatório do modelo broken stick e os padrões das curvas de espectro de tamanho para a assembleia da área a jusante indicam que esta área foi a mais equilibrada em termos ecológicos. Nas áreas Lacustre e Reservatório, os resultados tanto do ajuste ao modelo serie geométrica, quanto os resultados das curvas whitake-plot, ABC e K-dominância e o espectro de tamanho, assim como os resultados das curvas e ajustes ao modelo série e menor espectro de tamanho para a assembleia da área Reservatório, refletem que os peixes destas áreas, em sua maioria, são indivíduos pequenos com elevada dominância e baixa equitabilidade, caracterizando comunidades típicas de áreas impactadas. A estrutura trófica das assembleias de peixes das áreas represadas (Reservatório e Lacustre) foram formatadas em função do barramento do rio, que isolou e fragmentou o ambiente, determinando sua modificação física, impondo o estabelecimento de uma ictiofauna de espécies pré-adaptadas as condições ambientais de represamento, diferente, em parte, da estrutura da ictiofauna fluvial pre-barramento, destacando as piscívoras, onívoras e detritívoras, que foram as mais ricas e abundantes em função da disponibilidade, nas duas áreas, dos recursos alimentares de sua preferencia. Os resultados demonstraram que as dietas das assembleias de todas as áreas foram similares quanto ao predomínio do consumo de peixes e detritos, seguidos de alimento vegetal aloctone, revelando um padrão com poucos nichos amplos e uma concentração maior de espécies com nichos mais estreitos. Contudo, o padrão de baixa amplitude trófica foi evidenciado pelo predomínio da guilda piscívora, somada as guildas detritívora e herbívora. A sazonalidade pouco influenciou na alimentação da maioria das espécies em todas as áreas. Os padrões comparativos da dieta entre as áreas Montante e Jusante com as áreas Reservatório e Lacustre indicam que a maioria das espécies das áreas represadas pertenciam as guildas piscívora, onívora e detritívora antes do barramento do rio, que colonizaram estes ambientes, influenciadas, principalmente, pela abundancia dos recursos alimentares de suas preferencias e das condições físicas ambientais favoráveis. Interações competitivas foram evidenciadas pelos modelos nulos, sugerindo que a competição também foi um fator importante na estruturação das assembleias. Ecossistemicamente, os quatro modelos de fluxo de biomassa representam ecossistemas com elevada produção primaria oriunda da floresta riparia e algas filamentosas, que são utilizadas parcialmente. A cadeia trófica baseada em detrito apresentou ser mais importante que a que tem como base a produção primaria nas áreas Reservatório e Lacustre. A maioria dos fluxos ocorre nos compartimentos de níveis tróficos baixos. As propriedades ecossistêmicas da área Jusante indicam que este ambiente se encontra mais desenvolvido e maduro em relação aos outros, caracterizado por resiliência e entropia altas. As áreas represadas (Reservatório e Lacustre) apresentaram atributos ecossistêmicos que lhe conferiram características de menos resiliente e menos maduro que as áreas de rio. A área Montante apresentou um padrão intermediário de resiliência, estabilidade e maturidade. Esses resultados evidenciam que apos quarenta anos da construção da barragem do reservatório de Coaracy Nunes, a fragmentação do ambiente proporcionou alterações ecossistêmicas negativas, refletidas nas assembleias de peixes das áreas acima do barramento e na analise ecossistêmica, evidenciando que a área jusante apresenta características de ambiente em bom estado ecológico, com baixa alteração de origem antrópica e capaz de suportar distúrbios.

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Within a community, species may germinate at different times so as to mitigate competition and to take advantage of different aspects of the seasonal environment (temporal niche differentiation). We illustrated a hypothesis of the combined effects of abiotic and biotic competitive factors on germination timing and the subsequent upscale effects on community assembly. We estimated the germination timing (GT) for 476 angiosperm species of the eastern Tibetan Plateau grasslands under two light treatments in the field: high (i.e. natural) light and low light. We also measured the shift in germination timing (SGT) across treatments for all species. Furthermore, we used phylogenetic comparative methods to test if GT and SGT were associated with seed mass, an important factor in competitive interactions. We found a significant positive correlation between GT and seed mass in both light treatments. Additionally, small seeds (early germinating seeds) tended to germinate later and large seeds (late germinating seeds) tended to germinate earlier under low light vs high light conditions. Low light availability can reduce temporal niche differentiation by increasing the overlap in germination time between small and large seeds. In turn, reduced temporal niche differentiation may increase competition in the process of community assembly.

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Pós-graduação em Biologia Animal - IBILCE

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The effects of spatial competition among colonial marine organisms are often evident in the contact zones between colonies. These effects are especially pronounced when the interaction results in overgrowth or necrosis of one of the competitors. Ascidians, one of the dominant taxonomic groups in subtidal sessile communities, have specialized morula cells that provide a defense against microbial infections. Injuries resulting from interspecific competitive interactions might also act as a stimulus for this defensive mechanism. Therefore, we expected to see the recruitment of morula cells in tissues near competitor contact zones. To test the hypothesis that spatial competition elicits this immune response, we placed colonies of the ascidian Didemnum perlucidum from southeastern Brazil in four different types of competitive situations: (1) overgrowth of the competitor, (2) stand-off interactions, (3) overgrowth by the competitor, and (4) free of competitors. Our results indicate that competitive interactions increase the population of morula cells in contact zones, as more cells were observed in interactions that resulted in the overgrowth of individuals of D. perlucidum, and fewer cells were observed in colonies that were free of competitors. We identified the defensive function of the morula cells by showing the presence of the enzyme phenoloxidase within its vacuoles. Phenoloxidase is a widespread enzyme among animals and plants, and is frequently used in defense by synthesizing toxic quinones from polyphenol substrates. This is the first study to document the presence of morula cells in didemnid ascidians and the mobilization of these cells by spatial competition by heterospecifics, and one of the first studies to identify phenoloxidase activity in morula cells.

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This study documents one of the slowest feeding behaviors ever recorded for a muricid gastropod in one of the most biotically rigorous regions on the planet. In Pacific Panama, Vitularia salebrosa attacks mollusks by drilling through their shells. The duration of attacks estimated by isotope sclerochronology of oyster shells collected during attacks in progress range from 90 to 230 days, while experimental observation of interactions documented one attack greater than 103 days. The prolonged nature of attacks suggests that V. salebrosa is best characterized as an ectoparasite than as a predator, which is the ancestral condition in the Muricidae. An ectoparasitic lifestyle is also evident in the unusual interaction traces of this species, which include foot scars, feeding tunnels and feeding tubes, specialized soft anatomy, and in the formation of male-female Pairs, which is consistent with protandrous hermaphroditism, as is typical in sedentary gastropods. To delay death of its host, V. salebrosa targets renewable resources when feeding, such as blood and digestive glands. A congener, Vitularia miliaris from the Indo-Pacific, has an identical feeding biology The origin and persistence of extremely slow feeding in the tropics challenges our present understanding of selective pressures influencing the evolution of muricid feeding behaviors and morphological adaptations. Previously, it has been suggested that faster feeding is advantageous because it permits predators to spend a greater proportion of time hiding in enemy-free refugia or to take additional prey, the energetic benefits of which could be translated into increased fecundity or defenses. The benefits of exceptionally slow feeding have received little consideration. In the microhabitat preferred by V. salebrosa (beneath boulders), it is possible that prolonged interactions with hosts decrease vulnerability to enemies by reducing the frequency of risky foraging events between feedings . Ectoparasitic feeding through tunnels by V. salebrosa may also reduce competitive interactions with kleptoparasites (e.g., crabs, snails) that steal food through the gaped valves of dead or dying hosts.

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The effect of crab behaviour on shell-use dynamics was analysed, comparing both interference and exploitation behaviours between the hermit crabs Pagurus criniticornis and Pagurus brevidactylus. Although these species exhibited microhabitat separation, with P. criniticornis dominating (100%) in sandy substrates and P. brevidactylus (80%) on rocky shores, they overlapped in the rocky shore/sand interface (P. criniticornis, 53%; P. brevidactylus, 43%). Pagurus criniticornis occupied shells of Cerithium atratum in higher frequencies (84%) than P. brevidactylus (37%), which was hypothesized to be a consequence of competitive interactions combined with their ability to acquire and/or retain this resource. The species P. criniticornis was attracted in larger numbers to simulated gastropod predation events than was P. brevidactylus, which, on the few occasions that it moved before P. criniticornis, tended to be attracted more rapidly. Interspecific shell exchanges between these species were few, suggesting the absence of dominance relationships. The shell-use pattern in this species pair is thus defined by exploitation competition, which is presumed to be intensified in areas of microsympatry. These results differ from other studies, which found that interference competition through interspecific exchanges shapes shell use, indicating that shell partitioning in hermit crabs is dependent on the behaviour of the species involved in the contests.

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Despite a growing awareness that the herbaceous layer serves a special role in maintaining the structure and function of forests, this stratum remainsan underappreciated aspect of forest ecosystems. In this article I review and synthesize information concerning the herb layer’s structure,composition, and dynamics to emphasize its role as an integral component of forest ecosystems. Because species diversity is highest in the herb layeramong all forest strata, forest biodiversity is largely a function of the herb-layer community. Competitive interactions within the herb layer candetermine the initial success of plants occupying higher strata, including the regeneration of dominant overstory tree species. Furthermore, the herblayer and the overstory can become linked through parallel responses to similar environmental gradients. These relationships between strata varyboth spatially and temporally. Because the herb layer responds sensitively to disturbance across broad spatial and temporal scales, its dynamics canprovide important information regarding the site characteristics of forests, including patterns of past land-use practices. Thus, the herb layer has asignificance that belies its diminutive stature.

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In many animals, males congregate in leks that females visit for the sole purpose of mating. We observed male and female behavior on 3 different-sized leks of the bower-building cichlid fish Nyassachromis cf. microcephalus to test predictions of 3 prominent lek models: the "hotshot," "hot spot," and "female preference" models. In this system, we were able to refine these predictions by distinguishing between indirect mate choice, by which females restrict their set of potential mates in the absence of individual male assessment, and direct mate choice, by which females assess males and their territories through dyadic behavioral interactions. On no lek were males holding central territories favored by indirect or direct mate choice, contrary to the prediction of the hotshot model that leks form because inferior males establish territories surrounding hotshot males preferred by females. Average female encounter rate of males increased with lek size, a pattern typically interpreted as evidence that leks form through female preference for lekking males, rather than because males congregate in hot spots of high female density. Female propensity to engage in premating behavior once courted did not increase with lek size, suggesting female preference for males on larger leks operated through indirect choice rather than direct choice based on individual assessment. The frequency of male-male competitive interactions increased with lek size, whereas their foraging rate decreased, implying a cost to males maintaining territories on larger leks. Together these data most strongly support the female preference model, where females may benefit through indirect mate choice for males able to meet the competitive cost of occupying larger leks.

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Abstract Some introduced invasive species may be competitively superior to natives because they release allelochemicals, which negatively affect native species. Allelochemicals can be immediately effective after being released but can also persist in soils, resulting in a legacy effect. However, to our knowledge there are no studies which distinguish between allelopathic legacy and immediate allelopathy of invasive species and also test for their relative importance and possible interdependence. We used eleven invasive species and tested whether they show immediate allelopathy and allelopathic legacy effects in a factorial pairwise competition experiment using field-collected soil (invaded/non-invaded) and activated carbon to neutralize allelochemicals. We grew two native and the invasive species in both monocultures and pairwise mixtures. In monocultures, the native species did not experience an allelopathic legacy effect of the invasives, suggesting that invaders generally lack persistent allelochemicals. However, the effects of invader allelochemicals were modulated by competitive interactions. In competition, immediate allelopathy decreased competitive ability of natives, while allelopathic legacy positively affected the natives. Moreover, immediate allelopathic and allelopathic legacy effects were strongly negatively correlated. Our results suggest that both immediately released allelochemicals and the allelochemical legacy of invasive species are important for plant performance under natural conditions, and that natives should be able to recover once the invaders are removed. To test whether immediate allelopathy is responsible for plant invasion success, further studies should compare allelopathic effects between invasive and closely related native species.

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1 We used simulated and experimental plant populations to analyse mortality-driven pattern formation under size-dependent competition. Larger plants had an advantage under size-asymmetric but not under symmetric competition. Initial patterns were random or clumped. 2 The simulations were individual-based and spatially explicit. Size-dependent competition was modelled with different rules to partition overlapping zones of influence. 3 The experiment used genotypes of Arabidopsis thaliana with different morphological plasticity and hence size-dependent competition. Compared with wild types, transgenic individuals over-expressed phytochrome A and had decreased plasticity because of disabled phytochrome-mediated shade avoidance. Therefore, competition among transgenics was more asymmetric compared with wild-types. 4 Density-dependent mortality under symmetric competition did not substantially change the initial spatial pattern. Conversely, simulations under asymmetric competition and experimental patterns of transgenic over-expressors showed patterns of survivors that deviated substantially from random mortality independent of initial patterns. 5 Small-scale initial patterns of wild types were regular rather than random or clumped. We hypothesize that this small-scale regularity may be explained by early shade avoidance of seedlings in their cotyledon stage. 6 Our experimental results support predictions from an individual-based simulation model and support the conclusion that regular spatial patterns of surviving individuals should be interpreted as evidence for strong, asymmetric competitive interactions and subsequent density-dependent mortality.

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Metazoans have evolved ways to engage only the most appropriate cells for long-term tissue development and homeostasis. In many cases, competitive interactions have been shown to guide such cell selection events. In Drosophila, a process termed cell competition eliminates slow proliferating cells from growing epithelia. Recent studies show that cell competition is conserved in mammals with crucial functions like the elimination of suboptimal stem cells from the early embryo and the replacement of old T-cell progenitors in the thymus to prevent tumor formation. Moreover, new data in Drosophila has revealed that fitness indicator proteins, required for cell competition, are also involved in the culling of retinal neurons suggesting that 'fitness fingerprints' may play a general role in cell selection.

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The Chromatin Accessibility Complex (CHRAC) consists of the ATPase ISWI, the large ACF1 subunit and a pair of small histone-like proteins, CHRAC-14/16. CHRAC is a prototypical nucleosome sliding factor that mobilizes nucleosomes to improve the regularity and integrity of the chromatin fiber. This may facilitate the formation of repressive chromatin. Expression of the signature subunit ACF1 is restricted during embryonic development, but remains high in primordial germ cells. Therefore, we explored roles for ACF1 during Drosophila oogenesis. ACF1 is expressed in somatic and germline cells, with notable enrichment in germline stem cells and oocytes. The asymmetrical localization of ACF1 to these cells depends on the transport of the Acf1 mRNA by the Bicaudal-D/Egalitarian complex. Loss of ACF1 function in the novel Acf1(7) allele leads to defective egg chambers and their elimination through apoptosis. In addition, we find a variety of unusual 16-cell cyst packaging phenotypes in the previously known Acf1(1) allele, with a striking prevalence of egg chambers with two functional oocytes at opposite poles. Surprisingly, we found that the Acf1(1) deletion - despite disruption of the Acf1 reading frame - expresses low levels of a PHD-bromodomain module from the C-terminus of ACF1 that becomes enriched in oocytes. Expression of this module from the Acf1 genomic locus leads to packaging defects in the absence of functional ACF1, suggesting competitive interactions with unknown target molecules. Remarkably, a two-fold overexpression of CHRAC (ACF1 and CHRAC-16) leads to increased apoptosis and packaging defects. Evidently, finely tuned CHRAC levels are required for proper oogenesis.