978 resultados para eastern Asian-eastern North America disjunct distribution


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Includes bibliography

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Twenty-five specimens of the freshwater red alga Compsopogon were collected from locations in North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Australasia and Oceania, and from an aquarium, with the goal of determining genetic diversity among specimens and ascertaining the number of phylogenetic species. Specimens were morphologically identified as having either the 'caeruleus' morphology, with regular polyhedral cortical cells, or the 'leptoclados' morphology, with irregular cortical cells with rhizoidal outgrowths. The 'leptoclados' morphology has been used by some researchers to distinguish the genus Compsopogonopsis from Compsopogon, or at least to distinguish C. leptoclados from other Compsopogon species. Sequence data for the rbcL gene and cox1 barcoding region were obtained for most specimens. In addition, SSU and partial LSU (barcode) rDNA were explored for a few specimens, but all sequences were identical. For the 25 newly generated and eight previously published rbcL gene data, there were seven unique haplotypes, but the sequence divergence was very low (≤7 bp, ≤ 0.7%). One haplotype was widespread, represented by 21 specimens from diverse locations in all regions sampled. Likewise, the 22 new and one previously published cox1 barcode region sequences yielded seven unique haplotypes with little sequence divergence (≤13 bp, ≤ 2.0%). One haplotype was widespread, being shared among 16 specimens from all regions. The combined molecular and morphological data showed no genetic differentiation between the 'caeruleus' and 'leptoclados' morphologies. The ubiquitous distribution of Compsopogon in tropical/subtropical regions and its low genetic variation are probably facilitated by the alga's ability to tolerate a wide range of stream conditions and its propagation via asexual spores. Given the findings of previous culture-based studies, morphometric research and field observations, coupled with the results of our study, we conclude there is only a single monospecific genus worldwide and that the species is correctly called C. caeruleus, since this is the oldest validly published name; all other previously described species of Compsopogon and Compsopogonopsis are synonyms. © 2013 British Phycological Society.

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This issue of FAL Bulletin analyses the role of good modal integration between port facilities and the rail network to ensure port competitiveness.

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The 2014 edition of Latin America and the Caribbean in the World Economy: Regional integration and value chains amid challenging external conditions has four chapters. Chapter I examines the main features of the international context and their repercussions for world and regional trade. Chapter II looks at Latin American and Caribbean participation in global value chains and confirms that the region, with the exception of Mexico and Central America, has only limited linkages with the three major regional value chains of Asia, Europe and North America. This chapter also looks at how participation in value chains may contribute to more inclusive structural change, by analysing three core microeconomic aspects. Chapter III identifies various spheres in which regional integration and cooperation can help strengthen production integration between the economies of Latin America and the Caribbean. The fourth chapter explores the intra- and extraregional trade relations of the countries of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and considers how to strengthen production integration in the subregion by taking advantage of linkages beyond trade and building on commercial and production complementarities among the members. The chapter also reviews the differences between the countries in terms of income, population and production and export structure, in a context of marked macroeconomic vulnerability.

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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)

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Apesar dos esforços de pesquisa nos últimos anos, muitos dos aspectos das migrações dos charadrídeos e escolopacídeos no Brasil permanecem desconhecidos. A maioria dos estudos em escala local ou regional revela a necessidade de uma síntese das informações em escala espacial adequada para facilitar a detecção dos grandes padrões de movimento destas espécies no país. Desta forma, esta tese teve como objetivo geral identificar os padrões de distribuição e migrações das espécies de aves das famílias Charadriidae e Scolopacidae que se reproduzem no hemisfério norte e usam o território brasileiro durante as suas migrações, visando desenvolver estratégias para a conservação do grupo. Como objetivos específicos, caracterizar as principais rotas migratórias para estas espécies; identificar as áreas críticas para a conservação utilizando os critérios propostos pela metodologia das AIAs e ACBs; avaliar o estado de conservação atual das áreas críticas para a conservação destas espécies de acordo ao Sistema Nacional de Unidades de Conservação; avaliar se as áreas críticas são parte das áreas prioritárias para a conservação da biodiversidade brasileira; aplicar os critérios da Convenção de Ramsar e da WHSRN para identificar áreas críticas para conservação destas espécies. A base de dados foi estabelecida a partir de levantamento bibliográfico; consultas às coleções científicas de museus brasileiros e estrangeiros; utilização de bases de dados de recuperações de anilhas brasileiras e norte-americanas; dados cedidos por pesquisadores do Brasil, Argentina e Estados Unidos; dados de campo coletados pessoalmente no Pantanal (MS), litoral dos estados do Maranhão e Rio Grande do Sul. Entre os principais resultados, 19 das 24 espécies possuem um conjunto importante de dados, com as demais sendo ocasionais ou com poucas informações. Há uma maior concentração de dados na região costeira do país, com menor cobertura de áreas do interior. A Amazônia Ocidental mostrou-se a menos conhecida nos aspectos abordados, embora seja a via de passagem para algumas das espécies analisadas. O litoral entre a foz do Amazonas e São Luiz, no Maranhão foi a principal área de concentração em termos numéricos. A costa do Rio Grande do Sul foi o segundo local com maior destaque nas análises. Quinze espécies foram registradas em todos os meses do ano, demonstrando que nem todos os indivíduos migram anualmente para o hemisfério norte. Considerando as rotas globais, 8 espécies utilizam a rota do Atlântico e 10 a rota do Mississipi ou do centro da América do Norte. As outras 6 possivelmente utilizam-se das duas rotas. O conhecimento na utilização das 5 rotas propostas por Antas (1983) durante a migração sul-norte indicou que algumas espécies têm registros no interior da Amazônia, período em que possivelmente seus habitats estariam inundados. O padrão de chegada na migração norte-sul no Brasil é entre agosto e outubro, com incremento a partir de setembro. A migração sul-norte ocorre entre meados de março e abril na maioria das espécies. Durante o período não reprodutivo existe um padrão de distribuição ao longo da costa utilizado por 9 espécies, outro continental para 7 espécies no interior e ainda um terceiro, difuso, encontrado em 5 espécies que se distribuem tanto na costa quanto no interior do país. Foram identificadas 260 áreas críticas importantes para as espécies avaliadas. Observou-se que 72% das ACBs identificadas estão fora do SNUC. A sobreposição das ACBs com as Áreas Prioritárias para a Conservação revelou que 46% das primeiras estão sem indicação de importância neste programa. São elegíveis para os critérios da Convenção Ramsar 69 ACBs, enquanto 65 podem ser inseridas no programa da WHSRN. Entre as principais conclusões, o conhecimento de processos biológicos fundamentais à manutenção do ciclo de vida e o curso de suas migrações anuais, de parâmetros relacionados à mudas de penas, ganho de massa corporal, razão sexual e etária das populações migrantes são aspectos ainda insuficientemente detalhados para estas espécies no Brasil, e mesmo na América do Sul, assim como a necessidade de pesquisas que possam gerar estimativas e tendências populacionais, uma vez que em escala global várias destas espécies apresentam declínio populacional.

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Leptodeira é um gênero Neotropical de serpentes com nove espécies, dividido em quatro grupos morfológicos: annulata com as espécies L. annulata (L. a. annulata, L. a. ashmeadi, L. a. cussiliris, L. a. pulchriceps, L. a. rhombifera), L. bakeri, L. maculata, L. frenata (L. f. frenata, L. f. malleisi, L. f. yucatanensis), L. uribei; septentrionalis com L. septentrionalis (L. s. septentrionalis, L. s. larcorum, L. s. ornata, L. s. polysticta), L. splendida (L. s. splendida, L. s. bressoni, L. s. ephippiata); nigrofasciata com apenas a espécie L. nigrofasciata; e grupo punctata representado por L. punctata. Na última revisão taxonômica do gênero, várias espécies foram consideradas como subespécies, sendo caracterizadas principalmente com base no padrão de cor. No entanto, recentes análises moleculares não corroboraram o arranjo taxonômico proposto anteriormente. As duas espécies com distribuição geográfica mais ampla e maior número de subespécies, L. annulata e L. septentrionalis, não tiveram monofila validada. Na mais recente proposta filogenética de Leptodeira, a monofilia do complexo L. annulata/septentrionalis foi obtida a partir de caracteres moleculares, sendo recuperados dois clados geograficamente distintos: um clado Norte presente no sul da América do Norte e norte da América Central (L. s. polysticta ((L. rubricata - L. a. rhombifera) ((L. a. cussiliris - L. maculata) L. a. cussiliris))); e outro clado Sul-americano presente no sul da América Central e toda América do Sul ((L. s. ornata–L. a. annulata) (L. s. ornata (L. bakeri (L. a. ashmeadi–L. a. annulata)))). Neste trabalho, apresento uma hipótese filogenética para Leptodeira e reviso taxonomicamente o clado Sul do complexo L. annulata/septentrionalis, apresentando um novo arranjo taxonômico para o grupo. Desta forma, a presente tese está organizada em: Introdução Geral, onde foram apresentadas informações sobre taxonomia e sistemática de Leptodeira, especialmente do complexo L. annulata/septentrionalis; Capítulo 1 intitulado “Análise filogenética de Leptodeira (Serpentes, Dipsadidae)”, com o objetivo de propor uma hipótese filogenética para o gênero, com base em caracteres moleculares; e o Capítulo 2 intitulado “Taxonomia das espécies do clado Sul do complexo L. annulata/septentrionalis (Serpentes, Dipsadidae)”, que teve como objetivo caracterizar morfologicamente os clados obtidos a partir da análise molecular e propor um novo arranjo taxonômico para o grupo.

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Under the 1994 amendments to the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA), the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) are required to publish Stock Assessment Reports for all stocks of marine mammals within U.S. waters, to review new information every year for strategic stocks and every three years for non-strategic stocks, and to update the stock assessment reports when significant new information becomes available. This report presents stock assessments for 13 Pacific marine mammal stocks under NMFS jurisdiction, including 8 “strategic” stocks and 5 “non-strategic” stocks (see summary table). A new stock assessment for humpback whales in American Samoa waters is included in the Pacific reports for the first time. New or revised abundance estimates are available for 9 stocks, including Eastern North Pacific blue whales, American Samoa humpback whales, five U.S. west coast harbor porpoise stocks, the Hawaiian monk seal, and southern resident killer whales. A change in the abundance estimate of Eastern North Pacific blue whales reflects a recommendation from the Pacific Scientific Review Group to utilize mark-recapture estimates for this population, which provide a better estimate of total population size than the average of recent line-transect and mark-recapture estimates. The ‘Northern Oregon/Washington Coast Stock’ harbor porpoise stock assessment includes a name change (‘Oregon’ is appended to ‘Northern Oregon’) to reflect recent stock boundary changes. Changes in abundance estimates for the two stocks of harbor porpoise that occur in Oregon waters are the result of these boundary changes, and do not reflect biological changes in the populations. Updated information on the three stocks of false killer whales in Hawaiian waters is also included in these reports. Information on the remaining 50 Pacific region stocks will be reprinted without revision in the final 2009 reports and currently appears in the 2008 reports (Carretta et al. 2009). Stock Assessments for Alaskan marine mammals are published by the National Marine Mammal Laboratory (NMML) in a separate report. Pacific region stock assessments include those studied by the Southwest Fisheries Science Center (SWFSC, La Jolla, California), the Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center (PIFSC, Honolulu, Hawaii), the National Marine Mammal Laboratory (NMML, Seattle, Washington), and the Northwest Fisheries Science Center (NWFSC, Seattle, WA). Northwest Fisheries Science Center staff prepared the report on the Eastern North Pacific Southern Resident killer whale. National Marine Mammal Laboratory staff prepared the Northern Oregon/Washington coast harbor porpoise stock assessment. Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center staff prepared the report on the Hawaiian monk seal. Southwest Fisheries Science Center staff prepared stock assessments for 9 stocks. The stock assessment for the American Samoa humpback whale was prepared by staff from the Center for Coastal Studies, Hawaiian Islands Humpback National Marine Sanctuary, the Smithsonian Institution, and the Southwest Fisheries Science Center. Draft versions of the stock assessment reports were reviewed by the Pacific Scientific Review Group at the November 2008, Maui meeting. The authors also wish to thank those who provided unpublished data, especially Robin Baird and Joseph Mobley, who provided valuable information on Hawaiian cetaceans. Any omissions or errors are the sole responsibility of the authors. This is a working document and individual stock assessment reports will be updated as new information on marine mammal stocks and fisheries becomes available. Background information and guidelines for preparing stock assessment reports are reviewed in Wade and Angliss (1997). The authors solicit any new information or comments which would improve future stock assessment reports. These Stock Assessment Reports summarize information from a wide range of sources and an extensive bibliography of all sources is given in each report. We strongly urge users of this document to refer to and cite original literature sources rather than citing this report or previous Stock Assessment Reports. If the original sources are not accessible, the citation should follow the format: [Original source], as cited in [this Stock Assessment Report citation].

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If readers of Great Plains Research are seeking a window on rock art research in North America, this book provides a few clear panes, a few that are hazy, and a few muddy ones. Like many edited volumes, the weaker contributions and lack of a consistent style limit the book's usefulness. Some authors target a general readership; others clearly are addressing colleagues. The book has two stated themes: the history of rock art research in North America and recent approaches to rock art analysis. Articles by Julie Francis and (jointly) David Whitley and Jean Clottes explore why rock art research has long been marginalized in North America. Unfortunately, both of these otherwise observant essays slip into advocacy of shamanism as a unifying or primary explanation for rock art, an interpretive model by no means universally accepted by today's rock art specialists.

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Applying ecological studies to the adaptations of prehistoric human hunter-gatherer groups has greatly increased our abilities to interpret effects of an ever-changing environment and our access to critical resources on these populations. The Pleistocene/Holocene transition, its climate and human genesis in the new world, draws intensive interest from a number of scientific communities. In Twilight of the Mammoths, Paul Martin adds his views, which are of no surprise, on the megafaunal extirpations during a cultural period referred to in North America as Clovis.

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One hundred forty-five cliff swallows, Petrochelidon pyrrhonota, were examined for cestodes in two separate surveys in Weld County, Colorado. Seven species representing four genera were found. Angularella audubonensis sp. n. is differentiated by the small size of the rostellar hooks (8.4-13.5 μm) and the medial relationship of the cirrus pouch to the osmoregulatory canals. Other species collected were Angularella beema, Anonchotaenia globata, Mayhewia ababili, Vitta magniuncinata, Vitta parvirostris and Vitta riparia. Seven new hosts and geographic distribution records were established for Colorado, and six new records were determined for North America.

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The pathogenesis of South American and North American myxoma viruses was examined in two species of North American lagomorphs, Sylvilagus nuttallii (mountain cottontail) and Sylvilagus audubonii (desert cottontail) both of which have been shown to have the potential to transmit the South American type of myxoma virus. Following infection with the South American strain (Lausanne, Lu), S. nuttallii developed both a local lesion and secondary lesions on the skin. They did not develop the classical myxomatosis seen in European rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus). The infection at the inoculation site did not resolve during the 20-day time course of the trial and contained transmissible virus titres at all times. In contrast, S. audubonii infected with Lu had very few signs of disseminated infection and partially controlled virus replication at the inoculation site. The prototype Californian strain of myxoma virus (MSW) was able to replicate at the inoculation site of both species but did not induce clinical signs of a disseminated infection. In S. audubonii, there was a rapid response to MSW characterized by a massive T lymphocyte infiltration of the inoculation site by day 5. MSW did not reach transmissible titres at the inoculation site in either species. This might explain why the Californian myxoma virus has not expanded its host-range in North America.

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An ecological and taxonomic study of the helminth parasites of voles (Microtus spp.) in the Jackson Hole region of Wyoming is reported. Nematospiroides microti n. sp. from Microtus montanus nanus and M. richardsoni macropus is described and figured. A cestode, Paranoplocephala infrequens, and a nematode, Syphacia obvelata, were generally distributed throughout the region in all habitats except the sage flats. A trematode, Quinqueserialis hassalli, was recovered only from voles collected near streams at low altitudes. This was presumably due to the localized distribution of the molluscan intermediate host. Four helminths, viz., Hymenolepis horrida, Heligmosomum costellatum, Nematospiroides microti and Trichuris opaca, were restricted in their distribution to the alpine and sub-alpine meadows. Of these parasites, H. horrida and H. costellatum are reported for the first time from North America. Most of the other host and locality records are new. Available data indicate that host specificity was not a factor in restricting the distribution of parasites. Although the greatest numbers of parasites, both qualitative and quantitative, occurred in habitats where host density was greatest, it seems unlikely that host density is the only factor involved.

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Paranoplocephala etholeni n. sp, parasitizing the meadow vole Microtus pennsylvanicus in Alaska and Wisconsin, USA. is described Paranaplocephala etholeni is morphologically most closely related to the Nearctic Paranoplocephala ondatrae (Rausch, 1948). Available data suggest that P. etholeni is a host-specific, locally rare species that may have a wide but sporadic geographical distribution in North America. The finding of P. ondatrae-like cestodes in Microtus spp. suggests that this poorly known species may actually be a parasite of voles rather than muskrat (type host). A tabular synopsis of all the known species of Paranoplocephala s. I. in the Holarctic region with their main morphological features is presented.

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In spite of the importance of the various species of shrews to the biotic community, several aspects of their ecology remain very incompletely known. The helminths parasitic in the more conspicuous small mammals in North America have been studied more or less completely, but those occurring in shrews have been largely disregarded. This situation is particularly inappropriate when one considers that shrews often constitute the most abundant mammalian group in a given area. We have attempted to secure an adequate amount of shrew helminth material for study, and it is the purpose of this paper to present observations resulting from this work.