998 resultados para Arthropods. Abundance. Biomass. Restinga
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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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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Ecological research and monitoring of lacustrine ecosystems often requires a whole-lake assessment of fish communities. Gillnet sampling offers an efficient means of estimating abundance, biomass and fish community composition. However the choice of gillnet sampling protocol may influence lake characterization via physical properties of the nets and allocation of sampling effort between littoral, benthic and pelagic habitats. This paper compares two commonly used, whole-lake sampling protocols applied across 17 prealpine, subalpine and alpine European lakes ranging widely in size, depth and altitude to determine their relative strength for research and management applications. Effort-corrected estimates of abundance, biomass and species richness were correlated between the protocols and both distinguished the trout-dominated alpine communities from subalpine and prealpine lakes dominated by whitefish and perch. A considerable amount of variance remained unexplained between the two protocols however, which seemed to correspond with differences in the proportion of effort among benthic and pelagic habitats. We suggest that both the European standard (CEN) and vertical (VERT) netting protocols are suitable for assessing ecological status and monitoring changes in lake fish communities through time. However the details of each protocol should be kept in mind when comparing fish communities between lakes. Mesh sizes used in CEN nets produce a more even size frequency distribution, suggesting that this protocol is most appropriate for assessing size structure of fish assemblages. The high proportion of netting effort in benthic habitats shallower than 70 m depth under the CEN protocol means that, particularly in larger lakes, outcomes will be disproportionately influenced by the ecological condition of this habitat. The VERT protocol presumably provides a more accurate estimate of whole-lake CPUE and community composition because effort, in terms of net area, is more evenly distributed across the entire volume of the lake. This is particularly important in large and deep lakes where pelagic habitats occupy a high proportion of the lake volume.
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During Cruise 54 of R/V Akademik Mstislav Keldysh macrobenthos of the Novaya Zemlya Trough was studied with use of a Sigsby trawl along a submeridional transect near 75°30'N at depth range from 68 to 362 m. In total 140 species of bottom animals were found. Relative role of taxons was assessed using three parameters: abundance, biomass, and energy flow. Similarity of the parameters was used for comparison of samples. New material greatly contributes to data on composition of fauna and structure of communities of the studied region. It was revealed that small scyphozoid polyps and sipunculoids play an important role in the trough's community. Presence of a community dominated by Ophiocten sericeum (with important role of small bivalves) was revealed for the first time not only at the eastern by also at the western slope of the Novaya Zemlya Trough. The sharpest changes in composition and structure of the bottom community were confined to a zone of transition from the trough floor to the slope. These changes are determined by specificity of the macrorelief (of the floor and slope), composition of ground (soft brown silts abound in rhizopods and dense gray silts with admixture of pebbles), and possibly by hydrodynamic processes near the bottom.
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Based on results of field observations in August 1998, July 2000, and August 2001 composition and quantitative distribution of coccolithophorids in the middle part of the Eastern Bering Sea shelf between 56°052'N and 59°019'N was characterized. Emiliania huxleyi abundance, biomass, and population structure as well as role of species in the coccolithophorid community and phytoplankton as a whole were evaluated. Abundance of the species in the upper mixed layer in bloom areas was 1-3 mln cells/l and biomass made up 30-75 mg C/m**3. E. huxleyi share in total phytoplankton numbers and biomass at that reached 98% and 84% respectively. Significant spatial heterogeneity of E. huxleyi, quantitative distribution and population size structure, as well as asynchronism in population development in neighboring parts of the bloom area were shown. The time period, during which population structure in certain part of the area shifts from domination of juvenile cells without coccoliths to a phase of active detritus formation with dying coccolithophorid cells involved, may be estimated as two weeks. A conclusion is made that after anomalous E. huxleyi bloom in 1997 mass development of coccolithophorids became a characteristic feature of phytoplankton community's seasonal succession in the middle part of the Eastern Bering Sea shelf.
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According to monitoring data gained between 1982-1992, macrobenthos in the Tiksi Bay is characterized by low indices of the total abundance, biomass and taxonomic diversity. 30 macrobenthic species have been recorded in the Tiksi Bay. The bottom biocenoses within the estuarine-arctic water mass consist of widespread eurybiontic boreal-arctic and brackish-water species. The maximal number of species was observed at a depth of 8.5 m. The maximum biomass was recorded on muddy grounds. The studied bottom fauna is characterized by a high population density (from 1160-600 ind/m**2) and low biomass of 15.5-22.4 g/m**2. The predominant benthic animals of the main Lena River channel 4.7 km upstream Stolb Island are Chironomidae, Plecoptera and Oligochaeta. In total, 48 species of macrobenthos were registered here. In spring the average density of macrozoobenthos in the channel is 680, in summer 770, in autumn 720 and in winter 380 ind/m**2, with the average biomass varying between 2.9 g/m**2 in spring, 7.06 in summer, 4.4 in autumn, and 2.6 in winter.
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Bacterial abundance, biomass and cell size were studied in the oligotrophic sediments of the Cretan Sea (Eastern Mediterranean), in order to investigate their response to the seasonal varying organic matter (OM) inputs. Sediment samples were collected on a seasonal basis along a transect of seven stations (ranging from 40 to 1570 m depth) using a multiple-corer. Bacterial parameters were related to changes in chloroplastic pigment equivalents (CPE), the biochemical composition (proteins, lipids, carbohydrates) of the sedimentary organic matter and the OM flux measured at a fixed station over the deep basin (1570 m depth). The sediments of the Cretan Sea represent a nutrient depleted ecosystem characterised by a poor quality organic matter. All sedimentary organic compounds were found to vary seasonally, and changes were more evident on the continental shelf than in deeper sediments. Bacterial abundance and biomass in the sediments of the Cretan Sea (ranging from 1.02 to 4.59 * 10**8 cells/g equivalent to 8.7 and 38.7 µgC/g) were quite high and their distribution appeared to be closely related to the input of fresh organic material. Bacterial abundance and biomass were sensitive to changes in nutrient availability, which also controls the average cell size and the frequency of dividing cells. Bacterial abundance increased up to 3-fold between August '94 and February '95 in response to the increased amount of sedimentary proteins and CPE, indicating that benthic bacteria were constrained more by changes in quality rather than the quantity of the sedimentary organic material. Bacterial responses to the food inputs were clearly detectable down to 10 cm depth. The distribution of labile organic compounds in the sediments appeared to influence the vertical patterns of bacterial abundance and biomass. Cell size decreased significantly with water depth. Bacterial abundance and biomass were characterised by clear seasonal changes in response to seasonal OM pulses. The strong coupling between protein flux and bacterial biomass together with the strong bacterial dominance over the total biomass suggest that the major part of the carbon flow was channelled through the bacteria and the benthic microbial loop.
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The distribution, biomass, and diversity of living (Rose Bengal stained) deep-sea benthic foraminifera (>30 µm) were investigated with multicorer samples from seven stations in the Arabian Sea during the intermonsoonal periods in March and in September/October, 1995. Water depths of the stations ranged between 1916 and 4425 m. The distribution of benthic foraminifera was compared with dissolved oxygen, % organic carbon, % calcium carbonate, ammonium, % silica, chloroplastic pigment equivalents, sand content, pore water content of the sediment, and organic carbon flux to explain the foraminiferal patterns and depositional environments. A total of six species-communities comprising 178 living species were identified by principal component analysis. The seasonal comparison shows that at the western stations foraminiferal abundance and biomass were higher during the Spring Intermonsoon than during the Fall Intermonsoon. The regional comparison indicates a distinct gradient in abundance, biomass, and diversity from west to east, and for biomass from north to south. Highest values are recorded in the western part of the Arabian Sea, where the influence of coastal and offshore upwelling are responsible for high carbon fluxes. Estimated total biomass of living benthic foraminifera integrated for the upper 5 cm of the sediment ranged between 11 mg Corg m**-2 at the southern station and 420 mg Corg m**-2 at the western station. Foraminifera in the size range from 30 to 125 ?m, the so-called microforaminifera, contributed between 20 and 65% to the abundance, but only 3% to 28% to the biomass of the fauna. Highest values were found in the central and southern Arabian Sea, indicating their importance in oligotrophic deep-sea areas. The overall abundance of benthic foraminifera is positively correlated with oxygen content and pore volume, and partly with carbon content and chloroplastic pigment equivalents of the sediment. The distributional patterns of the communities seem to be controlled by sand fraction, dissolved oxygen, calcium carbonate and organic carbon content of the sediment, but the critical variables are of different significance for each community.
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ZooScan with ZooProcess and Plankton Identifier (PkID) software is an integrated analysis system for acquisition and classification of digital zooplankton images from preserved zooplankton samples. Zooplankton samples are digitized by the ZooScan and processed by ZooProcess and PkID in order to detect, enumerate, measure and classify the digitized objects. Here we present a semi-automatic approach that entails automated classification of images followed by manual validation, which allows rapid and accurate classification of zooplankton and abiotic objects. We demonstrate this approach with a biweekly zooplankton time series from the Bay of Villefranche-sur-mer, France. The classification approach proposed here provides a practical compromise between a fully automatic method with varying degrees of bias and a manual but accurate classification of zooplankton. We also evaluate the appropriate number of images to include in digital learning sets and compare the accuracy of six classification algorithms. We evaluate the accuracy of the ZooScan for automated measurements of body size and present relationships between machine measures of size and C and N content of selected zooplankton taxa. We demonstrate that the ZooScan system can produce useful measures of zooplankton abundance, biomass and size spectra, for a variety of ecological studies.
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At present time, there is a lack of knowledge on the interannual climate-related variability of zooplankton communities of the tropical Atlantic, central Mediterranean Sea, Caspian Sea, and Aral Sea, due to the absence of appropriate databases. In the mid latitudes, the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) is the dominant mode of atmospheric fluctuations over eastern North America, the northern Atlantic Ocean and Europe. Therefore, one of the issues that need to be addressed through data synthesis is the evaluation of interannual patterns in species abundance and species diversity over these regions in regard to the NAO. The database has been used to investigate the ecological role of the NAO in interannual variations of mesozooplankton abundance and biomass along the zonal array of the NAO influence. Basic approach to the proposed research involved: (1) development of co-operation between experts and data holders in Ukraine, Russia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, UK, and USA to rescue and compile the oceanographic data sets and release them on CD-ROM, (2) organization and compilation of a database based on FSU cruises to the above regions, (3) analysis of the basin-scale interannual variability of the zooplankton species abundance, biomass, and species diversity.
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On the basis of materials collected in June-August 1994 characteristic data on microplankton were gathered in three biotopes of the eastern shelf of the Bering Sea: open shelf (coastal zone), the harbor, and the salt lagoon of Saint Paul Island (Pribiof Islands). The following parameters of microplanktonic communities were analyzed: abundance, biomass, and production of autotrophic picoplankton (picoalgae and cyanobacteria); abundance, biomass, growth rate constant, and production of bacterioplankton; role of filiform bacteria in bacterioplankton; species composition of heterotrophic flagellates and ciliates, their abundance, and biomass. Growth rates and consumption rates of picoplankton and bacterioplankton by heterotrophic nano- and microplankton were estimated in the experiments using the dilution method. Temporal dynamics of all structural and functional parameters of microplankton were analyzed. The minor role of autotrophic picoplankton and significant role of bacterioplankton as well as heterotrophic nano- and microplankton in planktonic communities of studied biotopes during summer months was shown. During certain periods, bacterial biomass was as high as 50-65% of phytoplankton biomass, and production of bacteria was as high as 20-40% of primary production. In the middle of the season biomass of nano- and microheterotrophic organisms in different biotopes exceeded biomass of mesozooplankton 2-10 times. Average consumption of bacterial production by nano- and microplankton during the period of observations was 85-94%.