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  1. Article: Copper release from waste rocks in an abandoned mine (NE, Brazil) and its impacts on ecosystem environmental quality

    Perlatti, Fabio / Martins, Eve Pimentel / de Oliveira, Daniel Pontes / Ruiz, Francisco / Asensio, Verónica / Rezende, Carla Ferreira / Otero, Xosé Luis / Ferreira, Tiago Osório

    Chemosphere. 2021 Jan., v. 262

    2021  

    Abstract: This study aimed to estimate the impact of an abandoned copper (Cu) mine on ecosystem environmental quality, using integrated ecological and biogeochemical analyses. Through a controlled experiment, the amount of Cu released by waste rocks, Cu adsorbed ... ...

    Abstract This study aimed to estimate the impact of an abandoned copper (Cu) mine on ecosystem environmental quality, using integrated ecological and biogeochemical analyses. Through a controlled experiment, the amount of Cu released by waste rocks, Cu adsorbed in soils, Cu geochemical behaviour and its leached amount were measured. Furthermore, to investigate the impacts of mine drainage on the adjacent ecosystem, samples of sediments, water and aquatic macroinvertebrates were analysed. We found that waste rocks still have high Cu concentration even after 30 years under weathering, ranging from 7782 to 8717 mg kg⁻¹, associated mainly with carbonates, amorphous oxides and sulphides. It was estimated that 7.2 tonnes of Cu were released by waste rocks into the environment over last 30 years. The concentration of Cu observed in Ubari stream water was (<dl to 90 μg L⁻¹), in sediments (28.0–1185 mg kg⁻¹) and in macroinvertebrates (1.3–28.9 mg kg⁻¹ d/w). The ecological indexes showed that near mine discharge a significance decrease in the density of aquatic macroinvertebrates and a significance increase of Cu in biological tissues occurs, causing disturbances in biodiversity. The results showed that, even after long periods, the waste rocks from abandoned mines still contain high levels of metal, that are gradually released into the environment through weathering and erosion, representing a potential source of environmental pollution and a clear threat to the environmental quality of adjacent ecosystems.<br />
    Keywords aquatic invertebrates ; biodiversity ; copper ; drainage ; ecosystems ; environmental quality ; geochemistry ; macroinvertebrates ; pollution ; streams ; Brazil
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2021-01
    Publishing place Elsevier Ltd
    Document type Article
    Note NAL-light
    ZDB-ID 120089-6
    ISSN 1879-1298 ; 0045-6535 ; 0366-7111
    ISSN (online) 1879-1298
    ISSN 0045-6535 ; 0366-7111
    DOI 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.127843
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  2. Article ; Online: Copper release from waste rocks in an abandoned mine (NE, Brazil) and its impacts on ecosystem environmental quality.

    Perlatti, Fabio / Martins, Eve Pimentel / de Oliveira, Daniel Pontes / Ruiz, Francisco / Asensio, Verónica / Rezende, Carla Ferreira / Otero, Xosé Luis / Ferreira, Tiago Osório

    Chemosphere

    2020  Volume 262, Page(s) 127843

    Abstract: This study aimed to estimate the impact of an abandoned copper (Cu) mine on ecosystem environmental quality, using integrated ecological and biogeochemical analyses. Through a controlled experiment, the amount of Cu released by waste rocks, Cu adsorbed ... ...

    Abstract This study aimed to estimate the impact of an abandoned copper (Cu) mine on ecosystem environmental quality, using integrated ecological and biogeochemical analyses. Through a controlled experiment, the amount of Cu released by waste rocks, Cu adsorbed in soils, Cu geochemical behaviour and its leached amount were measured. Furthermore, to investigate the impacts of mine drainage on the adjacent ecosystem, samples of sediments, water and aquatic macroinvertebrates were analysed. We found that waste rocks still have high Cu concentration even after 30 years under weathering, ranging from 7782 to 8717 mg kg
    MeSH term(s) Brazil ; Copper/analysis ; Ecosystem ; Environmental Monitoring/methods ; Environmental Pollution/analysis ; Metals/analysis ; Mining ; Rivers ; Soil ; Soil Pollutants/analysis ; Sulfides/analysis ; Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis
    Chemical Substances Metals ; Soil ; Soil Pollutants ; Sulfides ; Water Pollutants, Chemical ; Copper (789U1901C5)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-08-01
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 120089-6
    ISSN 1879-1298 ; 0045-6535 ; 0366-7111
    ISSN (online) 1879-1298
    ISSN 0045-6535 ; 0366-7111
    DOI 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.127843
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article: Never forget where you came from: Microhabitat of origin influences boldness and exploration in the hermit crab Clibanarius symmetricus (Diogenidae)

    Garcia, Frederico Alekhine Chaves / Moura, Rafael Rios / Ogawa, Cynthia Yuri / Zanette, Lorenzo Roberto Sgobaro / Silva, José Roberto Feitosa / Rezende, Carla Ferreira

    Journal of experimental marine biology and ecology. 2020 June, v. 527

    2020  

    Abstract: Behavioral traits can differ between individuals in a population and affect their fitness if they differentially influence survivorship in a microhabitat scale. This may occur when individuals experience different predation risks between microhabitats. ... ...

    Abstract Behavioral traits can differ between individuals in a population and affect their fitness if they differentially influence survivorship in a microhabitat scale. This may occur when individuals experience different predation risks between microhabitats. In this study, we investigated boldness, exploration, and their correlation depending on the microhabitat of origin in the hermit crab Clibanarius symmetricus. Individuals of both sexes were collected from four microhabitats with different levels of predation exposure within the intertidal zone of a mangrove. We conducted experiments introducing the hermit crabs to a new standard environment and simulated predation attempts to assess exploration and boldness. Latency to re-emerge from the shell (boldness) was consistent and not affected by size, sex, or microhabitat type, but was slightly different between years. Exploration, in turn, varied only according to the microhabitat from which individuals were collected. Hermit crabs from the less risky environments explored the experimental arena for longer than individuals from the microhabitat most exposed to predators. This behavioral consistency in exploration activity can influence microhabitat choice in C. symmetricus. In addition, boldness and exploration were weakly correlated in a behavioral syndrome. Therefore, predation exposure can be a source of variation in exploration-avoidance personalities and can indirectly influence the expression of boldness in C. symmetricus. We conclude that personality traits can coevolve and have implications for habitat choice, but traditional theories of individual behavioral consistency still lack a unified theoretical background linking animal personality to niche specialization with empirical support.
    Keywords Clibanarius ; animals ; littoral zone ; microhabitats ; personality ; predation ; survival rate
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2020-06
    Publishing place Elsevier B.V.
    Document type Article
    Note NAL-AP-2-clean
    ZDB-ID 410283-6
    ISSN 0022-0981
    ISSN 0022-0981
    DOI 10.1016/j.jembe.2020.151365
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  4. Article ; Online: Does food partitioning vary in leaf-eating crabs in response to source quality?

    Pereira, Tamara Maciel / Nóbrega, Gabriel Nuto / Ferreira, Tiago Osório / Ogawa, Cynthia Yuri / de Camargo, Plínio Barbosa / Feitosa Silva, José Roberto / Rezende, Carla Ferreira

    Marine environmental research

    2018  Volume 144, Page(s) 72–83

    Abstract: Mangroves have a relevant ecosystem function due to their efficiency in blue carbon sequestration. Autotrophic carbon conservation in mangroves remains controversial. In this sense, autotrophic nutrient assimilation by crabs can highlight their ecosystem ...

    Abstract Mangroves have a relevant ecosystem function due to their efficiency in blue carbon sequestration. Autotrophic carbon conservation in mangroves remains controversial. In this sense, autotrophic nutrient assimilation by crabs can highlight their ecosystem function. This study aims to identify the relationship between quality sources and food partitioning in two leaf-eating crabs, Ucides cordatus and Goniopsis cruentata. Quantification of the litterfall biomass, analysis of the soil, the C/N ratio and stable isotopes (δ
    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Avicennia ; Brachyura ; Brazil ; Carbon Isotopes/analysis ; Food Chain ; Invertebrates ; Nitrogen Isotopes/analysis ; Plant Leaves ; Rhizophoraceae ; Rivers ; Wetlands
    Chemical Substances Carbon Isotopes ; Nitrogen Isotopes
    Language English
    Publishing date 2018-12-24
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 1502505-6
    ISSN 1879-0291 ; 0141-1136
    ISSN (online) 1879-0291
    ISSN 0141-1136
    DOI 10.1016/j.marenvres.2018.12.005
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article: Geographic distribution and conservation of seasonal killifishes (Cyprinodontiformes, Rivulidae) from the Mid-Northeastern Caatinga ecoregion, northeastern Brazil

    Abrantes, Yuri Gomes / Medeiros, Lucas Silva de / Bennemann, Ana Beatriz Alves / Bento, Diego de Medeiros / Teixeira, Francisco Keilo / Rezende, Carla Ferreira / Ramos, Telton Pedro Anselmo / Lima, Sergio Maia Queiroz

    Neotropical Biology and Conservation. 2020 July 31, v. 15, no. 3

    2020  

    Abstract: The Rivulidae fish family, which includes Neotropical seasonal killifishes, is one of the most diverse taxonomic groups in the aquatic systems of Caatinga in Brazil. Cynolebias and Hypsolebias genera, with 20 and 35 endemic species, respectively, ... ...

    Abstract The Rivulidae fish family, which includes Neotropical seasonal killifishes, is one of the most diverse taxonomic groups in the aquatic systems of Caatinga in Brazil. Cynolebias and Hypsolebias genera, with 20 and 35 endemic species, respectively, concentrate the greatest diversity of rivulid species in the semiarid. Sixty-eight years after the first records of annual killifishes in the Mid-Northeastern Caatinga ecoregion (MNCE), only four valid species have been sampled in this area. Here we combined bibliographic surveys and recent samplings to investigate the distribution of seasonal rivulids in MNCE. Twenty-one records were obtained, nine of which are new localities, expanding the distribution of three species: Hypsolebiasmartinsi, H.antenori and Cynolebiasmicrophthalmus. Hypsolebias longignatus is still only known from its type locality in Ceará, near the Environmental Protection Area in Pacoti River, and has not been sampled ever since its description in 2008. Among the four species present in MNCE, H.antenori is the only species occurring within the limits of a conservation unit in the Furna Feia National Park. Anthropogenic impacts were observed in most temporary habitats visited, which ranged from river channel to small ponds in cave entrances. All records are found in coastal basins that discharge in the northern coast of the MNCE, in Ceará and Rio Grande do Norte states, which are crucial for the conservation of the Caatinga’s killifishes. The results also evidenced the importance of karstic habitats in the Jandaíra Formation as potential biotopes for seasonal fish in MNCE. This information must be used to update the conservation status of these species and highlight the importance of strategies for preserving the Caatinga’s temporary aquatic habitats, which should be considered for environmental licensing purposes.
    Keywords Cynolebias ; Hypsolebias ; Neotropics ; anthropogenic activities ; aquatic habitat ; aquifers ; basins ; biotopes ; caatinga ; coasts ; conservation status ; ecoregions ; fish ; geographical distribution ; indigenous species ; national parks ; ponds ; rivers ; surveys ; Brazil
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2020-0731
    Size p. 301-315.
    Publishing place Pensoft Publishers
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 2613449-4
    ISSN 2236-3777 ; 1809-9939
    ISSN (online) 2236-3777
    ISSN 1809-9939
    DOI 10.3897/neotropical.15.e51738
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  6. Article: Do ecological corridors increase the abundance of soil fauna?

    Portela, Marcela Bernardes / Rodrigues de Sousa Rodrigues Filho, Carlos Alberto de Sousa / Rodrigues, Eliesé Idalino / de Sousa Rodrigues Filho, Carlos Alberto de Sousa Rodrigues / Rezende, Carla Ferreira / de Oliveira, Teógenes Senna de

    Écoscience. 2020 Jan. 2, v. 27, no. 1

    2020  

    Abstract: Ecological corridors are areas of natural vegetation that connect two or more separate habitat patches, surrounded by a non-habitat matrix. Soil fauna is important for sustainability, conservation and soil quality. Thus, in this study, we aimed to ... ...

    Abstract Ecological corridors are areas of natural vegetation that connect two or more separate habitat patches, surrounded by a non-habitat matrix. Soil fauna is important for sustainability, conservation and soil quality. Thus, in this study, we aimed to investigate the influence of corridors on the soil faunal community in crops near savannah vegetation areas by examining the effects on trophic, movement and taxonomic groups. We collected data during the dry and rainy seasons in two areas of biodynamic agriculture. Then, we calculated trophic, movement, taxonomic group abundance, total abundance, richness, equability and diversity. The taxa Acari, Chilopoda, Oligochaeta, Orthoptera and Psocoptera were the most abundant in cultivated areas with corridors during the rainy season, while the taxa Dermaptera, Diplura, Diptera, Collembola, Formicidae larva, Lepidoptera and Lepidoptera larva were more abundant in cultivated areas with corridors during the dry season. The trophic, movement, taxonomic group abundance, richness, equability and diversity were higher during the rainy season and were not related to corridor presence. Ecological corridors increased the abundance of some taxonomic groups of soil fauna in cultivated areas, thereby contributing to the maintenance of specific taxonomic groups, which provide important ecosystem services.
    Keywords Acari ; Chilopoda ; Collembola ; Dermaptera ; Diplura ; Diptera ; Formicidae ; Lepidoptera ; Oligochaeta ; Orthoptera ; dry season ; ecosystems ; habitats ; savannas ; soil fauna ; soil quality ; wet season
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2020-0102
    Size p. 45-57.
    Publishing place Taylor & Francis
    Document type Article
    Note NAL-AP-2-clean
    ISSN 2376-7626
    DOI 10.1080/11956860.2019.1690933
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  7. Article: Population biology of the mangrove crab Ucides cordatus (Decapoda: Ucididae) in an estuary from semiarid northeastern Brazil.

    Leite, Marcos de Miranda Leão / Rezende, Carla Ferreira / Silva, José Roberto Feitosa

    Revista de biologia tropical

    2013  Volume 61, Issue 4, Page(s) 1721–1735

    Abstract: The mangrove crab Ucides cordatus is an important resource of estuarine regions along the Brazilian coast. U. cordatus is distributed from Florida, U.S.A., to the coast of Santa Catarina, Brazil. The species plays an important role in processing leaf ... ...

    Abstract The mangrove crab Ucides cordatus is an important resource of estuarine regions along the Brazilian coast. U. cordatus is distributed from Florida, U.S.A., to the coast of Santa Catarina, Brazil. The species plays an important role in processing leaf litter in the mangroves, which optimizes the processes of energy transfer and nutrient cycling, and is considered a keystone species in the ecosystem. Population declines have been reported in different parts of the Brazilian coast. In the present study we evaluated aspects of the population structure, sex ratio and size at morphological sexual maturity. We analyzed 977 specimens collected monthly over 24 months (2010-2012), in a mangrove of the Jaguaribe River, in the municipality of Aracati on the East coast of Ceará state, Northeastern Brazil. The study area has a mild semiarid tropical climate, with mean temperatures between 26 and 28 degrees C. The area is located within the eco-region of the semiarid Northeast coast, where mangroves occur in small areas and estuaries are affected by mesomareal regimes. The population structure was evaluated by the frequency distribution of size classes in each month, and the overall sex ratio was analyzed using the chi-square test. Size at morphological sexual maturity was estimated based on the allometry of the cheliped of the males and the abdomen width of the females, using the program REGRANS. The size-frequency distribution was unimodal in both sexes. The overall sex ratio (M:F) (1:0.6) was significantly different from 1:1. Analysis of the sex ratio by size class showed that the proportion of males increased significantly from size class 55-60 mm upward, and this pattern persisted in the larger size classes. In the smaller size classes the sex ratio did not differ from 1:1. The size at morphological sexual maturity was estimated at a carapace width (CW) of 52 mm and 45 mm for males and females, respectively. Analysis of the population parameters indicated that the population of U. cordatus in the Jaguaribe River mangrove is stable. However, constant monitoring of the population is required to detect any changes in the population attributes that may affect this stability.
    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Body Size ; Brazil ; Decapoda (Crustacea)/classification ; Decapoda (Crustacea)/growth & development ; Estuaries ; Female ; Male ; Population Density ; Population Dynamics ; Sex Ratio ; Sexual Maturation
    Language English
    Publishing date 2013-12
    Publishing country Costa Rica
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2020929-0
    ISSN 2215-2075 ; 0034-7744
    ISSN (online) 2215-2075
    ISSN 0034-7744
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  8. Article: Prey selection by two benthic fish species in a Mato Grosso stream, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

    Rezende, Carla Ferreira / Mazzoni, Rosana / Caramaschi, Erica Pellegrini / Rodrigues, Daniela / Moraes, Maíra

    Revista de biologia tropical

    2011  Volume 59, Issue 4, Page(s) 1697–1706

    Abstract: Key to understand predator choice is the relationship between predator and prey abundance. There are few studies related to prey selection and availability. Such an approach is still current, because the ability to predict aspects of the diet in response ...

    Abstract Key to understand predator choice is the relationship between predator and prey abundance. There are few studies related to prey selection and availability. Such an approach is still current, because the ability to predict aspects of the diet in response to changes in prey availability is one of the major problems of trophic ecology. The general objective of this study was to evaluate prey selection by two species (Characidium cf. vidali and Pimelodella lateristriga) of the Mato Grosso stream, in Saquarema, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Benthos and fishes were collected in June, July and September of 2006 and January and February of 2007. Fish were collected with electric fishing techniques and benthos with a surber net. Densities of benthic organisms were expressed as the number of individuals per/m2. After sampling, the invertebrates were fixed in 90% ethanol, and, in the laboratory, were identified to the lowest taxonomical level. Approximately, seventy individuals from each species were selected randomly in each month. Fishes were fixed in 10% formalin in the field and transferred to 70 degrees GL ethanol in the laboratory. Fishes had their stomachs removed for subsequent analysis. Fish diet was described according to the numeric frequency method. The Manly Electivity Index was applied in order to verify prey selection. The most abundant families in both benthos and diet of both fish species were the same, indicating that these species consume mainly most abundant prey in the environment. We concluded that prey selection occurs even for preys that had small abundance in the environment. However, it is the availability of the macroinvertebrate resources that determines the major composition of items in diet of fish, demonstrating that the abundance is the factor that most influences the choice of prey.
    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Brazil ; Feeding Behavior/physiology ; Fishes/classification ; Fishes/physiology ; Gastrointestinal Contents ; Predatory Behavior/physiology ; Rivers
    Language English
    Publishing date 2011-05-13
    Publishing country Costa Rica
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2020929-0
    ISSN 2215-2075 ; 0034-7744
    ISSN (online) 2215-2075
    ISSN 0034-7744
    DOI 10.15517/rbt.v59i4.3432
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  9. Article: Mesohabitat indicator species in a coastal stream of the Atlantic rainforest, Rio de Janeiro-Brazil.

    Rezende, Carla Ferreira / Moraes, Maíra / Manna, Luisa Resende / Leitão, Rafael Pereira / Caramaschi, Erica Pelegrinni / Mazzoni, Rosana

    Revista de biologia tropical

    2011  Volume 58, Issue 4, Page(s) 1479–1487

    Abstract: The Mato Grosso is a typical Atlantic Forest stream located on the East coast of Brazil, approximately 70 km from Rio de Janeiro city. From its source at about 800m a.s.l, the stream drains a 30km2 area of the Northwestern part of the municipality of ... ...

    Abstract The Mato Grosso is a typical Atlantic Forest stream located on the East coast of Brazil, approximately 70 km from Rio de Janeiro city. From its source at about 800m a.s.l, the stream drains a 30km2 area of the Northwestern part of the municipality of Saquarema, state of Rio de Janeiro and flows into the Saquarema Lagoon system. We hypothesized that fish species occupy distinct mesohabitats, with the prediction that their occurrences and densities differ among the microhabitats of riffles, runs and pools. A 250m-long stretch of the stream located in its uppermost part was selected for this study, where it becomes second-order. Mesohabitat description and their fish characterization were undertaken. Fish sampling was conducted by electroshocking and after their identification and counting, they were returned to the stream. For mesohabitat characterization, a Discriminant Function Analysis (DA) was applied. The total number of samples was estimated by the Zippin method and the recorded densities were used as an Indicator Species Analysis (ISA), followed by a Monte Carlo test for 1 000 permutations. The DA significantly separated the three predetermined mesohabitats (pool, riffle and run) (WL = 0.13, F = 187.70, p = 0.001). We found five species of fishes, belonging to four families and three orders. The fishes Rhamdia quelen, Phalloceros harpagos, Pimelodella lateristriga and Astyanax taeniatus are indicators of the pool environment in the Mato Grosso stream, whereas Characidium cf. vidali is an indicator of the riffle environment. The Monte Carlo test detected non-random mesohabitat use only for P. lateristriga and A. taeniatus in the pools and for Characidium cf. vidali in the riffles. We concluded that the Mato Grosso stream contains three well-defined mesohabitats, with indicator species present in two of these mesohabitats.
    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Brazil ; Ecosystem ; Environmental Monitoring/methods ; Fishes/classification ; Population Density ; Rivers ; Trees
    Language English
    Publishing date 2011-01-14
    Publishing country Costa Rica
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2020929-0
    ISSN 2215-2075 ; 0034-7744
    ISSN (online) 2215-2075
    ISSN 0034-7744
    DOI 10.15517/rbt.v58i4.5425
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  10. Article ; Online: NEOTROPICAL FRESHWATER FISHES: A dataset of occurrence and abundance of freshwater fishes in the Neotropics

    Tonella, Lívia Helena / Ruaro, Renata / Daga, Vanessa Salete / Garcia, Diego Azevedo Zoccal / Vitorino, Oscar Barroso, Júnior / Lobato‐de Magalhães, Tatiana / dos Reis, Roberto Esser / Di Dario, Fabio / Petry, Ana Cristina / Mincarone, Michael Maia / de Assis Montag, Luciano Fogaça / Pompeu, Paulo Santos / Teixeira, Adonias Aphoena Martins / Carmassi, Alberto Luciano / Sánchez, Alberto J. / Giraldo Pérez, Alejandro / Bono, Alessandra / Datovo, Aléssio / Flecker, Alexander S. /
    Sanches, Alexandra / Godinho, Alexandre Lima / Matthiensen, Alexandre / Peressin, Alexandre / Hilsdorf, Alexandre Wagner Silva / Barufatti, Alexéia / Hirschmann, Alice / Jung, Aline / Cruz‐Ramírez, Allan K. / Braga Silva, Alline / Cunico, Almir Manoel / Saldanha Barbosa, Amanda / de Castro Barradas, Amauri / Rêgo, Ana Carolina Lacerda / Franco, Ana Clara Sampaio / Costa, Ana Paula Lula / Vidotto‐Magnoni, Ana Paula / Ferreira, Anderson / Kassner Filho, Anderson / Nobile, André Batista / Magalhães, André Lincoln Barroso / da Silva, André Teixeira / Bialetzki, Andréa / dos Santos Maroclo Gomes, Andréa Cristina / Nobre, Andrezza Bellotto / Casimiro, Armando Cesar Rodrigues / Angulo Sibaja, Arturo / dos Santos, Arthur Alexandre Capelli / de Araújo, Átila Rodrigues / Frota, Augusto / Quirino, Bárbara Angélio / Ferreira, Beatriz Moreira / Albuquerque, Bianca Weiss / Meneses, Bruna Arbo / Oliveira, Brunno Tolentino / Torres Parahyba Campos, Bruno Augusto / Gonçalves, Bruno Bastos / Kubiak, Bruno Busnello / da Silveira Prudente, Bruno / de Araujo Passos Pacheco, Bruno Gorini / Nakagawa, Bruno Kazuo / do Nascimento, Bruno Tayar Marinho / Maia, Calebe / Cantagallo Devids, Camila / Rezende, Carla Ferreira / Muñoz‐Mendoza, Carla / Peres, Carlos A. / de Sousa Rodrigues Filho, Carlos Alberto / de Lucena, Carlos Alberto Santos / Fernandes, Carlos Alexandre / Kasper, Carlos Benhur / Donascimiento, Carlos / Emidio, Carmino, Júnior / Carrillo‐Moreno, Carolina / Machado, Carolina / Pera, Carolina / Hartmann, Caroline / Pringle, Catherine M. / Leal, Cecília Gontijo / Jézéquel, Céline / Harrod, Chris / da Rosa, Clarissa Alves / Quezada‐Romegialli, Claudio / Pott, Crisla Maciel / Larentis, Crislei / Nascimento, Cristiane A. S. / da Silva Gonçalves, Cristina / da Cunha, Cristina Jaques / Pisicchio, Cristina Moreira / de Carvalho, Daniel Cardoso / Galiano, Daniel / Gomez‐Uchida, Daniel / Santana, Daniel Oliveira / Salas Johnson, Daniel / Petsch, Danielle Katharine / de Freitas, Danielly Torres Hashiguti / Bailly, Dayani / Machado, Débora Ferreira / de Carvalho, Débora Reis / Topan, Dhyego Hamilton / Cañas‐Rojas, Diego / da Silva, Diego / Freitas‐Souza, Diogo / Lima‐Júnior, Dilermando Pereira / Piscor, Diovani / Moraes, Djalma Pereira / Viana, Douglas / Caetano, Dyego Leonardo Ferraz / Gubiani, Éder André / Okada, Edson K. / do Amaral, Eduardo Cazuni / Brambilla, Eduardo Meneguzzi / Cunha, Eduardo Ribeiro / Kashiwaqui, Elaine Antoniassi Luiz / Rocha, Elise Amador / Barp, Elisete Ana / da Costa Fraga, Elmary / D'Bastiani, Elvira / Zandonà, Eugenia / Dary, Eurizângela Pereira / Benedito, Evanilde / Barba‐Macías, Everardo / Calvache Uvidia, Evelyn Vanessa / Fonseca, Fabiana Luques / Ferreira, Fabiane Silva / Lima, Fábio Batista / Maffei, Fabio / Porto‐Foresti, Fábio / Teresa, Fabrício Barreto / de Andrade Frehse, Fabrício / Oliveira, Fagner Júnior M. / da Silva, Felipe Pessoa / de Lima, Felipe Pontieri / do Prado, Fernanda Dotti / Jerep, Fernando Camargo / Vieira, Fernando Emmanuel Gonçalves / Becker, Fernando Gertum / de Carvalho, Fernando Rogério / Ubaid, Flávio Kulaif / Teixeira, Francisco Keilo / Provenzano Rizzi, Francisco / Severo‐Neto, Francisco / Villamarín, Francisco / de Mello, Franco Teixeira / Keppeler, Friedrich Wolfgang / de Avila Batista, Gabriel / de Menezes Yazbeck, Gabriel / Tesitore, Giancarlo / Salvador, Gilberto Nepomuceno / Soteroruda Brito, Gita Juan / Carmassi, Giulianna Rondineli / Kurchevski, Gregório / Goyenola, Guillermo / Pereira, Hasley Rodrigo / Alvez, Helen Jamille Fernandes Silva / do Prado, Helena Alves / Pinho, Henrique Ledo Lopes / Sousa, Híngara Leão / Bornatowski, Hugo / de Oliveira Barbosa, Hugo / Tobes, Ibon / de Paiva Affonso, Igor / Queiroz, Igor Raposo / Vila, Irma / Negrete, Iván Vinicio Jácome / Prado, Ivo Gavião / Vitule, Jean Ricardo Simões / Figueiredo‐Filho, Jessé / Gonzalez, Jessica Antúnez / de Faria Falcão, Jéssica Caroline / Teixeira, Jéssica Vieira / Pincheira‐Ulbrich, Jimmy / da Silva, Jislaine Cristina / de Araujo Filho, João Antonio / Silva, João Fernando Marques da / Genova, João Gabriel / Giovanelli, João Gabriel Ribeiro / Andriola, João Vitor Perin / Alves, Jonatas / Valdiviezo‐Rivera, Jonathan / Britto, Jorge / Botero, Jorge Iván Sánchez / Liotta, Jorge / Ramirez, Jorge Luis / Marinho, Jorge Reppold / Birindelli, José Luís Olivan / Novaes, Jose Luis Costa / Hawes, Joseph E. / Ribolli, Josiane / Rivadeneira, Juan Francisco / Schmitter‐Soto, Juan Jacobo / Assis, Juliana Camara / da Silva, Juliana Paulo / dos Santos, Juliana Silveira / Wingert, Juliana / Wojciechowski, Juliana / Bogoni, Juliano André / Ferrer, Juliano / Solórzano, Julio César Jut / Sá‐Oliveira, Júlio César / Vaini, Jussara Oliveira / Contreras Palma, Kamila / Orlandi Bonato, Karine / de Lima Pereira, Karla Dayane / dos Santos Sousa, Kassiano / Borja‐Acosta, Kevin Giancarlo / Carneiro, Laís / Faria, Larissa / de Oliveira, Leonardo Brito / Resende, Leonardo Cardoso / da Silva Ingenito, Leonardo Ferreira / Oliveira Silva, Leonardo / Rodrigues, Leydiane Nunes / Guarderas‐Flores, Lida / Martins, Lidiane / Tonini, Lorena / Braga, Lorrana Thaís Máximo Durville / Gomes, Louise Cristina / de Fries, Lucas / Silva, Lucas Gonçalves da / Jarduli, Lucas Ribeiro / Lima, Luciano Benedito / Gomes Fischer, Luciano / Wolff, Luciano Lazzarini / dos Santos, Luciano Neves / Bezerra, Luis Artur Valões / Sarmento Soares, Luisa Maria / Manna, Luisa Resende / Duboc, Luiz Fernando / dos Santos Ribas, Luiz Guilherme / Malabarba, Luiz Roberto / Brito, Marcelo Fulgêncio Guedes / Braga, Marcelo Rennó / de Almeida, Marcelo Silva / Sily, Maria Cecília / Barros, Maria Claudene / do Nascimento, Maria Histelle Sousa / de Souza Delapieve, Maria Laura / Piedade, Maria Teresa Fernandez / Tagliaferro, Marina / de Pinna, Mário Cesar Cardoso / Yánez‐Muñoz, Mario H. / Orsi, Mário Luís / da Rosa, Marlon Ferraz / Bastiani, Marlos / Stefani, Marta Severino / Buenaño‐Carriel, Martha / Moreno, Martha Elena Valdez / de Carvalho, Mateus Moreira / Kütter, Mateus Tavares / Freitas, Matheus Oliveira / Cañas‐Merino, Mauricio / Cetra, Mauricio / Herrera‐Madrid, Mauricio / Petrucio, Mauricio Mello / Galetti, M. / Salcedo, Miguel Ángel / Pascual, Miguel / Ribeiro, Milton Cezar / Abelha, Milza Celi Fedatto / da Silva, Mônica Andrade / de Araujo, Mônica Pacheco / Dias, Murilo Sversut / Guimaraes Sales, Naiara / Benone, Naraiana Loureiro / Sartor, Natane / Fontoura, Nelson Ferreira / de Souza Trigueiro, Nicholas Silvestre / Álvarez‐Pliego, Nicolás / Shibatta, Oscar Akio / Tedesco, Pablo A. / Lehmann Albornoz, Pablo Cesar / Santos, Pablo Henrique Fernandes / Freitas, Pâmela Virgolino / Fagundes, Patricia Calegari / de Freitas, Patrícia Domingues / Mena‐Valenzuela, Patricio / Tufiño, Paúl / Catelani, Paula Araujo / Peixoto, Paula / Ilha, Paulo / de Aquino, Pedro De Podestà Uchôa / Gerhard, Pedro / Carvalho, Pedro Hollanda / Jiménez‐Prado, Pedro / Galetti, Pedro Manoel, Jr / Borges, Pedro Paulino / Nitschke, Pedro Peixoto / Manoel, Pedro Sartori / Bernardes Perônico, Phamela / Soares, Philip Teles / Piana, Pitágoras Augusto / de Oliveira Cunha, Priscila / Plesley, Priscila / de Souza, Rafael Couto Rosa / Rosa, Rafael Rogério / El‐Sabaawi, Rana W. / Rodrigues, Raoni Rosa / Covain, Raphael / Loures, Raquel Coelho / Braga, Raul Rennó / Ré, Reginaldo / Bigorne, Rémy / Cassemiro Biagioni, Renata / Silvano, Renato Azevedo Matias / Dala‐Corte, Renato Bolson / Martins, Renato Tavares / Rosa, Ricardo / Sartorello, Ricardo / de Almeida Nobre, Rodrigo / Bassar, Ronald D. / Gurgel‐Lourenço, Ronaldo César / Pinheiro, Ronaldo Fernando Martins / Carneiro, Ronaldo Leal / Florido, Rosa / Mazzoni, Rosana / Silva‐Santos, Rosane / de Paula Santos, Rosiane / Delariva, Rosilene Luciana / Hartz, Sandra Maria / Brosse, Sebastien / Althoff, Sérgio Luiz / Nóbrega Marinho Furtado, Shaka / Lima‐Junior, Sidnei Eduardo / Lustosa Costa, Silvia Yasmin / Arrolho, Solange / Auer, Sonya K. / Bellay, Sybelle / de Fátima Ramos Guimarães, Taís / Francisco, Talitha Mayumi / Mantovano, Tatiane / Gomes, Tatyana / Ramos, Telton Pedro Anselmo / de Assis Volpi, Thaís / Emiliano, Thais Moura / Barbosa, Thiago Augusto Pedroso / Balbi, Thiago José / da Silva Campos, Thiago Nascimento / Silva, Thiago Teixeira / Occhi, Thiago Vinícius Trento / Garcia, Thiely Oliveira / da Silva Freitas, Tiago Magalhães / Begot, Tiago Octavio / da Silveira, Tony Leandro Rezende / Lopes, Ueslei / Schulz, Uwe Horst / Fagundes, Valéria / da Silva, Valéria Flávia Batista / Azevedo‐Santos, Valter M. / Ribeiro, Vanessa / Tibúrcio, Vanessa Graciele / de Almeida, Vera Lúcia Lescano / Isaac‐Nahum, Victoria J. / Abilhoa, Vinicius / Campos, Vinicius Farias / Kütter, Vinicius Tavares / de Mello Cionek, Vivian / Prodocimo, Viviane / Vicentin, Wagner / Martins, Waldney Pereira / de Moraes Pires, Walna Micaelle / da Graça, Weferson Júnio / Smith, Welber Senteio / Dáttilo, Wesley / Aguirre Maldonado, Windsor Efren / de Carvalho Rocha, Yuri Gomes Ponce / Súarez, Yzel Rondon / de Lucena, Zilda Margarete Seixas

    Ecology. 2023 Apr., v. 104, no. 4 p.e3713-

    2023  

    Abstract: The Neotropical region hosts 4225 freshwater fish species, ranking first among the world's most diverse regions for freshwater fishes. Our NEOTROPICAL FRESHWATER FISHES data set is the first to produce a large‐scale Neotropical freshwater fish inventory, ...

    Abstract The Neotropical region hosts 4225 freshwater fish species, ranking first among the world's most diverse regions for freshwater fishes. Our NEOTROPICAL FRESHWATER FISHES data set is the first to produce a large‐scale Neotropical freshwater fish inventory, covering the entire Neotropical region from Mexico and the Caribbean in the north to the southern limits in Argentina, Paraguay, Chile, and Uruguay. We compiled 185,787 distribution records, with unique georeferenced coordinates, for the 4225 species, represented by occurrence and abundance data. The number of species for the most numerous orders are as follows: Characiformes (1289), Siluriformes (1384), Cichliformes (354), Cyprinodontiformes (245), and Gymnotiformes (135). The most recorded species was the characid Astyanax fasciatus (4696 records). We registered 116,802 distribution records for native species, compared to 1802 distribution records for nonnative species. The main aim of the NEOTROPICAL FRESHWATER FISHES data set was to make these occurrence and abundance data accessible for international researchers to develop ecological and macroecological studies, from local to regional scales, with focal fish species, families, or orders. We anticipate that the NEOTROPICAL FRESHWATER FISHES data set will be valuable for studies on a wide range of ecological processes, such as trophic cascades, fishery pressure, the effects of habitat loss and fragmentation, and the impacts of species invasion and climate change. There are no copyright restrictions on the data, and please cite this data paper when using the data in publications.
    Keywords Astyanax fasciatus ; Cichliformes ; Cyprinodontiformes ; Gymnotiformes ; Neotropics ; Siluriformes ; climate change ; data collection ; fisheries ; freshwater ; freshwater fish ; georeferencing ; habitat destruction ; indigenous species ; introduced species ; inventories ; Argentina ; Caribbean ; Chile ; Mexico ; Paraguay ; Uruguay
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2023-04
    Publishing place John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
    Document type Article ; Online
    Note JOURNAL ARTICLE
    ZDB-ID 1797-8
    ISSN 0012-9658
    ISSN 0012-9658
    DOI 10.1002/ecy.3713
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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