31 results on '"Stenert C"'
Search Results
2. Responses of freshwater molluscs to environmental factors in Southern Brazil wetlands/Respostas de moluscos limnicos a fatores ambientais em areas umidas do sul do Brasil
- Author
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Maltchik, L., Stenert, C., Kotzian, C.B., and Pereira, D.
- Published
- 2010
3. Dynamics of the terrestrial amphibian assemblage in a flooded riparian forest fragment in a neotropical region in the south of Brazil/Dinamica da comunidade de anfibios terrestres em um fragmento de floresta riparia na regiao Neotropical no sul do Brasil
- Author
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Maltchik, L., Peixoto, C.D., Stenert, C., Moreira, L.F.B., and Machado, I.F.
- Published
- 2008
4. Permeability of the haemolymph–neural interface in the terrestrial snail Megalobulimus abbreviatus (Gastropoda, Pulmonata): An ultrastructural approach
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Nóblega, H.G., Rigon, F., Stenert, C., Faccioni-Heuser, M.C., and Achaval, M.
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- 2006
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5. Killifish eggs can disperse via gut passage through waterfowl
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Silva, G. G., Weber, V., Green, Andy J., Hoffmann, P., Silva, V. S., Volcan, M.V., Lanés, L.E.K., Stenert, C., Reichard, M., Maltchik, L., Silva, G. G., Weber, V., Green, Andy J., Hoffmann, P., Silva, V. S., Volcan, M.V., Lanés, L.E.K., Stenert, C., Reichard, M., and Maltchik, L.
- Published
- 2019
6. Whole angiosperms Wolffia columbiana disperse by gut passage through wildfowl in South America
- Author
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Silva, G. G., primary, Green, A. J., additional, Weber, V., additional, Hoffmann, P., additional, Lovas-Kiss, Á., additional, Stenert, C., additional, and Maltchik, L., additional
- Published
- 2018
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7. Whole angiosperms Wolffia columbiana disperse by gut passage through wildfowl in South America
- Author
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Silva, Glaura G., Green, Andy J., Weber, V., Hoffmann, P., Lovas-Kiss, Ádám, Stenert, C., Maltchik, L., Silva, Glaura G., Green, Andy J., Weber, V., Hoffmann, P., Lovas-Kiss, Ádám, Stenert, C., and Maltchik, L.
- Abstract
For the first time to our knowledge, we demonstrate that whole angiosperm individuals can survive gut passage through birds, and that this occurs in the field. Floating plants of the genus Wolffia are the smallest of all flowering plants. Fresh droppings of white-faced whistling duck Dendrocygna viduata (n = 49) and coscoroba swan Coscoroba coscoroba (n = 22) were collected from Brazilian wetlands. Intact Wolffia columbiana were recovered from 16% of D. viduata and 32% of Coscoroba samples (total = 164 plantlets). The viability of plants was tested, and asexual reproduction was confirmed. Wolffia columbiana is an expanding alien in Europe. Avian endozoochory of asexual angiosperm propagules may be an important, overlooked dispersal means for aquatic plants, and may contribute to the invasive character of alien species.
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- 2018
8. Effects of spatial scale and habitat on the diversity of diapausing wetland invertebrates
- Author
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Freiry, RF, primary, Esquinatti, FM, additional, Stenert, C, additional, Arenzon, A, additional, Nielsen, DL, additional, and Maltchik, L, additional
- Published
- 2016
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9. Responses of freshwater molluscs to environmental factors in Southern Brazil wetlands
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Maltchik, L., Stenert, C., Kotzian, CB., and Pereira, D.
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hydroperiod ,neotropical region ,região neotropical ,área ,aquatic vegetation ,hidroperíodo ,vegetação aquática ,wetland area ,altitude - Abstract
Freshwater molluscs play an important role in aquatic ecosystems, providing food for many fish species and vertebrates. Investigations on factors that determine mollusc species richness and distribution in wetland systems are scarce in the Neotropical region. The main goal of this study was to determine how much variation in mollusc richness and composition is explained by area, hydroperiod, altitude, water conductivity, and dominant aquatic vegetation. This survey was performed in an extensive area of a Neotropical region (~280,000 km² in southern Brazil), with a large number of wetland systems (111) and covering a wide gradient of altitude and wetland surface area. The mollusc richness was positively associated with wetland area and negatively associated with altitude. The richness and composition of the freshwater molluscs were similar between permanent and intermittent wetlands and it did not differ significantly between aquatic bed and emergent wetlands. The first three axes of CCA explained 16.2% of the total variation in the composition of the freshwater mollusc observed. The variation in the composition had a correlation with wetland area, altitude and water conductivity. Our results showed that the wetlands are important habitats for molluscs in southern Brazil, and that the richness and the composition of molluscs were associated with area, altitude, water conductivity and dominant vegetation. Moluscos límnicos desempenham um papel importante em ecossistemas aquáticos, fornecendo alimento para diversos peixes e vertebrados. Investigações sobre os fatores que determinam a riqueza e a distribuição das espécies de moluscos em áreas úmidas são escassos na região neotropical. O principal objetivo deste estudo foi determinar a variação na riqueza e na composição de moluscos em função da área, hidroperíodo, altitude, condutividade da água e tipo de vegetação aquática dominante. Este estudo foi desenvolvido em uma extensa área Neotropical (~280.000 km² no sul do Brasil), com um elevado número de áreas úmidas (111) e compreendeu um amplo gradiente de altitude e tamanho de áreas úmidas. A riqueza de moluscos foi positivamente relacionada com o tamanho da área úmida e negativamente relacionada com a altitude. A riqueza e a composição de moluscos foram similares entre áreas úmidas permanentes e intermitentes e não diferiram significativamente entre áreas úmidas herbáceas e emergentes. Os três primeiros eixos da CCA explicaram 16,2% da variação na composição de moluscos. A variação na composição foi correlacionada com a área, altitude e condutividade da água. Nossos resultados mostraram que as áreas úmidas são ecossistemas importantes para os moluscos límnicos no sul do Brasil e que a riqueza e a composição de moluscos estiveram relacionadas à área, altitude, condutividade da água e tipo de vegetação aquática dominante.
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- 2010
10. Diversity and stability of aquatic macrophyte community in three shallow lakes associated to a floodplain system in the south of Brazil
- Author
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Maltchik, L., Oliveira, Gr, Ana Silvia Rolon, and Stenert, C.
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Aquatic Macrophyte ,Wetlands ,Shallow Lakes ,Disturbance ,Floods - Abstract
The floodplain systems are important wetland classes in southern Brazil, but studies about the effects of flood pulses on the biota are still scarce. The purpose of this study was to analyze and compare the effects of floods on the richness, biomass and diversity of macrophytes in three shallow lakes over an annual cycle (2001-2002) under different flooding regimes. The number of flood events was different among the three studied shallow lakes. The lowest resistance to disturbance by flood and the absence of dominance were observed in the lake with the highest number of flood events. Macrophyte stability and diversity were not related. The results indicate the importance of the flooding regime (number of flood events, even short duration ones) on the macrophyte stability and composition in shallow lakes of southern Brazil. Las llanuras de inundación son importantes tipos de humedales en el sur de Brasil, pero estudios que analizan los efectos de las inundaciones en la biota aún son muy escasos. El objetivo del trabajo era analizar y comparar los efectos de las inundaciones en la riqueza, biomasa y diversidad de macrofitos acuáticos en tres lagunas en un ciclo anual (2001-2002) bajo distintos regimenes de inundaciones. El número de inundaciones era diferente en las tres lagunas estudiadas. La menor resistencia de macrofitos frente las inundaciones y la ausencia de dominancia ha sido observada en la laguna con mayor numero de inundaciones. La estabilidad de macrofitos no estuvo relacionada con su diversidad. Estos resultados indicaran la importancia del régimen de inundación (numero de inundaciones, incluyendo los eventos de rápida duración) en la estabilidad y composición de macrófitos en lagunas del sur de Brasil. As planícies de inundação são importantes classes de áreas úmidas no sul do Brasil, entretanto estudos sobre os efeitos do pulso de inundação nas comunidades biológicas ainda são escassos. O objetivo desse estudo foi analisar e comparar os efeitos das inundações na riqueza, biomassa e diversidade de macrófitas aquáticas em três lagoas de diferentes rasas de um ciclo anual (2001-2002) sujeitos a diferentes regimes de inundação. O número de inundações foi diferente nas três lagoas estudadas. A menor resistência de macrófitas aquáticas frente às perturbações hidrológicas e a ausência de espécies dominantes foram observadas na lagoa com maior número de inundações. A estabilidade de macrófitas não esteve relacionada com a diversidade de macrófitas. Estes resultados indicaram a importância do regime de inundação (número de eventos, inclusive os de curta duração) na estabilidade e composição de macrófitas em lagoas rasas do sul do Brasil.
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- 2005
11. Effects of an artificial and annual opening of a natural sandbar on the fish community in a coastal lagoon system: a case study in Lagoa do Peixe floodplains, southern Brazil
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Lanés, L. E. K., primary, Rolon, A. S., additional, Stenert, C., additional, and Maltchik, L., additional
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- 2015
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12. The diet ofCynopoecilus fulgensCosta, 2002 (Cyprinodontiformes: Rivulidae) in Southern Brazil wetlands
- Author
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Keppeler, F. W., primary, Lanés, L. E. K., additional, Rolon, A. S., additional, Stenert, C., additional, and Maltchik, L., additional
- Published
- 2013
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13. Aquatic macrophyte and macroinvertebrate diversity and conservation in wetlands of the Sinos River basin
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Maltchik, L., primary, Rolon, AS., additional, and Stenert, C, additional
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- 2010
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14. Are the streams of the Sinos River basin of good water quality? Aquatic macroinvertebrates may answer the question
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Bieger, L., primary, Carvalho, ABP, additional, Strieder, MN, additional, Maltchik, L., additional, and Stenert, C, additional
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- 2010
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15. Vascular supply of the central nervous system of the land snail Megalobulimus oblongus (Gastropoda, Pulmonata)
- Author
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Nóblega, H.G., primary, Missaglia, V., additional, Stenert, C., additional, Faccioni-Heuser, M.C., additional, and Achaval, M., additional
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- 2003
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16. The diet of Cynopoecilus fulgens Costa, 2002 (Cyprinodontiformes: Rivulidae) in Southern Brazil wetlands.
- Author
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Keppeler, F. W., Lanés, L. E. K., Rolon, A. S., Stenert, C., and Maltchik, L.
- Subjects
CYPRINODONTIFORMES ,WETLANDS ,SEASONAL physiological variations ,LIFE cycles (Biology) ,COMPARATIVE studies ,FISHES - Abstract
Studies with annual fish diet have shown that the generalist habit is a dominant strategy within this group.Cynopoecilus fulgens(Cyprinodontiformes: Rivulidae) is a restricted range species, endemic to a small area in Southern Brazil, and aspects of its biology and ecology are poorly known. The main goal of the study was to determine the diet ofC. fulgensthroughout its life cycle and compare it with the prey availability in Southern Brazil wetlands. Specifically, we analyzed samples collected in different stages of ontogenetic development (immature and adult fishes) in various year seasons. A total of 52 food items were found in the diet ofC. fulgens, and invertebrates comprised 96.4% of the counts observed. The richness of consumed and available prey changed along with the seasons. The seasonal variation of the consumed prey richness was mainly related to increase in fish size along the annual cycle. Microcrustaceans represented 75.6%, 80.9%, and 68.4% of the consumed prey in autumn, winter and spring, respectively. Prey composition varied with the seasons and it was not correlated to prey availability. Diet selectivity was different among male, female and immature fish. Our study reported the feeding habits ofCynopoecilus fulgensto improve knowledge of the biological and ecological traits of annual killifishes in Southern Brazil wetlands, where more than 90% of the original wetlands have been lost due to agricultural expansion. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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17. Whole angiosperms Wolffia columbianadisperse by gut passage through wildfowl in South America
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Silva, G. G., Green, A. J., Weber, V., Hoffmann, P., Lovas-Kiss, Á., Stenert, C., and Maltchik, L.
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- 2018
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18. Bet-hedgers commit to the hedge: Zooplankton in ephemeral semiarid wetlands of tropical Brazil that widely spread risk.
- Author
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Pires MM, Vendramin D, Medeiros ESF, Stenert C, Batzer DP, and Maltchik L
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- Animals, Brazil, Reproduction, Fresh Water, Wetlands, Zooplankton
- Abstract
Bet-hedging is an ecological risk-aversion strategy in which a population does not commit all its effort toward a single reproductive event or specific environmental condition, and instead spreads the risk to include multiple reproductive events or conditions. For aquatic invertebrates in dry wetlands, this often takes the form of some propagules hatching in the first available flood, while remaining propagules hatch in subsequent floods (the "hedge"); this better ensures that a subset of propagules will hatch in a flood of sufficient duration to successfully complete development. Harsh environmental conditions are believed to promote an increased reliance on bet-hedging. Bet-hedging studies have typically been restricted to single sites or single populations. Community-level assessments may provide more robust support for the range of hatching strategies that exist in nature. Here, we tested whether freshwater zooplankton assemblages inhabiting ephemeral and unpredictable wetlands of a semiarid zone of tropical Brazil employ hatching strategies suggestive of bet-hedging; few efforts have addressed bet-hedging in the tropics where the unique conditions may influence the strategy. We collected dry sediments from six ephemeral wetlands, and flooded them across a sequence of three hydrations under similar laboratory conditions to assess whether hatching patterns conform to some of the predictions of the bet-hedging theory. We found that taxa showing hatching patterns akin to bet-hedging associated with delayed hatching numerically dominated the assemblages that emerged from dry sediments, although there was large heterogeneity in the hatching rate among sites and across taxa. While some populations distributed their hatching across all three floods and committed most of their hatching fraction to the first hydration, others committed as much or more effort to the second hydration (the "hedge") or the third hydration (another substantial "hedge"). Thus, in the harsh study wetlands, hatching patterns akin to bet-hedging associated with delayed hatching were common and occurred at multiple temporal scales. Our community assessment found that a commitment to the "hedge" was greater than the current theory would predict. Our findings have broader implications; bet-hedger taxa seem especially well equipped to tolerate stress if conditions become harsher as environments change., (© 2023 The Ecological Society of America.)
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- 2023
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19. Invertebrate Richness and Hatching Decrease with Sediment Depth in Neotropical Intermittent Ponds.
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de Oliveira Hoffmann PH, Adolfo A, Piu AG, Vendramin D, Martins L, Weber V, Maltchik L, and Stenert C
- Abstract
Some groups of invertebrates from intermittent wetlands produce dormant stages in response to environmental fluctuations. Dormancy is a strategy to survive such fluctuations and to persist in extreme aquatic habitats, such as temporary habitats. We investigated the hatching responses of invertebrate dormant stages across different depths of sediment in intermittent ponds. Our hypotheses were: (1) the richness and abundance of invertebrate hatchlings decrease as the depth of the sediment column increases, and (2) the composition of invertebrate hatchlings varies over the wetland sediment depth. Four intermittent ponds were sampled in southern Brazil. One sediment column of 30 cm depth was collected in each pond and stratified into 1 cm thick slices for analysis of the dormant stages. A total of 1,931 hatchlings distributed among 31 taxa were collected from the sediment columns over the experiment. The total richness and abundance of hatchlings (after bdelloid taxa exclusion) were negatively related with the sediment depth. The composition of aquatic invertebrates varied among the different strata over the sediment depth. As intermittent wetlands are ecosystems extremely susceptible to climate variations, the results help to understand the resilience of aquatic resistant communities from different sediment strata after drought events., Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s13157-023-01675-6., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest/Competing InterestsThe authors declare no conflict of interest regarding this publication. The authors have no relevant financial or non-financial interests to disclose., (© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Society of Wetland Scientists 2023, Springer Nature or its licensor (e.g. a society or other partner) holds exclusive rights to this article under a publishing agreement with the author(s) or other rightsholder(s); author self-archiving of the accepted manuscript version of this article is solely governed by the terms of such publishing agreement and applicable law.)
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- 2023
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20. Ground-dwelling Spider Communities Respond to Changes in Riparian Vegetation Widths.
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Pires MM, Rodrigues ENL, Rocha MDS, Costi JAR, Viegas G, Stenert C, and Maltchik L
- Abstract
Spiders play a key role in the ecological dynamics in riparian habitats. However, most studies on the effects of changes in riparian habitats on spider communities have focused on the conversion of riparian forest to other land uses rather than on a gradient of forest widths. We assessed the community structure of ground-dwelling spiders in riparian vegetation fragments with varying widths in Southern Brazil. We selected four fragments with different riparian vegetation widths (> 40 m; < 30 m; < 15 m; < 5 m). In each fragment, spiders were seasonally collected using pitfall traps. We tested the effects of riparian vegetation widths and environmental variables (litter height, litter cover and canopy openness) on the taxonomic and guild composition of spider communities. The taxonomic and guild composition of ground-dwelling spiders varied among the widest (> 40 and < 30 m) and narrower riparian widths (< 15 m and < 5 m). While hunting spiders were associated with the narrower widths, web-building spiders were associated with the wider widths. Spider composition was influenced by the leaf litter height in the widest widths (> 40 and < 30 m) and by canopy openness in the narrowest width (< 15 m). Reductions in riparian vegetation were associated with significant changes in the community structure of ground-dwelling spiders, likely through top-down mechanisms associated with the higher litter input in wider fragments. In summary, the fragmentation of the riparian forests of Sothern Brazil are negatively associated with web-building spiders.
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- 2022
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21. Perils of life on the edge: Climatic threats to global diversity patterns of wetland macroinvertebrates.
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Epele LB, Grech MG, Williams-Subiza EA, Stenert C, McLean K, Greig HS, Maltchik L, Pires MM, Bird MS, Boissezon A, Boix D, Demierre E, García PE, Gascón S, Jeffries M, Kneitel JM, Loskutova O, Manzo LM, Mataloni G, Mlambo MC, Oertli B, Sala J, Scheibler EE, Wu H, Wissinger SA, and Batzer DP
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- Animals, Climate Change, Biodiversity, Invertebrates, Wetlands
- Abstract
Climate change is rapidly driving global biodiversity declines. How wetland macroinvertebrate assemblages are responding is unclear, a concern given their vital function in these ecosystems. Using a data set from 769 minimally impacted depressional wetlands across the globe (467 temporary and 302 permanent), we evaluated how temperature and precipitation (average, range, variability) affects the richness and beta diversity of 144 macroinvertebrate families. To test the effects of climatic predictors on macroinvertebrate diversity, we fitted generalized additive mixed-effects models (GAMM) for family richness and generalized dissimilarity models (GDMs) for total beta diversity. We found non-linear relationships between family richness, beta diversity, and climate. Maximum temperature was the main climatic driver of wetland macroinvertebrate richness and beta diversity, but precipitation seasonality was also important. Assemblage responses to climatic variables also depended on wetland water permanency. Permanent wetlands from warmer regions had higher family richness than temporary wetlands. Interestingly, wetlands in cooler and dry-warm regions had the lowest taxonomic richness, but both kinds of wetlands supported unique assemblages. Our study suggests that climate change will have multiple effects on wetlands and their macroinvertebrate diversity, mostly via increases in maximum temperature, but also through changes in patterns of precipitation. The most vulnerable wetlands to climate change are likely those located in warm-dry regions, where entire macroinvertebrate assemblages would be extirpated. Montane and high-latitude wetlands (i.e., cooler regions) are also vulnerable to climate change, but we do not expect entire extirpations at the family level., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest We have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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22. Does taxonomic and numerical resolution affect the assessment of invertebrate community structure in New World freshwater wetlands?
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Pires MM, Grech MG, Stenert C, Maltchik L, Epele LB, McLean KI, Kneitel JM, Bell DA, Greig HS, Gagne CR, and Batzer DP
- Abstract
The efficiency of biodiversity assessments and biomonitoring studies is commonly challenged by limitations in taxonomic identification and quantification approaches. In this study, we assessed the effects of different taxonomic and numerical resolutions on a range of community structure metrics in invertebrate compositional data sets from six regions distributed across North and South America. We specifically assessed the degree of similarity in the metrics (richness, equitability, beta diversity, heterogeneity in community composition and congruence) for data sets identified to a coarse resolution (usually family level) and the finest taxonomic resolution practical (usually genus level, sometimes species or morphospecies) and by presence-absence and relative abundance numerical resolutions. Spearman correlations showed highly significant and positive associations between univariate metrics (richness and equitability) calculated for coarse- and finest-resolution datasets. Procrustes analysis detected significant congruence between composition datasets. Higher correlation coefficients were found for datasets with the same numerical resolutions regardless of the taxonomic level (about 90%), while the correlations for comparisons across numerical resolutions were consistently lower. Our findings indicate that family-level resolution can be used as a surrogate of finer taxonomic resolutions to calculate a range of biodiversity metrics commonly used to describe invertebrate community structure patterns in New World freshwater wetlands without significant loss of information. However, conclusions on biodiversity patterns derived from datasets with different numerical resolutions should be critically considered in studies on wetland invertebrates., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
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- 2021
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23. Three new species of Hyalella (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Hyalellidae) from the Southern Brazilian Coastal Plain.
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Talhaferro JT, Bueno AALP, Pires MM, Stenert C, Maltchik L, and Kotzian CB
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- Animals, Brazil, Fresh Water, Wetlands, Amphipoda anatomy & histology, Amphipoda classification
- Abstract
In this study, three new species of Hyalella (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Hyalellidae) are described based on specimens collected in wetlands located in three freshwater ecoregions (Southeastern Mata Atlântica, Tramandaí-Mampituba and Laguna dos Patos) of the southern Brazilian Coastal Plain (states of Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina). Hyalella minuana n. sp. was recorded in the southernmost region of the state of Rio Grande do Sul. This species is characterized by presenting smooth body surface, epimeral plates not acuminated, nine serrate setae on the inner face of gnathopod 1, and peduncle of uropod 3 with four cuspidate setae with accessory seta and without plumose seta on the margin of the telson. Hyalella lagoana n. sp. was recorded in the northern region of Rio Grande do Sul and southern region of Santa Catarina. This species shows body surface smooth, epimeral plates not acuminated, nine serrate setae on the inner face of gnathopod 1, peduncle of uropod 3 with five cuspidate setae with accessory seta, and telson with six cuspidate setae with accessory seta without plumose seta on the margins. Hyalella sambaqui n. sp. was recorded in the state of Santa Catarina. This species is characterized by presenting smooth body surface, epimeral plates not acuminated, six serrate setae on the inner face of gnathopod 1, peduncle of uropod 3 with three cuspidate setae with accessory seta, and telson with three cuspidate setae with accessory seta and four plumose setae on the margin of the telson. The new records elevates the known diversity of species of Hyalella in the Brazilian territory to 33 species (19 in the southern Brazilian region) and to 83 species in the Americas.
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- 2021
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24. Climate- versus geographic-dependent patterns in the spatial distribution of macroinvertebrate assemblages in New World depressional wetlands.
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Stenert C, Pires MM, Epele LB, Grech MG, Maltchik L, McLean KI, Mushet DM, and Batzer DP
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- Animals, Brazil, Climate Change, Invertebrates, North America, Ecosystem, Wetlands
- Abstract
Analyses of biota at lower latitudes may presage impacts of climate change on biota at higher latitudes. Macroinvertebrate assemblages in depressional wetlands may be especially sensitive to climate change because weather-related precipitation and evapotranspiration are dominant ecological controls on habitats, and organisms of depressional wetlands are temperature-sensitive ectotherms. We aimed to better understand how wetland macroinvertebrate assemblages were structured according to geography and climate. To do so, we contrasted aquatic-macroinvertebrate assemblage structure (family level) between subtropical and temperate depressional wetlands of North and South America using presence-absence data from 264 of these habitats across the continents and more-detailed relative-abundance data from 56 depressional wetlands from four case-study locations (North Dakota and Georgia in North America; southern Brazil and Argentinian Patagonia in South America). Both data sets roughly partitioned wetland numbers equally between the two climatic zones and between the continents. We used ordination methods (PCA and NMDS) and tests of multivariate dispersion (PERMDISP) to assess the distribution and the homogeneity in variation in the composition of macroinvertebrate assemblages across climates and continents, respectively. We found that macroinvertebrate assemblage structures in the subtropical depressional wetlands of North and South America were similar to each other (at the family level), while assemblages in the North and South American temperate wetlands were unique from the subtropics, and from each other. Tests of homogeneity of multivariate dispersion indicated that family-level assemblage structures were more homogeneous in wetlands from the subtropical than the temperate zones. Our study suggests that ongoing climate change may result in the homogenization of macroinvertebrate assemblage structures in temperate zones of North and South America, with those assemblages becoming enveloped by assemblages from the subtropics. Biotic homogenization, more typically associated with other kinds of anthropogenic factors, may also be affected by climate change., (© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
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25. Coevolution between male and female genitalia in Belostoma angustum Lauck, 1964 (Insecta, Heteroptera, Belostomatidae): disentangling size and shape.
- Author
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Ribeiro JRI, Stefanello F, Bugs C, Stenert C, Maltchik L, and Guilbert E
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- Animals, Female, Genitalia, Female anatomy & histology, Genitalia, Male anatomy & histology, Male, Organ Size, Biological Coevolution, Heteroptera anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Sexual and natural selection mechanisms might drive variation in the genitalia of male animals. All aforementioned mechanisms are known to predict the coevolution of male and female genital morphology. Belostoma angustum is known to have subtle variation in the male and female genitalia of its members. In this species, phallosoma with dorsal arms and ventral diverticulum are assumed to be intromittent male genital traits that interact with the female genital chamber. We thus evaluated the existence of variation after disentangling the size from the shape of male genitalia in B. angustum. Body and genitalia dimensions and photographs of phallosoma with dorsal arms, ventral diverticulum and lateral views of the right paramere (the non-intromittent part) were obtained. Semi-landmarks and landmarks were used to capture phenotypic variation, by eliminating all non-shape variation with a Procrustes superimposition. Male and female specimens collected from the same location or immediate vicinity were grouped, and 12 groups originating from 12 locations were used to conduct two block-Partial Least Squares analyses (PLS). Group structures were also taken into account by adopting a multilevel approach. The male and female genital traits had similarly shallow static allometry slopes, as well as the dispersion values around the mean (i.e. coefficient of variation) and the standard error of the estimate. The correlation between the pooled within-locality covariance matrix of the symmetric component of phallosoma with dorsal arms and the female genital chamber was significant (r-PLS=0.37), as well as that with male body dimensions (r-PLS=0.36), even after controlling for allometry. Specimens with lower PLS shape scores had narrower phallosoma with dorsal arms, with poorly curved outer margins of the dorsal arms, whereas specimens with higher PLS shape scores had slightly shorter dorsal arms, with strongly curved outer margins. Lower shape scores were associated with narrower and especially shorter and narrower female genital chambers. Similar shallow allometric curves among sexes and the correlation between intromittent male parts and the female genital chamber, as well as male dimensions, suggest the coevolution of these contact structures in size and in shape., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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26. Killifish eggs can disperse via gut passage through waterfowl.
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Silva GG, Weber V, Green AJ, Hoffmann P, Silva VS, Volcan MV, Lanés LEK, Stenert C, Reichard M, and Maltchik L
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- Adaptation, Physiological, Animals, Fundulidae
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- 2019
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27. Age-associated liver alterations in wild populations of Austrolebias minuano, a short-lived Neotropical annual killifish.
- Author
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Godoy RS, Lanés LEK, Weber V, Stenert C, Nóblega HG, Oliveira GT, and Maltchik L
- Subjects
- Animals, Biomarkers metabolism, Fundulidae, Models, Biological, beta-Galactosidase analysis, Aging physiology, Fatty Liver metabolism, Killifishes physiology, Lipofuscin analysis, Liver metabolism
- Abstract
Aging processes have become an attractive field for researchers and annual fish have been used as biological models. However, the study on the changes in age-associated markers during the normal aging in wild populations of annual fish remains open. Austrolebias is a genus of Neotropical annual killifishes, distributed mainly in ephemeral pools across grassland floodplains of temperate South America and represent an emerging biological model for aging research, but studies investigating rapid aging and senescence in this genus of annual fish are almost non-existent. This study was undertaken to examine the changes in age-associated liver markers at the different developmental stages in wild populations of Austrolebias minuano. We demonstrate that A. minuano has a number of liver alterations of different severities throughout the life cycle, suggesting that these changes tend to increase with age. Our results revealed that > 70% of the analyzed livers presented alterations. Thus, our study should instigate new approaches on aging using Neotropical annual fish, and could be useful to improve the knowledge already provided by consecrated biological aging models as e.g. Nothobranchius killifishes.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Responses of macroinvertebrate communities to pesticide application in irrigated rice fields.
- Author
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Stenert C, de Mello ÍCMF, Pires MM, Knauth DS, Katayama N, and Maltchik L
- Subjects
- Animals, Benzoates analysis, Benzoates toxicity, Environmental Monitoring methods, Herbicides analysis, Insecticides analysis, Isoxazoles analysis, Isoxazoles toxicity, Oxazolidinones analysis, Oxazolidinones toxicity, Pyrimidines analysis, Pyrimidines toxicity, ortho-Aminobenzoates analysis, ortho-Aminobenzoates toxicity, Agricultural Irrigation, Herbicides toxicity, Insecticides toxicity, Invertebrates drug effects, Oryza
- Abstract
The ability to recover to original states after disturbances makes macroinvertebrates useful tools for assessing the impacts of pesticides. Many studies showed that direct exposure to pesticides decreases macroinvertebrate richness and alters their composition. The main objective of this study was to assess recovery patterns in macroinvertebrate communities after pesticide application in irrigated rice fields. We analyzed short-term temporal dynamics of macroinvertebrate communities after application of the herbicides bispyribac-sodium and clomazone and the insecticide chlorantraniliprole, over the rice-growing season in southern Brazil. We selected three conventional rice fields and the recovery of macroinvertebrate communities was also compared with three adjacent natural ponds. The study was developed from November 2011 to February 2012 (rice-growing season). Five macroinvertebrate collections were carried out 3, 7, 14, 38, and 60 days after pesticide application (November 25). Rice fields showed lower richness and abundance than ponds in the period immediately after pesticide application, and recovery rates in the richness of macroinvertebrate communities were more conspicuous as pesticide residuals dissipated from the fields. Macroinvertebrate community structure in rice fields also became more similar to natural ponds as pesticide traces were scarcer. However, macroinvertebrate abundance patterns were not related to pesticide concentrations in the fields. Our results supported the general hypothesis on the negative effects of pesticide application on macroinvertebrate community in irrigated rice fields, although other environmental features (e.g., length of the flooded period) also contributed to explain temporal dynamics in the macroinvertebrate communities from irrigated rice fields.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Reduced riparian zone width compromises aquatic macroinvertebrate communities in streams of southern Brazil.
- Author
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Moraes AB, Wilhelm AE, Boelter T, Stenert C, Schulz UH, and Maltchik L
- Subjects
- Animals, Brazil, Invertebrates classification, Ecosystem, Environmental Monitoring, Invertebrates growth & development, Rivers chemistry
- Abstract
Recent changes in Brazilian legislation reduced the width of riparian forest buffer needed to be preserved in private properties from 30 to 15 m or less. The consequences of these modifications can be dramatic, mainly because riparian buffer width is an important parameter for riparian forest structure and functioning. Our study assessed whether (1) macroinvertebrate family richness and Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, and Trichoptera (EPT) family richness decrease with reduced riparian buffer width; (2) taxonomic composition and functional feeding group (FFG) composition of macroinvertebrates vary with a reduced riparian buffer width; and (3) reduced riparian buffer width similarly influence the macroinvertebrate community in different stream substrates. We selected three fragments with different riparian buffer widths (>40, <30, and <15 m) in three streams (fourth and fifth orders) in the Sinos River watershed, southern Brazil. Our results show that on all substrate types, reducing the width of the riparian buffer altered neither the macroinvertebrate richness nor EPT richness. However, EPT richness was greater in the substrates stone and gravel than leaf litter, independent of riparian buffer width. There was a significant difference in macroinvertebrate composition among riparian buffer widths. The macroinvertebrate composition and FFG differed among substrates, independent of riparian buffer width. This study showed that riparian buffer widths <15 m altered the macroinvertebrate community. A width greater than 15 m is necessary to maintain the composition and trophic conditions of macroinvertebrate families similar to those found in reference states of conservation.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Diversity and distribution of aquatic insects in Southern Brazil wetlands: implications for biodiversity conservation in a Neotropical region.
- Author
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Maltchik L, Dalzochio MS, Stenert C, and Rolon AS
- Subjects
- Animals, Brazil, Conservation of Natural Resources, Population Density, Population Dynamics, Tropical Climate, Biodiversity, Environmental Monitoring methods, Insecta classification, Wetlands
- Abstract
The selection of priority areas is an enormous challenge for biodiversity conservation. Some biogeographic methods have been used to identify the priority areas to conservation, and panbiogeography is one of them. This study aimed at the utilization of panbiogeographic tools, to identify the distribution patterns of aquatic insect genera, in wetland systems of an extensive area in the Neotropical region (approximately 280 000km2), and to compare the distribution of the biogeographic units identified by the aquatic insects, with the conservation units of Southern Brazil. We analyzed the distribution pattern of 82 genera distributed in four orders of aquatic insects (Diptera, Odonata, Ephemeroptera and Trichoptera) in Southern Brazil wetlands. Therefore, 32 biogeographic nodes corresponded to the priority areas for conservation of the aquatic insect diversity. Among this total, 13 were located in the Atlantic Rainforest, 16 in the Pampa and three amongst both biomes. The distribution of nodes showed that only 15% of the dispersion centers of insects were inserted in conservation units. The four priority areas pointed by node cluster criterion must be considered in further inclusions of areas for biodiversity conservation in Southern Brazil wetlands, since such areas present species from different ancestral biota. The inclusion of such areas into the conservation units would be a strong way to conserve the aquatic biodiversity in this region.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Can rice field channels contribute to biodiversity conservation in Southern Brazilian wetlands?
- Author
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Maltchik L, Rolon AS, Stenert C, Machado IF, and Rocha O
- Subjects
- Animals, Brazil, Conservation of Natural Resources methods, Fresh Water, Population Dynamics, Agriculture methods, Amphibians, Biodiversity, Invertebrates, Oryza, Plants, Wetlands
- Abstract
Conservation of species in agroecosystems has attracted attention. Irrigation channels can improve habitats and offer conditions for freshwater species conservation. Two questions from biodiversity conservation point of view are: 1) Can the irrigated channels maintain a rich diversity of macrophytes, macroinvertebrates and amphibians over the cultivation cycle? 2) Do richness, abundance and composition of aquatic species change over the rice cultivation cycle? For this, a set of four rice field channels was randomly selected in Southern Brazilian wetlands. In each channel, six sample collection events were carried out over the rice cultivation cycle (June 2005 to June 2006). A total of 160 taxa were identified in irrigated channels, including 59 macrophyte species, 91 taxa of macroinvertebrate and 10 amphibian species. The richness and abundance of macrophytes, macroinvertebrates and amphibians did not change significantly over the rice cultivation cycle. However, the species composition of these groups in the irrigation channels varied between uncultivated and cultivated periods. Our results showed that the species diversity found in the irrigation channels, together with the permanence of water enables these man-made aquatic networks to function as important systems that can contribute to the conservation of biodiversity in regions where the wetlands were converted into rice fields. The conservation of the species in agriculture, such as rice field channels, may be an important alternative for biodiversity conservation in Southern Brazil, where more than 90% of wetland systems have already been lost and the remaining ones are still at high risk due to the expansion of rice production.
- Published
- 2011
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