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1.
Rev. peru. biol. (Impr.) ; 29(1): e20667, ene.-mar. 2022. tab, graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1377188

ABSTRACT

Resumen La cordillera del Kutukú está ubicada al sureste de Ecuador y se encuentra parcialmente aislada de la cordillera de los Andes. Realizamos cinco expediciones a este macizo, donde obtuvimos de manera directa información referente a la riqueza de aves. Además, con el fin de generar un listado más completo, realizamos una recopilación de registros publicados y revisamos colecciones de museos ecuatorianos. En total registramos 501 especies de aves, en un rango entre 500 - 2300 m de altitud. Encontramos trece especies con nuevas ampliaciones de distribución altitudinal y/o latitudinal. Veintiséis especies de aves (5.2%) están en alguna categoría de amenaza a su conservación, a nivel mundial y nacional. Las escasas vías de acceso, sumadas a las políticas de ingreso al territorio, por parte de la etnia Shuar, han favorecido la preservación de los bosques, especialmente aquellos por encima de los 1800 m. Es así que, el conocimiento biológico de esta área queda aún por descubrir. Esta zona remota protege una importante diversidad, así como poblaciones de aves amenazadas, recursos hídricos, además del territorio y cultura de las comunidades que la habitan. Desafortunadamente la totalidad de la cordillera se encuentra concesionada para exploraciones de proyectos mineros. Por tanto, se requiere la atención de las autoridades regionales y nacionales para aunar esfuerzos que aseguren su conservación y exploración biológica.


Abstract The cordillera del Kutukú is located in the southeastern Ecuador and is partially isolated from the Andes mountain range. We conducted five field expeditions to the region, where we directly obtained information regarding the richness of birds. In addition, we compile bird richness data from published records and Ecuadorian museum's collections in order to provide an updated list. A total of 501 bird species were registered, in an elevation range from 500 to 2.300 m a.s.l. We found 13 species with new latitudinal and/or longitudinal distribution extensions. Twenty-six species (5.2%) are in an elevated risk category nationally or globally. The region's limited roads, added to the Shuar ethnic group policies for entering to their territory has aided in the conservation of forests, especially those over 1800 m a.s.l. Thus, the biological knowledge of this area remains to be discovered. This remote area protects an important diversity, as well as threatened bird populations, water resources, territory and culture of the indigenous groups that inhabit it. However, unfortunately the entire mountain range is under concession for exploration of mining projects. Therefore, the attention of regional and national authorities is required to join efforts to ensure their conservation and biological exploration.

2.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 94(Pt B): 626-634, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26456003

ABSTRACT

Megascops screech-owls are endemic to the New World and range from southern Canada to the southern cone of South America. The 22 currently recognized Megascops species occupy a wide range of habitats and elevations, from desert to humid montane forest, and from sea level to the Andean tree line. Species and subspecies diagnoses of Megascops are notoriously difficult due to subtle plumage differences among taxa with frequent plumage polymorphism. Using three mitochondrial and three nuclear genes we estimated a phylogeny for all but one Megascops species. Phylogenies were estimated with Maximum Likelihood and Bayesian Inference, and a Bayesian chronogram was reconstructed to assess the spatio-temporal context of Megascops diversification. Megascops was paraphyletic in the recovered tree topologies if the Puerto Rican endemic M. nudipes is included in the genus. However, the remaining taxa are monophyletic and form three major clades: (1) M. choliba, M. koepckeae, M. albogularis, M. clarkii, and M. trichopsis; (2) M. petersoni, M. marshalli, M. hoyi, M. ingens, and M. colombianus; and (3) M. asio, M. kennicottii, M. cooperi, M. barbarus, M. sanctaecatarinae, M. roboratus, M. watsonii, M. atricapilla, M. guatemalae, and M. vermiculatus. Megascops watsonii is paraphyletic with some individuals more closely related to M. atricapilla than to other members in that polytypic species. Also, allopatric populations of some other Megascops species were highly divergent, with levels of genetic differentiation greater than between some recognized species-pairs. Diversification within the genus is hypothesized to have taken place during the last 8 million years, with a likely origin in Central America. The genus later expanded over much of the Americas and then diversified via multiple dispersal events from the Andes into the Neotropical lowlands.


Subject(s)
DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Genetic Variation , Phylogeny , Strigiformes/classification , Animals , Bayes Theorem , Canada , Central America , Ecosystem , Likelihood Functions , South America , Strigiformes/genetics
3.
Zootaxa ; 4032(3): 251-63, 2015 Oct 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26624360

ABSTRACT

Tyrant-flycatchers (Tyrannidae) are a taxonomically confusing bird group containing a large degree of cryptic diversity that has only recently begun to be unraveled through the application of acoustic and molecular methods. We investigated all three subspecies of the Lesser Elaenia, Elaenia chiriquensis Lawrence, across their range using sound recordings as well as nuclear and mitochondrial markers. We show that two of the three subspecies, the nominate race from southern Central America and the widespread South American subspecies E. c. albivertex Pelzeln, have undergone very low levels of vocal and molecular differentiation across their fragmented range. In contrast, the isolated taxon E. c. brachyptera Berlepsch, endemic to the western and also, as recently shown, eastern slopes of the northern Andes, is phylogenetically and vocally distinct from other Lesser Elaenias, indicating that it constitutes a separate biological species.


Subject(s)
Genetic Speciation , Passeriformes/classification , Passeriformes/genetics , Vocalization, Animal/physiology , Acoustics , Animals , DNA, Mitochondrial , Molecular Sequence Data , Passeriformes/physiology , Phylogeny , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Species Specificity
4.
Ugeskr Laeger ; 170(43): 3420-4, 2008 Oct 20.
Article in Danish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18976599

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Infection with Borrelia sp. is common in Denmark, and dissemination to the central nervous system (neuroborreliosis) may develop in a minority of cases with varying symptoms. We here present a population-based review of neuroborreliosis in Northern Denmark. MATERIAL AND METHODS: We identified 84 patients with neuroborreliosis from North Jutland County in the period 1998-2006 based on the demonstration of intrathecal antibody production to B. burgdorferi, and we reviewed the medical records for symptoms, diagnosis, treatment and outcome. RESULTS: Paresis of the facialis nerve and fever were more common among children than among adults, whereas radiculitis and sensory symptoms were more frequent among adults than among children. Eight of 84 patients (10%) reported only nonneurological symptoms. All patients were treated with antibiotics for at least ten days. Information on outcome was available for 76 patients (90%) of whom 16 (19%) had persistent sequelae after six months. Patients with persistent sequelae had a lower cell count in the cerebrospinal fluid than patients without sequelae. Patients with a diagnostic delay of less than 28 days had less sequelae than patients with a delay longer than 28 days. CONCLUSION: Symptoms in neuroborreliosis are heterogeneous, although some symptoms are common in children while others are predominant in adults. Early diagnosis of neuroborreliosis potentially improves the outcome.


Subject(s)
Lyme Neuroborreliosis/epidemiology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Child , Child, Preschool , Denmark/epidemiology , Early Diagnosis , Female , Humans , Lyme Neuroborreliosis/complications , Lyme Neuroborreliosis/diagnosis , Lyme Neuroborreliosis/drug therapy , Male , Middle Aged , Prognosis , Treatment Outcome
5.
Scand J Infect Dis ; 40(11-12): 985-7, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18720254

ABSTRACT

We report the case of a 47-y-old female with documented neuroborreliosis, who had a complete recovery after 10 d of intravenous high-dose penicillin followed after 9 months by a new episode of documented neuroborreliosis. The case probably represents a rare case of true reinfection rather than relapse.


Subject(s)
Lyme Disease/complications , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Antibodies, Bacterial/blood , Antibodies, Bacterial/cerebrospinal fluid , Borrelia burgdorferi/immunology , Female , Humans , Immunoglobulin G/blood , Immunoglobulin G/cerebrospinal fluid , Immunoglobulin M/blood , Immunoglobulin M/cerebrospinal fluid , Lyme Disease/cerebrospinal fluid , Lyme Disease/drug therapy , Middle Aged , Recurrence
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