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1.
Acta Trop ; 249: 107053, 2024 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37898478

ABSTRACT

Puya alpestris, P. berteroniana and P. chilensis (Bromeliaceae) are terrestrial plants present in north-central Chile, considered important part of the shrub flora due to their abundance and close interaction with animals. A previous study showed that bromeliad cover positively correlates with the abundance of the sylvatic triatomine vector Mepraia spinolai, only when infected by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi, the etiological agent of Chagas disease. Here, we assessed the biological interactions and abiotic conditions provided by these Puya species to M. spinolai. During the austral summers of 2015 and 2016, we sampled 17 sites with presence of M. spinolai colonies. In each site, we estimated the presence of bromeliad and its cover proportion, and placed a camera trap for three months near a M. spinolai colony to record the vertebrates potentially interacting with this triatomine. Three of the camera traps were placed right in front of M. spinolai-colonized bromeliads. At the same time, triatomines present under these bromeliads were collected to assess their blood meal by Next Generation Sequencing. Between July 2017 and January 2018, we examined the abiotic conditions (temperature and humidity) under bromeliad, under rocks and at ground level. We detected 40 vertebrate species associated to Puya spp. (18 birds, 16 mammals, and 6 reptiles). Puya spp. are a resource for keystone species in T. cruzi sylvatic transmission, including small mammals (Octodon degus, Phyllotis darwini) and lizard species (Liolaemus spp.), detecting a positive association between bromeliad presence and availability of reptiles and non-domestic mammals. Native rodents and humans were the most represented vertebrates in the diet of M. spinolai collected under bromeliads. Temperatures were more stable under bromeliad, showing lower amplitude (up to 14.3 °C) compared to under rocks (23.7 °C) or at ground level (49.6 °C). Bromeliads present in the semiarid-Mediterranean ecosystem provide feeding opportunities for triatomines, and act as buffer of abiotic conditions reducing daily thermal amplitude. The presence of bromeliads near human settlements should be carefully monitored, especially because their leaves are consumed by people and browsed by livestock present in endemic areas of Chagas disease.


Subject(s)
Chagas Disease , Lizards , Octodon , Triatominae , Trypanosoma cruzi , Animals , Humans , Ecosystem , Rodentia , Mammals
2.
J Med Entomol ; 58(1): 320-332, 2021 01 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32696971

ABSTRACT

The seasonal fluctuations of flesh fly (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) assemblages were investigated from March 2015 to February 2016 in five habitat types in the Humid Chaco ecoregion, Chaco Province, Argentina. Three of the habitats were anthropized: an urban area, a cattle farm, and an alfalfa crop; and two were natural: a savanna and a forest. Flesh flies were collected monthly at 25 sampling points, five per habitat. In total, 5,790 male specimens comprising 55 species distributed in 15 genera were collected. The assemblage composition of flesh flies in each habitat and season was analyzed in terms of abundance, species richness, and diversity. In addition, the correlation between these community parameters and climatic factors (precipitation 7 and 14 d before samplings, temperature, and relative humidity) were evaluated in each habitat. The highest abundance and species richness of Sarcophagidae were registered in May (autumn) and June (winter), respectively. The lowest diversity values were observed between August and September (end of winter and early spring) in all habitats. However, flesh flies were present and well represented (in terms of species richness) throughout the year in all habitat types. Fluctuations in the abundance of the most abundant species collected were analyzed. The climatic factors were correlated with diversity and species richness in the urban, cattle farm, and savanna habitats. This study revealed that flesh fly assemblages differed temporally between different types of habitats in accordance with climatic factors and microclimate conditions.


Subject(s)
Animal Distribution , Biota , Environment , Sarcophagidae/physiology , Animals , Argentina , Male , Seasons
3.
Ecol Appl ; 30(6): e02116, 2020 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32145123

ABSTRACT

Microclimatic conditions change dramatically as forests age and impose strong filters on community assembly during succession. Light availability is the most limiting environmental factor in tropical wet forest succession; by contrast, water availability is predicted to strongly influence tropical dry forest (TDF) successional dynamics. While mechanisms underlying TDF successional trajectories are not well understood, observational studies have demonstrated that TDF communities transition from being dominated by species with conservative traits to species with acquisitive traits, the opposite of tropical wet forest. Determining how functional traits predict TDF tree species' responses to changing environmental conditions could elucidate mechanisms underlying tree performance during TDF succession. We implemented a 6-ha restoration experiment on a degraded Vertisol in Costa Rica to determine (1) how TDF tree species with different resource-use strategies performed along a successional gradient and (2) how ecophysiological functional traits correlated with tree performance in simulated successional stages. We used two management treatments to simulate distinct successional stages including: clearing all remnant vegetation (early-succession), or interplanting seedlings with no clearing (mid-succession). We crossed these two management treatments (cleared/interplanted) with two species mixes with different resource-use strategies (acquisitive/conservative) to examine their interaction. Overall seedling survival after 2 yr was low, 15.1-26.4% in the four resource-use-strategy × management-treatment combinations, and did not differ between the management treatments or resource-use-strategy groups. However, seedling growth rates were dramatically higher for all species in the cleared treatment (year 1, 69.1% higher; year 2, 143.3% higher) and defined resource-use strategies had some capacity to explain seedling performance. Overall, ecophysiological traits were better predictors of species' growth and survival than resource-use strategies defined by leaf and stem traits such as specific leaf area. Moreover, ecophysiological traits related to water use had a stronger influence on seedling performance in the cleared, early-successional treatment, indicating that the influence of microclimatic conditions on tree survival and growth shifts predictably during TDF succession. Our findings suggest that ecophysiological traits should be explicitly considered to understand shifts in TDF functional composition during succession and that using these traits to design species mixes could greatly improve TDF restoration outcomes.


Subject(s)
Forests , Tropical Climate , Costa Rica , Seedlings , Trees
4.
Acta sci., Biol. sci ; Acta sci., Biol. sci;42: e48871, fev. 2020. map, graf
Article in English | LILACS, VETINDEX | ID: biblio-1460964

ABSTRACT

Fish fauna was studied in five sites of the shallow infralittoral of the Paranaguá Bay during the period from October 1999 to September 2000. At each sampling site, fish were sampled with other trawls, salinity and temperature were measured, water samples were taken from the bottom of the water column for determination of dissolved oxygen, dissolved inorganic nitrogen and phosphate. The spatial and temporal behavior of the environmental variables was analyzed by a Principal Component Analysis; Cluster Analysis was used to gather the sampling sites, and Factorial Correspondence Analysis was applied to the most abundant species. Temperature was themost important variable for the distribution of the months, allowing the division of the study period into hot and cold months. The temporal variation in the fish fauna composition was indicated by cluster analysis, with highest percentages of dissimilarity between the sampling sites during hot months. The variation in dissimilarity between the sites occurred due to differences in the number of individuals and species of the catches. The high frequencies of occurrence of Anisotremus surinamensis, Etropus crossotus, Genidens genidens, Micropogonias furnieri and Sphoeroides greeleyiwere related to high temperatures. The greatest number of fish and species observed in hot months may be related to the life cycle of many species, which reproduce in warmer months, and whose offspring use estuaries as breeding areas.


Subject(s)
Animals , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Estuaries , Fishes
5.
Neotrop. ichthyol ; 15(3): e160029, 2017. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS, VETINDEX | ID: biblio-895094

ABSTRACT

Populations show spatial-temporal fluctuations in abundance, partly due to random processes and partly due to self-regulatory processes. We evaluated the effects of various external factors on the population numerical abundance of curimba Prochilodus lineatus in the upper Paraná River floodplain, Brazil, over a 19-year period. Panel data analysis was applied to examine the structure of temporal and spatial abundance while controlling auto-regressive processes and spatial non-homogeneity variances that often obscure relationships. As sources of population variation, we considered predation, competition, selected abiotic variables, construction of a dam upstream of the study area, water level and flood intensity during the spawning period. We found that biological interactions (predation and competition) were not significantly related to variations in curimba abundance; specific conductance was a space indicator of abundance, apparently linked to the biology of the species; intensity of floods determined inter-annual variation in abundances; Porto Primavera Dam negatively impacted the abundances at sites in the floodplain directly affected by discharges from the dam. Panel data analysis was a powerful tool that identified the need for intense flooding to maintain high abundances of curimba in the upper Paraná River. We believe our results apply to other species with similar life strategy.(AU)


As populações apresentam flutuações espaço-temporais em abundância devido a processos aleatórios e auto-regulatórios. Nesse trabalho avaliamos efeitos de vários fatores sobre a abundância da curimba, Prochilodus lineatus, em cinco ambientes da planície de inundação do alto rio Paraná, Brasil, durante 19 anos. A análise de dados em painel foi utilizada por examinar variações espaço-temporais na abundância considerando processos auto-regressivos e variâncias espacialmente heterogêneas, que por vezes dificultam a identificação das relações. Como fontes de variação na abundância da curimba foram consideradas: predação, competição, variáveis abióticas selecionadas, construção da barragem de Porto Primavera, nível da água do rio Paraná e intensidade de cheia no período reprodutivo. Foi identificado que predação e competição não foram significativamente associadas às abundâncias da curimba; condutividade específica foi indicadora espacial da abundância; intensidade das cheias foi determinante de variações interanuais na abundância; barragem de Porto Primavera influenciou, negativamente, a abundância em corpos d'água diretamente afetados. A análise de dados em painel mostrou ser uma poderosa ferramenta preditiva, que possibilitou identificar a necessidade de cheias intensas para manutenção de elevadas abundâncias de curimba no alto rio Paraná. Acreditamos que o mesmo seja válido espécies de peixes que apresentam estratégia de vida similar.(AU)


Subject(s)
Animals , Characiformes/growth & development , Animal Distribution
6.
Neotrop. ichthyol ; 15(3): [e160029], 2017. tab, graf
Article in English | VETINDEX | ID: vti-18518

ABSTRACT

Populations show spatial-temporal fluctuations in abundance, partly due to random processes and partly due to self-regulatory processes. We evaluated the effects of various external factors on the population numerical abundance of curimba Prochilodus lineatus in the upper Paraná River floodplain, Brazil, over a 19-year period. Panel data analysis was applied to examine the structure of temporal and spatial abundance while controlling auto-regressive processes and spatial non-homogeneity variances that often obscure relationships. As sources of population variation, we considered predation, competition, selected abiotic variables, construction of a dam upstream of the study area, water level and flood intensity during the spawning period. We found that biological interactions (predation and competition) were not significantly related to variations in curimba abundance; specific conductance was a space indicator of abundance, apparently linked to the biology of the species; intensity of floods determined inter-annual variation in abundances; Porto Primavera Dam negatively impacted the abundances at sites in the floodplain directly affected by discharges from the dam. Panel data analysis was a powerful tool that identified the need for intense flooding to maintain high abundances of curimba in the upper Paraná River. We believe our results apply to other species with similar life strategy.(AU)


As populações apresentam flutuações espaço-temporais em abundância devido a processos aleatórios e auto-regulatórios. Nesse trabalho avaliamos efeitos de vários fatores sobre a abundância da curimba, Prochilodus lineatus, em cinco ambientes da planície de inundação do alto rio Paraná, Brasil, durante 19 anos. A análise de dados em painel foi utilizada por examinar variações espaço-temporais na abundância considerando processos auto-regressivos e variâncias espacialmente heterogêneas, que por vezes dificultam a identificação das relações. Como fontes de variação na abundância da curimba foram consideradas: predação, competição, variáveis abióticas selecionadas, construção da barragem de Porto Primavera, nível da água do rio Paraná e intensidade de cheia no período reprodutivo. Foi identificado que predação e competição não foram significativamente associadas às abundâncias da curimba; condutividade específica foi indicadora espacial da abundância; intensidade das cheias foi determinante de variações interanuais na abundância; barragem de Porto Primavera influenciou, negativamente, a abundância em corpos d'água diretamente afetados. A análise de dados em painel mostrou ser uma poderosa ferramenta preditiva, que possibilitou identificar a necessidade de cheias intensas para manutenção de elevadas abundâncias de curimba no alto rio Paraná. Acreditamos que o mesmo seja válido espécies de peixes que apresentam estratégia de vida similar.(AU)


Subject(s)
Animals , Characiformes/growth & development , Animal Distribution
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