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Mosquitos da Caatinga: biodiversidade, aspectos ecológicos e importância epidemiológica da fauna Culicidae do semiárido brasileiro / Mosquitoes of the Caatinga: biodiversity, ecology and epidemiological importance of Culicidae fauna of the Brazilian semiaridMarteis, Letícia Silva 25 April 2016 (has links)
Em relação à fauna Culicidae, a Caatinga é um dos biomas mais desconhecidos do Brasil. Há carência de registro de ocorrência de culicídeos, bem como de estudos sobre as interações deles com o ambiente silvestre. Assim, o objetivo deste estudo foi investigar biodiversidade e aspectos ecológicos e epidemiológicos da fauna Culicidae em áreas de conservação do bioma Caatinga. Para isso foram consideradas duas unidades de conservação da Caatinga e realizados 19 levantamentos entomológicos mensais e consecutivos. Foram realizadas coletas de formas imaturas de mosquitos em bromélias, ocos de árvore e criadouros de solo, além da coleta de mosquitos adultos de hábitos diurno, crepuscular e noturno. Ao todo, entre mosquitos adultos e imaturos associados a habitats fitotelmatas, foram coletados 11.456 culicídeos distribuídos em 28 espécies, das quais 11 eram desconhecidas para a ciência. A fauna de imaturos coletados em bromélias e ocos de árvore interferiu na composição da fauna de mosquitos adultos e houve variações na abundância e nos padrões de diversidade de acordo com fitofisionomia do ambiente. Temperatura e umidade foram os parâmetros ambientais mais fortemente associados à abundância de culicídeos. Foram registradas novas ocorrências de anofelinos, coletados em criadouros de solo, ampliando a distribuição das espécies para o semiárido brasileiro. Este é um estudo pioneiro acerca da biodiversidade da fauna Culicidae em áreas de conservação da Caatinga que apresenta uma rica e desconhecida fauna de culicídeos, inédita para a ciência. / Regarding Culicidae fauna, Caatinga is one of the most unknown biomes of Brazil. There are few records of mosquitoes occurrence, as well as studies on their interactions with the wild environment. Therefore, the aimof this study was to investigate the biodiversity, ecological and epidemiological aspects of Culicidae fauna in conservation areas of the Caatinga biome. Two protected areas were considered for the study and 19 entomological surveys were performed monthly. Immature forms of mosquitoes were collected in bromeliads, tree holes and ground pools, as well as collection of adult mosquitoes with day time, twilight and nocturnal habits. Between adults and immatures associated with phytotelmatas habits, a total of 11,456 mosquitoes were collected, distributed in 28 species, 11 of which were unknown to science. The immature fauna collected in bromeliads and tree holes interfered in the fauna composition of adults and there were variations in the abundance and diversity patterns according to the environment phytophysiognomy. Temperature and humidity were the most strongly environmental factors associated with the abundance of mosquitoes. New records of anophelines collected inground pools were registered, broadening the distribution of species in the Brazilian semiarid region. This is a pioneering study on the biodiversity of the Culicidae in the Caatinga conservation areas which presents a rich and unknown mosquitoes fauna, unprecedented for science
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Opportunities and challenges for the pursuit of sustainability under globalization: A study from Costa RicaMcLennan, Blythe Unknown Date
No description available.
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Opportunities and challenges for the pursuit of sustainability under globalization: A study from Costa RicaMcLennan, Blythe 11 1900 (has links)
Globalization and human-domination of the globe have increased the complexity, scope and pace of human-environment interactions in ways that have fundamentally reconfigured the opportunities and challenges for sustainability. As a result, what society needs from science has shifted. Society and scientists alike now call for new ways of doing science that can support decision-makers to confront the complexity and uncertainty of sustainability in today’s more globalized world.
The research presented in this thesis contributes to answering this call. The goal of the research was to examine complexities in how globalization shapes the opportunities and challenges for pursuing sustainability. It was conducted in a region of the world where human-environment interactions have been fundamentally transformed by globalization: Latin America.
The research used a two-tiered, qualitative case study approach to examine environmental policy-making in Costa Rica and land-use management in Costa Rica’s dry North West. It had three specific objectives:
1. To analyze how environmental policy-making in Costa Rica was influenced by the transfer of policy ideas between the international and Costa Rican political systems;
2. To trial a novel methodology for conducting qualitative land-use research that can support natural resource managers to pursue sustainability while maintaining a high level of scientific credibility; and,
3. To examine the specific processes of forest recovery and rural livelihood change in Costa Rica’s dry North West, and their implications for sustainability and forest management.
This research makes three key contributions to our understanding of interactions between globalization, sustainability and complex social-ecological systems. First, it counters a tendency towards oversimplification in both theories and solutions for sustainability. It shows that neither generalized large-scale theories nor single blueprint solutions are adequate on their own to address the complex reality of environmental policy-making and land-use management in Costa Rica today. Second, it demonstrates how the potential of qualitative research to support natural resource managers can be more fully realized through methodological innovation. Third, it reveals important ways that environmental policy-makers and natural resource managers can avoid the pitfalls of oversimplification to more directly confront the complexities of pursuing sustainability under globalization.
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Phytogeography and conservation of neotropical dry forest, with emphasis on ColumbiaBanda Rodriguez, Karina Paola January 2017 (has links)
Dry forest is one of the most threatened tropical forests in the world. Human impact has caused its massive transformation but conservation of dry forest has often been neglected across Latin America. In Colombia, less than 10% of the original extension of dry forest remains. This thesis studies the phytogeography of neotropical dry forest and its relevance for conservation using data from 1602 tree species inventories made in dry forests across Latin America and the Caribbean synthesised by The Latin American Seasonally Dry Tropical Forest Floristic Network (DRYFLOR). Clustering and ordination analyses were used to explore the floristic relationships of dry forest across the entire Neotropics, revealing distinctive regional clusters defined by their tree species composition. Colombian dry forests are shown to be part of two wider clusters, one including neighbouring forests in Venezuela and southern Central America, and the second including the inter-Andean dry forests. The high turnover of floristic diversity and endemism within and amongst the main floristic groups demonstrates that to conserve the full species diversity in dry forests across Latin America and the Caribbean will require protecting it simultaneously across multiple regions. A regionally focused study of floristic relationships in the Central American and northern South American dry tropical forest group, using quantitative approaches to conservation prioritization, including a new Conservation Priority Index (CPI), suggests that conservation priority should be placed on the South American Caribbean Coast in the cross-border area of Colombia and Venezuela. This emphasises the need for a biogeographical approach to conservation that cannot be restricted by political borders. Within Colombia, new quantitative floristic data were used to investigate controls of floristic composition in dry forests. Multivariate analyses showed that space related variables explain a larger fraction of the variance of the floristic composition than climatic or edaphic variables. The importance of spatial variables implies that biogeography is a key element in understanding the structure of communities, and that the Andean cordilleras might be acting as geographical barriers isolating these seasonally dry formations. The value of floristic inventory data for assessing the conservation status of tree species using IUCN criteria was assessed in a case of study of the Andean Piedmont dry forest. By combining inventory data from the DRYFLOR database and herbarium records, the number of species for which we have sufficient information to make conservation assessments increases by 16% and the accuracy of predictive species distribution improves for 84% of the species. Together, these results reveal the importance of ecological inventory data as a complementary data source in conservation assessment for dry forest trees in the Neotropics. Finally, the conclusions chapter places these results in the context of conservation planning for Colombian dry forests, including some suggestions for research, policies and actions. These actions include restoration programmes focusing on sustainable harvesting of native dry forest tree species, for example for firewood and other forest resources such as fruits, fibres and medicines. A land use mosaic, including forest fallows and strict conservation areas, may help to guarantee the long-term maintenance dry forest species in Colombia.
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Mosquitos da Caatinga: biodiversidade, aspectos ecológicos e importância epidemiológica da fauna Culicidae do semiárido brasileiro / Mosquitoes of the Caatinga: biodiversity, ecology and epidemiological importance of Culicidae fauna of the Brazilian semiaridLetícia Silva Marteis 25 April 2016 (has links)
Em relação à fauna Culicidae, a Caatinga é um dos biomas mais desconhecidos do Brasil. Há carência de registro de ocorrência de culicídeos, bem como de estudos sobre as interações deles com o ambiente silvestre. Assim, o objetivo deste estudo foi investigar biodiversidade e aspectos ecológicos e epidemiológicos da fauna Culicidae em áreas de conservação do bioma Caatinga. Para isso foram consideradas duas unidades de conservação da Caatinga e realizados 19 levantamentos entomológicos mensais e consecutivos. Foram realizadas coletas de formas imaturas de mosquitos em bromélias, ocos de árvore e criadouros de solo, além da coleta de mosquitos adultos de hábitos diurno, crepuscular e noturno. Ao todo, entre mosquitos adultos e imaturos associados a habitats fitotelmatas, foram coletados 11.456 culicídeos distribuídos em 28 espécies, das quais 11 eram desconhecidas para a ciência. A fauna de imaturos coletados em bromélias e ocos de árvore interferiu na composição da fauna de mosquitos adultos e houve variações na abundância e nos padrões de diversidade de acordo com fitofisionomia do ambiente. Temperatura e umidade foram os parâmetros ambientais mais fortemente associados à abundância de culicídeos. Foram registradas novas ocorrências de anofelinos, coletados em criadouros de solo, ampliando a distribuição das espécies para o semiárido brasileiro. Este é um estudo pioneiro acerca da biodiversidade da fauna Culicidae em áreas de conservação da Caatinga que apresenta uma rica e desconhecida fauna de culicídeos, inédita para a ciência. / Regarding Culicidae fauna, Caatinga is one of the most unknown biomes of Brazil. There are few records of mosquitoes occurrence, as well as studies on their interactions with the wild environment. Therefore, the aimof this study was to investigate the biodiversity, ecological and epidemiological aspects of Culicidae fauna in conservation areas of the Caatinga biome. Two protected areas were considered for the study and 19 entomological surveys were performed monthly. Immature forms of mosquitoes were collected in bromeliads, tree holes and ground pools, as well as collection of adult mosquitoes with day time, twilight and nocturnal habits. Between adults and immatures associated with phytotelmatas habits, a total of 11,456 mosquitoes were collected, distributed in 28 species, 11 of which were unknown to science. The immature fauna collected in bromeliads and tree holes interfered in the fauna composition of adults and there were variations in the abundance and diversity patterns according to the environment phytophysiognomy. Temperature and humidity were the most strongly environmental factors associated with the abundance of mosquitoes. New records of anophelines collected inground pools were registered, broadening the distribution of species in the Brazilian semiarid region. This is a pioneering study on the biodiversity of the Culicidae in the Caatinga conservation areas which presents a rich and unknown mosquitoes fauna, unprecedented for science
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Tree Diameter Growth : Variations And Demographic Niches In A Tropical Dry Forest Of Southern IndiaNath, Cheryl D 07 1900 (has links)
Tree growth influences forest community dynamics and responses to environmental variations, but currently is not well understood. Tree growth in highly diverse wet tropical forests have been well studied and characterised compared to the species-poor dry tropical forests. Thus, it is not clear if growth rates and community dynamics of dry forests are similar to those of wet forests, given the longer dry season, greater rainfall variability, more open canopy and lower number of species in dry forests. This thesis focuses on identifying important factors that influence tree diameter growth rates in the dry tropical forest at Mudumalai, southern India, and also compares growth patterns at this dry forest with those at moister forests. The thesis thus contributes towards closing the gap in understanding of tree growth patterns across the tropics.
An initial analysis involving matrix-based population projections of four common canopy species at Mudumalai showed that variations in diameter growth have the potential to drastically modify population trajectories of dominant species. Thus the main focus of this thesis is aimed at identifying the important intrinsic and extrinsic factors affecting growth in this dry forest, as this information could be useful for future management of the forest. The second important aim of the thesis was to find out if growth rates are influenced by different sets of factors in tropical dry versus moist forests.
A large permanent 50ha plot vegetation monitoring plot was set up in 1988-89 in the Mudumalai dry deciduous forest, and was subsequently monitored annually by staff of the Centre for Ecological Sciences. Data used in this thesis represent a 12-year interval between 1988 and 2000. Girth measurements were obtained from all woody tree stems ≥1cm in diameter every four years during this 12 year interval, which provided three census intervals of diameter increment data on >13,000 trees. For the comparison between dry and moist deciduous forests, data were obtained from a similar large plot maintained and monitored at the Barro Colorado Island (BCI) in Panama.
Influences of the intrinsic factors, tree size, individual identity, species identity and growth form, were examined using t-tests, Wilcoxon signed ranks tests, linear regressions, analysis of variance (ANOVA), principal components analysis (PCA) and cluster analysis. Among the intrinsic factors tested, species identity explained approximately 20% of growth rates at the community level, while tree diameter explained less of growth variation, and growth form had a minor influence on growth.
Growth rates also were examined for variations across the three census intervals, and for relationships with rainfall and survival from fire. Statistical tests included t-tests, Wilcoxon and other non-parametric sign tests, logistic regression and ANOVA. Most species and individuals showed significant reductions of growth in the second census interval (1992-1996), and growth rates of most trees were positively related to rainfall. Growth rate variations generally were not related to survival from fire, and few species were capable of escaping fire mortality by fast growth.
Spatial environmental influences were tested in the commonest fifteen species, using five habitat categories, local elevation, slope, aspect, and the biotic neighbourhood variables of local conspecific and heterospecific density. Statistical tests included analysis of covariance, multiple linear regression and redundancy analysis. The tests were quadrat-based or individual-based, and species' growth responses were tested at different levels of distance and spatial scale. Topographic features and habitat categories had ephemeral effects on species growth. Only the most dominant species, Lagerstroemia microcarpa, showed consistent conspecific neighbour density effects. Redundancy analysis using a subset of common species and environmental factors did not reveal common growth responses to spatial environmental factors.
Comparison of factors influencing growth at Mudumalai versus at BCI using multiple factor ANOVA and multiple linear regressions showed a similar influence of temporal variation at the two sites, but stronger and more widespread influence of tree size (diameter) at BCI. The greater influence of tree size at BCI may be related to greater light limitation in this dense moist forest. Spatial environmental factors had weak influences at both plots. Species were less differentiated from each other at the more diverse BCI plot compared to the relatively species-poor Mudumalai plot, suggesting that species' growth niches may be weakly related to diversity across tropical forests.
Overall the results showed that among the factors tested species identity and census intervals were the most important influences on diameter growth at the Mudumalai dry deciduous forest. Tree diameter was less important and less consistent in affecting growth at the Mudumalai dry forest, contrary to expectations based on moist tropical forests where this relationship has been established previously. When comparing Mudumalai and BCI, the relative importance of different factors was different at the two sites, and the most important difference was a dominant influence of light limitation at the wetter forest in Panama.
In terms of management applications, this study showed that fires at Mudumalai might be an inescapable source of mortality for many vulnerable species, and improved fire management is crucial for long term survival of species in this dry forest. At a larger scale, light and other environmental variables were found to influence growth differently at Mudumalai compared to BCI. This suggests that location-specific responses may be important for projections of tree biomass and carbon sequestration, especially under future climatic change scenarios.
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GROWTH AND STRUCTURAL DAMAGES OF TREES HOSTING LIANAS IN SEMI-EVERGREEN TROPICAL FORESTS IN NORTHEASTERN YUCATAN PENINSULA (MEXICO)Garrido-Pérez, Edgardo I. 05 May 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Influência de diferentes estágios sucessionais na composição e riqueza de liquens na caatingaMendonça, Cléverton de Oliveira 29 July 2014 (has links)
Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / The successional processes in tropical forests follow a progression of stages during which forests have a gradual enrichment of species and an increase in structural and functional complexity. Stochastic actions resulted from the behaviour of the population s components and species define forest succession, where biotic and abiotic factors lead the ecological diversity strategies in a community according to local and regional environmental filters. Lichens are organisms with complex relationship within successional forest because they respond to spatial and temporal factors, and at the same time, are bioindicators of environmental quality. In this context, the present study aims to investigate the richness and species composition of corticicolous lichens along a gradient of forest succession in the Caatinga biome, and verify the possibility of using functional traits of lichens as indicators of successional stages of this type of vegetation. The study was undertaken in three areas of different successional stages in the Caatinga from Sergipe semiarid, in two municipalities. A total of 1460 samples were collected, distributed between the initial, intermediate and advanced stage areas. After the analysis, 119 species were identified, comprising 17 families and 47 genera. The richness differs between stages of succession, where the highest values are for the initial stage, followed by intermediate and later stages. Among the sampled environmental factors, the pH of the rainy season is the one that significantly affects species richness. Regarding species composition, there is a clear separation of stages, where the advanced stage differs from the initial and intermediate and are influenced by parameters such as bark pH, DAP of the tree, brightness, and elevation. The beta diversity is higher for the advanced stage, which has a more heterogeneous composition than the initial and intermediate, which share species among themselves. The functional traits presents a noticeable variation in the abundance and are bioindicators of stages of succession. Results show that the community of lichens respond to natural succession and is influenced by biotic and abiotic factors. Therefore, it is expected that this work will contribute to enhance the ecological knowledge of lichens in the Caatinga, serving as the starting point for complementary and innovative research that contributes to the conservation of this ecosystem. / Os processos sucessionais em florestas tropicais seguem uma progressão de estágios durante os quais as florestas apresentam um enriquecimento gradual de espécies e um aumento em complexidade estrutural e funcional. Ações estocásticas resultadas do comportamento dos componentes das populações e espécies definem a sucessão florestal, onde fatores bióticos e abióticos em uma comunidade conduzem as estratégias ecológicas de diversidade de uma determinada comunidade de acordo com filtros ambientais locais e regionais. Os liquens são organismos que possuem uma complexa relação sucessional dentro da floresta, pois respondem a fatores espaciais e temporais, e ao mesmo tempo, são bioindicadores de qualidade ambiental. Neste sentido, o presente estudo tem como objetivo analisar a riqueza e a composição de espécies de liquens corticícolas ao longo de um gradiente de sucessão florestal na Caatinga, e verificar a possibilidade da utilização de atributos funcionais de liquens como indicadores dos estágios de sucessão florestal neste tipo de vegetação. O trabalho foi realizado em três áreas de diferentes estágios sucessionais na Caatinga do Alto Sertão Sergipano, em dois municípios do estado. Foram coletadas 1460 amostras, distribuídas entre as áreas inicial, intermediária e avançada. Desse total, 119 espécies foram identificadas, compreendendo 17 famílias e 47 gêneros. A riqueza difere entre os estágios de sucessão, onde os maiores valores estão para o estágio inicial, seguidos pelo avançado e intermediário. Dentre os fatores ambientais amostrados, o pH do período chuvoso é o único que afeta a riqueza. Com relação à composição, há uma clara separação dos estágios, onde o estágio avançado se diferencia do inicial e intermediário e são influenciados pelos fatores pH, DAP, luminosidade, elevação. A diversidade beta é maior para o estágio avançado, que possui uma composição mais heterogênea em relação ao inicial e intermediário, os quais compartilham espécies entre si. Com relação aos atributos funcionais, é perceptível a variação da abundância e a correlação bioindicadora dos estágios de sucessão. Os resultados demonstram que a comunidade de liquens responde à sucessão natural e é influenciada por fatores bióticos e abióticos. Logo, espera-se que este trabalho venha contribuir para ampliar os conhecimentos ecológicos sobre os liquens na Caatinga, servindo como ponto inicial para pesquisas complementares e inovadoras que contribuam para a conservação deste bioma.
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