12 research outputs found

    Pollen feeding habits of Chrysoperla carnea s.l. adults in the olive grove agroecosystem

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    Chrysoperla carnea s.l. (Stephens) larvae are important natural enemies in agroecosystems. However, adults feed on honeydew excreted by hemipterans, and pollen and nectar from flowering plants. Pollen is essential for egg production, but to our knowledge, the pollen diet of C. carnea in perennial crops has never been addressed. In this work, the objective was to study the diversity and potential selection of pollen types consumed by C. carnea in the olive grove agroecosystem. For this study, C. carnea adults were captured from April to December of 2012 and 2013, and simultaneously, inventories of the plant diversity were obtained in olive orchards and adjacent scrubland and herbaceous patches. The pollen types contained in C. carnea guts were identified by microscopy and compared with the pollen types in the environment using Jacobs`s second selection index. The results indicated that (i) C. carnea females and males captured in the olive tree canopy visited scrub and herbaceous vegetation patches; (ii) they fed on different anemophilous and entomophilous pollen types from tree and scrub (Olea europaea, Fabaceae, Pinaceae, Cistaceae or Ericaceae) and herbaceous (Asteraceae, Apicaceae, Brassicaceae, Poaceae, Rumex type or Plantago type) strata; and (iii) adults fed not only on flowers but also on pollen settled on vegetation surfaces. Here, we demonstrated that C. carnea could benefit not only from the diversity of entomophilous pollen during the plant flowering periods but also from other pollens that could remain in the environment in different periods. This has important implications for the management of the floral diversity adjacent to the crop.The authors are grateful to the Portuguese Foundation of Science and Technology for financial support through the project EXCL/AGRPRO/ 0591/2012 “Olive crop protection in sustainable production under global climatic changes: linking ecological infrastructures to ecosystem functions.” M.V. thanks FCT, PostDoc grant (SFRH/BPD/ 119487/2016).info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Syrphids feed on multiple patches in heterogeneous agricultural landscapes during the autumn season, a period of food scarcity

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    Many syrphid larvae are predators and have an important role as biological control agents of pests in agroecosystems. However, adults feed on non-prey resources such as pollen from flowers. Heterogeneous landscapes can provide syrphids with a great biodiversity of plants and ensure the existence of food resources. This is particularly important during periods of food scarcity, such as autumn, for syrphid species that spend those periods as adults. Nevertheless, the feeding habits of syrphid adults in resource-scarce agroecosystems are poorly known. In this study, the pollen consumption and preferences of Eupeodes corollae (Fabricius) and Episyrphus balteatus (De Geer) were analyzed in olive groves and surrounding herbaceous and woody patches in the autumns of 2012 and 2013 in northeastern Portugal. The guts were dissected, and the pollen types were identified and compared with the ground cover plants in the studied patches. Both species consumed and selected pollen types from herbaceous and woody vegetation that occurred in different patches, indicating that they flew between patches. These results highlight the importance of conserving heterogeneous agricultural landscapes to guarantee the existence of food resources for beneficial insects during periods of scarcity.The authors are grateful to the Foundation for Science and Technology (Portugal) and COMPETE/QREN/EU for financial support through the research project EXCL/AGR-PRO/0591/2012: Olive crop protection in sustainable production under global climatic changes: linking ecological infrastructures to ecosystem functions and for grant SFRH/BD/70693/2010 awarded to M. Villa. The authors are also grateful to Carlos Aguiar for help with the plant species identification.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Biodiversity and pollen feeding habits of syrphids in olive groves and surrounding landscape in Northeastern Portugal during spring

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    Many syrphid larvae are predators of aphids and early stages of moths and psyllids, being potential control agents of some olive pests. However, adults need pollen and nectar for energy and reproduction. An increase of plant resources biodiversity in heterogeneous landscape could benefit these natural enemies. Thus, our goal of was to study the syrphid biodiversity and their pollen sources in olive agroecosystems from the northeast of Portugal during spring, that coincides with the availability of pests. For that, syrphids were captured in three not-tilled olive groves and two surrounding field areas (an herbaceous vegetation patch and a scrubland) next to each olive grove. Simultaneously, flowering plant inventories were carried out. Syrphids and the pollen contained in the guts of the most abundant species were identified. Thereafter pollen in guts was compared with pollen in the environment to evaluate a potential pollen selection. The most abundant species were Sphaerophoria scripta and Melanostoma mellinum. During the spring syrphids did not consume all the occurring plant species but did not actively selected pollen types. Results indicated that Asteraceae, Plantaginaceae, Caryophyllaceae, Echium type, Rumex type and Jasione type are important food sources for M. mellinum and S. scripta. These results will allow managing ground cover vegetation more efficiently in order to conserve syrphids in the olive agroecosystem.M. Villa is grateful to the Foundation for Science and Technology (Portugal) for the postdoctoral grant SFRH/BPD/119487/2016info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    The Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in southern Iberia

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    New data and a review of historiographic information from Neolithic sites of the Malaga and Algarve coasts (southern Iberian Peninsula) and from the Maghreb (North Africa) reveal the existence of a Neolithic settlement at least from 7.5 cal ka BP. The agricultural and pastoralist food producing economy of that population rapidly replaced the coastal economies of the Mesolithic populations. The timing of this population and economic turnover coincided with major changes in the continental and marine ecosystems, including upwelling intensity, sea-level changes and increased aridity in the Sahara and along the Iberian coast. These changes likely impacted the subsistence strategies of the Mesolithic populations along the Iberian seascapes and resulted in abandonments manifested as sedimentary hiatuses in some areas during the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition. The rapid expansion and area of dispersal of the early Neolithic traits suggest the use of marine technology. Different evidences for a Maghrebian origin for the first colonists have been summarized. The recognition of an early North-African Neolithic influence in Southern Iberia and the Maghreb is vital for understanding the appearance and development of the Neolithic in Western Europe. Our review suggests links between climate change, resource allocation, and population turnover. (C) 2011 University of Washington. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (Portugal); European Science Foundation [PTDC/HAH/64548/2006]; European Union; Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia; Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion, Spain [HAR 2008-1920, CGL2009-07603, CTM2009-07715, CSD2006-00041, HAR2008-06477-C03-03/HIST]; European Research Council [2008-AdG 230561]; MARM [200800050084447]; Project RNM [05212]; Junta de Andalucia, Spain [0179]; FCT [SFRH/BPD/26525/2006]; CSIC "JAE-Doc"info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Deus

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    A relação entre a arte e a transcendência é imemorial. Uma sociedade interroga-se sobre a vida e a morte, desenvolve rituais e estabelece mediações através da oferta de objetos, de sacrifícios, de representações, de práticas funerárias, de comportamentos que não surgem da necessidade biológica, surgem da necessidade pensada, ou melhor, surgem do espírito. A questão estabelece-se entre o pensamento e as coisas. As coisas, o seu destino, o seu processo, o seu devir, têm regularidades, e irregularidades. Sobre as regularidades, como a quantidade, a permanência, a repetição, podemos estabelecer representações, ou relações de conhecimento. Sobre as irregularidades, percebidas como arbitrárias, que provocam incerteza, vida e morte, destinos indeterminados, podemos pensar uma determinação exterior, que nos transcende na duração e no conhecimento. Ao lançar “Deus” como tema deste número da revista Estúdio teve-se a perceção inteira da sua profundidade. A condição humana faz-se da representação da sua finitude, na mesma medida da grandeza do que a transcende. Assim foi, neste número, o tema do desafio lançado pela Estúdio. Adicionou-se este tema ao escopo que a revista Estúdio sempre tem apresentado, e que a distingue, ao solicitar aos artistas e criadores que apresentem as suas perspetivas sobre as obras de seus companheiros de profissão, colocando um ênfase no estudo de artistas que são menos conhecidos, e dando prioridade aos originários dos países abrangidos pelos idiomas da revista, português e espanhol. Este número 10 da Estúdio, dedicado ao tema Deus, é constituído por 19 artigos, selecionados a partir de 46 submissões, a que se adicionou um dossier editorial, perfazendo assim um total de 21 artigos e 1 entrevista.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Complement component C4 structural variation and quantitative traits contribute to sex-biased vulnerability in systemic sclerosis

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    Altres ajuts: Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER), "A way of making Europe".Copy number (CN) polymorphisms of complement C4 play distinct roles in many conditions, including immune-mediated diseases. We investigated the association of C4 CN with systemic sclerosis (SSc) risk. Imputed total C4, C4A, C4B, and HERV-K CN were analyzed in 26,633 individuals and validated in an independent cohort. Our results showed that higher C4 CN confers protection to SSc, and deviations from CN parity of C4A and C4B augmented risk. The protection contributed per copy of C4A and C4B differed by sex. Stronger protection was afforded by C4A in men and by C4B in women. C4 CN correlated well with its gene expression and serum protein levels, and less C4 was detected for both in SSc patients. Conditioned analysis suggests that C4 genetics strongly contributes to the SSc association within the major histocompatibility complex locus and highlights classical alleles and amino acid variants of HLA-DRB1 and HLA-DPB1 as C4-independent signals

    Plantas espontâneas em floração como recurso alimentar para adultos de Chrysoperla carnea s.l. no agroecossistema olival

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    As larvas de Chrysoperla carnea (Stephens) (Neuroptera: Chrysopidae) são consumidores generalistas de pragas nos agroecossistemas, nomeadamente no olival. Os adultos alimentam-se de meladas de hemípteros, pólen e néctar de plantas desempenhando a flora adventícia do olival um papel relevante em proteção biológica de conservação. Considerando que o pólen pode ser um recurso florístico essencial para a reprodução e fecundidade no predador e que o conhecimento acerca da dieta polínica de C. carnea é escasso, o presente trabalho teve por objetivo estudar a potencial seleção de tipos polínicos consumidos por C. carnea s.l. no agroecossistema olival. De abril a dezembro de 2012 e 2013, em olivais com coberto vegetal na região de Mirandela foram capturados adultos de C. carnea s.l. na copa da oliveira. Em laboratório, procedeu-se à remoção do conteúdo estomacal dos insetos para identificação, ao microscópio ótico, dos diferentes tipos polínicos. Paralelamente realizaram-se inventários das plantas em floração nos olivais e parcelas adjacentes de vegetação herbácea e arbustiva para comparação dos tipos polínicos consumidos e presentes no agroecossistema. Os resultados indicaram que os indivíduos de C. carnea s.l. consumiram pólen de diferentes plantas anemófilas e entomófilas pertencentes aos extratos arbóreo e arbustivo (Fabaceae, Pinaceae, Cistaceae ou Ericaceae) e ao extrato herbáceo (Asteraceae, Apicaceae, Brassicaceae, Poaceae, tipo Rumex o tipo Plantago). Por outro lado, verificou-se ainda que os adultos de C. carnea se alimentaram não só do pólen das flores mas também do outro pólen que provavelmente se encontra depositado sobre a superfície da vegetação, o que poderá representar um reservatório alimentar para períodos de escassez. Os resultados obtidos evidenciam a importância da flora espontânea nos agroecossistemas e podem contribuir para a gestão destas espécies no olival com vista ao fomento da comunidade de inimigos naturais de pragas da cultura.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Biodiversity and pollen feeding habits of syrphids in olive groves and surrounding landscape in Northeastern Portugal during spring

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    Many syrphid larvae are predators of aphids and early stages of moths and psyllids, being potential control agents of some olive pests. However, adults need pollen and nectar for energy and reproduction. An increase of plant resources biodiversity in heterogeneous landscape could benefit these natural enemies. Thus, our goal of was to study the syrphid biodiversity and their pollen sources in olive agroecosystems from the northeast of Portugal during spring, that coincides with the availability of pests. For that, syrphids were captured in three not-tilled olive groves and two surrounding field areas (an herbaceous vegetation patch and a scrubland) next to each olive grove. Simultaneously, flowering plant inventories were carried out. Syrphids and the pollen contained in the guts of the most abundant species were identified. Thereafter pollen in guts was compared with pollen in the environment to evaluate a potential pollen selection. The most abundant species were Sphaerophoria scripta and Melanostoma mellinum. During the spring syrphids did not consume all the occurring plant species but did not actively selected pollen types. Results indicated that Asteraceae, Plantaginaceae, Caryophyllaceae, Echium type, Rumex type and Jasione type are important food sources for M. mellinum and S. scripta. These results will allow managing ground cover vegetation more efficiently in order to conserve syrphids in the olive agroecosystem.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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