32 research outputs found

    ATLANTIC EPIPHYTES: a data set of vascular and non-vascular epiphyte plants and lichens from the Atlantic Forest

    Get PDF
    Epiphytes are hyper-diverse and one of the frequently undervalued life forms in plant surveys and biodiversity inventories. Epiphytes of the Atlantic Forest, one of the most endangered ecosystems in the world, have high endemism and radiated recently in the Pliocene. We aimed to (1) compile an extensive Atlantic Forest data set on vascular, non-vascular plants (including hemiepiphytes), and lichen epiphyte species occurrence and abundance; (2) describe the epiphyte distribution in the Atlantic Forest, in order to indicate future sampling efforts. Our work presents the first epiphyte data set with information on abundance and occurrence of epiphyte phorophyte species. All data compiled here come from three main sources provided by the authors: published sources (comprising peer-reviewed articles, books, and theses), unpublished data, and herbarium data. We compiled a data set composed of 2,095 species, from 89,270 holo/hemiepiphyte records, in the Atlantic Forest of Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay, recorded from 1824 to early 2018. Most of the records were from qualitative data (occurrence only, 88%), well distributed throughout the Atlantic Forest. For quantitative records, the most common sampling method was individual trees (71%), followed by plot sampling (19%), and transect sampling (10%). Angiosperms (81%) were the most frequently registered group, and Bromeliaceae and Orchidaceae were the families with the greatest number of records (27,272 and 21,945, respectively). Ferns and Lycophytes presented fewer records than Angiosperms, and Polypodiaceae were the most recorded family, and more concentrated in the Southern and Southeastern regions. Data on non-vascular plants and lichens were scarce, with a few disjunct records concentrated in the Northeastern region of the Atlantic Forest. For all non-vascular plant records, Lejeuneaceae, a family of liverworts, was the most recorded family. We hope that our effort to organize scattered epiphyte data help advance the knowledge of epiphyte ecology, as well as our understanding of macroecological and biogeographical patterns in the Atlantic Forest. No copyright restrictions are associated with the data set. Please cite this Ecology Data Paper if the data are used in publication and teaching events. © 2019 The Authors. Ecology © 2019 The Ecological Society of Americ

    Arqueologia do baixo Tapajós: ocupação humana na periferia do domínio tapajônico

    No full text
    This research investigates a archaeological site located on a supposed south boundary of the Incised and Punctate Tradition area of influence, in the lower Tapajós River, and debates the results of the investigation in the light of the data and hypotheses on the precolonial occupation of the region. Archaeological investigations in the region in the last couple of years have revealed that the area of dispersal of this tradition is larger than previously expected. Material culture styles and the ways the landscape was occupied seem to indicate cultural contact between the inhabitants of the lower Tapajós River and the peoples who lived on the Nhamundá and Trombetas rivers basins by the end of the first millennium. So being, this research focus was twofold: (1) a local scale, with reference to Serraria Trombetas site and a detailed study of the in-site space as a micro cosmos of a regional history; and (2) a regional scale, comparing local results with the chronology and the characteristics of other sites in the region. Cultural diversity among the pre-colonial indigenous groups in the region was studied through ceramic styles, lithic objects, spatial distribution of vestiges in the local and regional levels, and the absolute chronology.CAPES - Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível SuperiorEssa pesquisa investiga um sítio arqueológico localizado em área que seria o limite sul da dispersão da Tradição Inciso-Ponteada no baixo curso do rio Tapajós, e discute os resultados dessa pesquisa à luz dos demais dados e hipóteses que vêm sendo formulados sobre a ocupação indígena pré-colonial da região. Investigações arqueológicas realizadas na região nos últimos anos vêm revelando que a área de dispersão de sítios arqueológicos ligados a essa tradição cerâmica é maior do que se supunha anteriormente. As características estilísticas da cultura material e o modo de ocupação das paisagens parecem indicar contatos culturais entre habitantes do baixo rio Tapajós e os povos que habitavam as bacias dos rios Nhamundá e Trombetas ao final do primeiro milênio da Era Cristã. Sendo assim, esta pesquisa compreende dois exercícios: (1) o primeiro de escala local, com foco no sítio arqueológico Serraria Trombetas, e no estudo detalhado do espaço intra-sítio, entendido como um microcosmo de uma história regional; e (2) o segundo de escala regional, de comparação dos resultados locais com a cronologia e as características dos demais sítios arqueológico da região. Através da caracterização estilística da cerâmica, do estudo do material lítico, da distribuição espacial dos vestígios no sítio e em nível regional, além do exame da cronologia regional, buscou-se investigar a diversidade cultural dos grupos pré-coloniais no segundo milênio da Era Cristã

    Sobre contactos y fronteras: un enfoque arqueológico

    Get PDF
    This article proposes a debate on cultural contacts in the Amazon region in pre-colonial times. Ethnohistorical information and archaeological data obtained through surveys conducted in the lower Tapajós river are confronted with other contexts in the lower Amazon, in order to substantiate the hypothesis that the wide distribution of the Incised-and-Punctate ceramics indicate regional cultural interaction between social groups in a cultural network of shared cosmologies. This is realized through the study of material culture socially produced and signified, which is understood as an indicator of social ties that transposed geographical boundaries, were vehicles of cultural identity, and active agents of social belonging. Similarities and differences between groups that occupied the region are examined through landscape use patterns and material culture, using the ceramics from the Alvorada archaeological site in the city of Itaituba, Pará, as a case study.CAPES - Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível SuperiorEsse artigo propõe uma discussão sobre contatos culturais na região Amazônica no período pré-colonial. Para debater esse tema, utilizarei informações etnohistóricas e dados arqueológicos obtidos por pesquisas realizadas na região do baixo Tapajós, confrontando-os com outros contextos do baixo Amazonas, a fim de fundamentar a hipótese de in-terações culturais em escala regional sugerida pela ampla distribuição da cerâmica do Horizonte Inciso-Ponteado. Os dados indicam que grupos sociais interagiram no passado compartilhando redes de comunicação, ideias e cosmologias. Isso é percebido através do estudo da cultura material produzida e significada socialmente, a qual é entendida como indicador de vínculos sociais que transpunham fronteiras geográficas, bem como veículo de identidade cultural e agente ativo de pertencimento social. São apresentadas similaridades e distinções entre grupos que ocuparam a região em questão a partir da comparação das características de implantação dos sítios arqueológicos na paisagem e da cultura material, utilizando como estudo de caso a cerâmica do sítio arqueológico Alvo-rada, município de Itaituba, Pará.Aquí proponemos una discusión acerca de los contactos culturales en la región amazónica en el periodo pre-colonial. Para discutir este tema, son utilizados los datos de información etnohistórica y arqueológica obtenidos a partir de prospecciones realizadas en el bajo rio Tapajós confrontándolos con otros contextos en el bajo Amazonas, con el fin de corroborar la hipótesis de que la amplia distribución de la cerámica del Horizonte Inciso-Punteado Horizonte atesta interacciones culturales a escala regional. Los datos indican que los grupos sociales interactúavan en una red que incluya el intercambio de ideas y cosmologías. Esto se realiza a través del estudio de la cultura material producida y significada socialmente, lo que se entiende como un indicador de las relaciones sociales de transposición de las fronteras geográficas, así como un vehículo de la identidad cultural y el agente activo de pertenencia social. Se presentam similitudes y diferencias entre los grupos que ocuparon la región, por la comparación de las características de ubicación de sitios arqueológicos en el paisaje y la cultura material, utilizando como caso de estudio la cerámica del sitio arqueológico Alvorada, en la ciudad de Itaituba, Pará.UFPA - Universidade Federal do Par

    Oxidative stress and nitrosative stress are involved in different stages of proteolytic pulmonary emphysema.

    Get PDF
    International audienceOur aim was to investigate the role of oxidative stress in elastase-induced pulmonary emphysema. C57BL/6 mice were subjected to pancreatic porcine elastase (PPE) instillation (0.05 or 0.5 U per mouse, i.t.) to induce pulmonary emphysema. Lungs were collected on days 7, 14, and 21 after PPE instillation. The control group was sham injected. Also, mice treated with 1% aminoguanidine (AMG) and inducible NO synthase (iNOS) knockout mice received 0.5 U PPE (i.t.), and lungs were analyzed 21 days after. We performed bronchoalveolar lavage, biochemical analyses of oxidative stress, and lung stereology and morphometry assays. Emphysema was observed histologically at 21 days after 0.5 U PPE treatment; tissues from these mice exhibited increased alveolar linear intercept and air-space volume density in comparison with the control group. TNF-α was elevated at 7 and 14 days after 0.5 U PPE treatment, concomitant with a reduction in the IL-10 levels at the same time points. Myeloperoxidase was elevated in all groups treated with 0.5 U PPE. Oxidative stress was observed during early stages of emphysema, with increased nitrite levels and malondialdehyde and superoxide dismutase activity at 7 days after 0.5 U PPE treatment. Glutathione peroxidase activity was increased in all groups treated with 0.5 U PPE. The emphysema was attenuated when iNOS was inhibited using 1% AMG and in iNOS knockout mice. Furthermore, proteolytic stimulation by PPE enhanced the expression of nitrotyrosine and iNOS, whereas the PPE+AMG group showed low expression of iNOS and nitrotyrosine. PPE stimulus also induced endothelial (e) NOS expression, whereas AMG reduced eNOS. Our results suggest that the oxidative and nitrosative stress pathways are triggered by nitric oxide production via iNOS expression in pulmonary emphysema

    Preserving the Internal Quality of Quail Eggs Using a Corn Starch-Based Coating Combined with Basil Essential Oil

    No full text
    The objective of the study is to evaluate a new proposal for a coating based on corn starch (CS) enriched with basil essential oil (BEO) to overcome the rapid deterioration of quail eggs under nonrefrigerated conditions. One hundred and seventy-one quail eggs were divided into treatments of uncoated eggs (control), eggs coated with CS, and eggs coated with CS/BEO, and analyzed over four weeks at room temperature. The CS/BEO coating reduced the growth of total aerobic mesophilic bacteria, Enterobacteriaceae, molds, and yeasts on the surface of eggshells to 10 CFU/mL compared to the control treatment at week four storage. The average Haugh unit (HU) of the four weeks of storage of the CS/BEO treatment was notably higher compared to the control. There was no significant difference between the sensory parameter scores of coated eggs and control treatment. Based on the findings, the CS/BEO coating can be used to mitigate the contamination of quail eggs and preserve their internal quality when stored in an environment without temperature and humidity control

    Data from: Differences in larval nutritional requirements and female oviposition preference reflect the order of fruit colonization of Zaprionus indianus and Drosophila simulans

    Get PDF
    Species coexist using the same nutritional resource by partitioning it either in space or time, but few studies explore how species-specific nutritional requirements allow partitioning. Zaprionus indianus and Drosophila simulans co-exist in figs by invading the fruit at different stages; Z. indianus colonizes ripe figs, whereas D. simulans oviposits in decaying fruit. Larvae feed on yeast growing on the fruit, which serves as their primary protein source. Because yeast populations increase as fruit decays, we find that ripe fruit has lower protein content than rotting fruit. Therefore, we hypothesized that Z. indianus and D. simulans larvae differ in their dietary requirements for protein. We used nutritional geometry to assess the effects of protein and carbohydrate concentration in the larval diet on life history characters in both species. Survival, development time, and ovariole number respond differently to the composition of the larval diet, with Z. indianus generally performing better across a wider range of protein concentrations. Correspondingly, we found that Z. indianus females preferred to lay eggs on low protein foods, while D. simulans females chose higher protein foods for oviposition when competing with Z. indianus. We propose the different nutritional requirements and oviposition preference of these two species allows them to temporally partition their habitat
    corecore