22 research outputs found

    Vegetação e flora.

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    O processo de redução e isolamento da vegetação natural, conhecido como fragmentação de habitat tem consequĂȘncias sobre a estrutura e os processos das comunidades vegetais, que podem ser naturais ou geralmente causados pela ação antrĂłpica e, apesar das implicaçÔes da fragmentação de habitat na manutenção da biodiversidade, muito de seus efeitos de curto, mĂ©dio e longo prazo ainda nĂŁo sĂŁo entendidos. Resultados de estudos em diversos ecossistemas tĂȘm demonstrado que a compreensĂŁo de somente uma ou de poucas caracterĂ­sticas dos fragmentos, nĂŁo Ă© suficiente para entender ou prever como a biodiversidade serĂĄ afetada. É, portanto, essencial a compreensĂŁo dos diversos fatores que podem estar simultaneamente ou em sinergismo sobre a vegetação dos fragmentos tais como o tamanho, a forma, a idade, o uso e a matriz, entre outros

    First report on dung beetles in intra-Amazonian savannahs in Roraima, Brazil

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    This is the first study to address the dung beetle (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae) diversity in intra-Amazonian savannahs in the state of Roraima, Brazil. Our aim was to survey the dung beetle fauna associated with these savannahs (regionally called 'lavrado'), since little is known about the dung beetles from this environment. We conducted three field samples using pitfall traps baited with human dung in savannah areas near the city of Boa Vista during the rainy seasons of 1996, 1997, and 2008. We collected 383 individuals from ten species, wherein six have no previous record in intra-Amazonian savannahs. The most abundant species were Ontherus appendiculatus (Mannerheim, 1829), Canthidium aff. humerale (Germar, 1813), Dichotomius nisus (Olivier, 1789), and Pseudocanthon aff. xanthurus (Blanchard, 1846). We believe that knowing the dung beetles diversity associated with the intra-Amazonian savannahs is ideal for understanding the occurrence and distribution of these organisms in a highly threatened environment, it thus being the first step towards conservation strategy development

    Amazonia Camtrap: a data set of mammal, bird, and reptile species recorded with camera traps in the Amazon forest.

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    Abstract : The Amazon forest has the highest biodiversity on Earth. However, information on Amazonian vertebrate diversity is still deficient and scatteredacross the published, peer-reviewed, and gray literature and in unpublishedraw data. Camera traps are an effective non-invasive method of surveying vertebrates, applicable to different scales of time and space. In this study, we organized and standardized camera trap records from different Amazonregions to compile the most extensive data set of inventories of mammal,bird, and reptile species ever assembled for the area. The complete data setcomprises 154,123 records of 317 species (185 birds, 119 mammals, and13 reptiles) gathered from surveys from the Amazonian portion of eightcountries (Brazil, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Peru,Suriname, and Venezuela). The most frequently recorded species per taxawere: mammals:Cuniculus paca (11,907 records); birds: Pauxi tuberosa (3713 records); and reptiles:Tupinambis teguixin(716 records). The infor-mation detailed in this data paper opens up opportunities for new ecological studies at different spatial and temporal scales, allowing for a moreaccurate evaluation of the effects of habitat loss, fragmentation, climatechange, and other human-mediated defaunation processes in one of themost important and threatened tropical environments in the world. The data set is not copyright restricted; please cite this data paper when usingits data in publications and we also request that researchers and educator sinform us of how they are using these data

    Byrsonima crassifolia

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    Angiosperm

    Byrsonima crassifolia

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    Angiosperm

    Byrsonima crassifolia

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    Angiosperm

    Byrsonima crassifolia

    No full text
    Angiosperm

    Byrsonima crassifolia

    No full text
    Angiosperm

    Fire effects on the composition of a bird community in an amazonian Savanna (Brazil)

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    The effects of fire on the composition of a bird community were investigated in an Amazonian savanna near Alter-do-ChĂŁo, ParĂĄ (Brazil). Mist-net captures and visual counts were used to assess species richness and bird abundance pre- and post-fire in an approximately 20 ha area. Visual counts along transects were used to survey birds in an approximately 2000 ha area in a nearby area. Results using the same method of ordination analysis (multidimensional scaling) showed significant effects of fire in the 20 ha and 2000 ha areas and strongly suggest direct effects on bird community composition. However, the effects were different at different spatial scales and/or in different years, indicating that the effects of fire vary spatially and/or temporally. Bird community composition pre-fire was significantly different from that found post-fire. Using multiple regression analysis it was found that the numbers of burned and unburned trees were not significantly related to either bird species richness or bird abundance. Two months after the fire, neither bird species richness nor bird abundance was significantly related to the number of flowering trees (Lafoensia pacari) or fruiting trees (Byrsonima crassifolia). Since fire is an annual event in Alter-do-ChĂŁo and is becoming frequent in the entire Amazon, bird community composition in affected areas could be constantly changing in time and space
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