3,546 research outputs found
A note on ensiling characteristics of the tropical grass Setaria sphacelata var. splendida (Stapf).
The objective of this study was to evaluate the ensiling characteristics of Setaria sphacelata var. splendida (S. splendida) and to identify ensilability limiting factors of this tropical grass, locally produced
Microhabitat use by endangered Iberian cyprinids nase Iberochondrostoma almacai and chub Squalius aradensis
Research ArticleOver the last decade there has been a major
rise in the number of attempts at fish conservation and
management as a response to the widespread degradation
of aquatic ecosystems. The assessments involved
are rarely planned and executed with inputs
from the species life history, particularly their microhabitat
use over space and time.The seasonal and sizerelated
microhabitat use of two critically endangered
cyprinids – the Iberian nase Iberochondrostoma
almacai and Iberian chub Squalius aradensis – was
examined at seven sites across four small catchments
in southwest Portugal. Both species displayed nonrandom
microhabitat use. In autumn, nase preferred
more sheltered (>50% cover) habitats with small
substrata (organic cover and silt) than in summer,
while chub were found to occupy significantly fasterflowing
habitats areas (>10 cm/s) with coarser substrata
(>50 mm particle size) in the spring than in the
rest of the year. Size-related analyses indicated that young-of-year (yoy) nase used coarser substrata
(>5 mm particle size) and more exposed habitats
(<50% cover) than adult nase. Adult chub, on the
other hand, occupied coarser substrata (>50 mm
particle size) and faster-flowing areas (>10 cm/s)
than yoy and juveniles. Based on these findings, it
was possible to assign the species to ecological guilds
and to classify them as limnophilic (nase) and
eurytopic and lithophilic (chub). Both species generally
occupied distinct microhabitats, although resource-
use overlap was significant in summer. During
this season, overlap was found between yoy nase and
chub, juvenile nase and juvenile/adult chub, and
between adults of both species. The present study
identified key factors in the species habitat requirements
and helped develop management recommendations
for river restoration that may have a wider
application, particularly for other Mediterraneantype
river
Fish-based groups for ecological assessment in rivers: the importance of environmental drivers on taxonomic and functional traits of fish Assemblages
The use of river-types is of practical value, serving as groups for which
assessment procedures can be developed and applied. An abiotic typology
was set by the Portuguese Water Agency, mainly based on 6 major
morphoclimatic regions. However, to be biologically meaningful, this typology
should fit the distribution patterns of the biological quality elements
communities proposed in Water Framework Directive under the lowest
possible human pressure. This study aimed to identify and characterize
fish-based geographical groups for continental Portugal and their environmental
and geographical discriptors, using taxonomic and functional
traits. Sampling took place between 2004 and 2006 during Spring. Fish
fauna from 155 reference sites was analysed using a multivariate
approach. Cluster Analysis on fish composition identified 10 fish-groups,
expressing a clear correspondence to the river basin level, due to the
restrict basin distribution of many species. Groups showed a wider aggregation
in 4 regions with a larger geographical correspondence, statistically
supported by Similarity Analysis, both on fish composition and mostly on
fish metrics/guilds. Principal Components Analysis revealed major environmental
drivers associated to fish-groups and fish-regions. Fish-groups
were hierarchically grouped over major and local regions, expressing a
large-scale response to a North-South environmental gradient defined by
temperature, precipitation, mineralization and altitude, and a regional scale
response mainly to drainage area and flow discharge. From North to
South, fish-regions were related to the morphoclimatic regions. Results
contributed to reduce redundance in abiotic river-types and set the final
typology for Portuguese rivers, constituting a fundamental tool for planning
and managing water resources
Static Hopfions in the extended Skyrme-Faddeev model
We construct static soliton solutions with non-zero Hopf topological charges
to a theory which is an extension of the Skyrme-Faddeev model by the addition
of a further quartic term in derivatives. We use an axially symmetric ansatz
based on toroidal coordinates, and solve the resulting two coupled non-linear
partial differential equations in two variables by a successive over-relaxation
(SOR) method. We construct numerical solutions with Hopf charge up to four, and
calculate their analytical behavior in some limiting cases. The solutions
present an interesting behavior under the changes of a special combination of
the coupling constants of the quartic terms. Their energies and sizes tend to
zero as that combination approaches a particular special value. We calculate
the equivalent of the Vakulenko and Kapitanskii energy bound for the theory and
find that it vanishes at that same special value of the coupling constants. In
addition, the model presents an integrable sector with an infinite number of
local conserved currents which apparently are not related to symmetries of the
action. In the intersection of those two special sectors the theory possesses
exact vortex solutions (static and time dependent) which were constructed in a
previous paper by one of the authors. It is believed that such model describes
some aspects of the low energy limit of the pure SU(2) Yang-Mills theory, and
our results may be important in identifying important structures in that strong
coupling regime.Comment: 22 pages, 42 figures, minor correction
Monitoring fish passes using infrared beaming: a case study in an Iberian river
An application of a new automated fish counting device – the
Riverwatcher System (RW) – was used to monitor upstream
fish movements in a pool-and-weir fish pass in the River
Zeˆ zere, Portugal, for 141 days from June 2002 to May 2003.
Fish populations were also collected downstream using multimesh
gillnets (5 different mesh sizes ranging from 30 mm to
85 mm knot to knot; ratio between mesh sizes of about 1.30)
and electrofishing for comparison with fish records produced
by the RW. More than 3000 individual Iberian nase Chondrostoma
polylepis ascended the fish pass and moved through the
RW during the study period. However, only 18% of the
records produced by the RW contained silhouettes similar to
fish; no individual smaller than 15 cm TL was recorded by the
counter. Most seasonal movements (73.9%) occurred in spring
and were associated with reproduction. Displacements seemed
to occur independently of time of day. Water temperature
(range: 12–22 C) was the only significant environmental
variable (P < 0.01) influencing upstream movements of this
species. Further development of hardware and software will be
necessary to improve performance of the counter, particularly
in Mediterranean rivers, where more turbid waters and a
greater proportion of small-size species are presen
The organisation of fish assemblages in the regulated Lima basin, Northern Portugal
In order to understand the structure of fish assemblages in the modified Lima basin (Northern
Portugal), two distinct datasets concerning the presence and abundance of fish species
were subjected to multivariate analysis. On the River Lima two types of flow modification
are present within kilometres of one another: (a) a reduced and constant flow due to hypolimnetic
release; and (b) an intense and irregular flow. A comparison of their influence on fish
assemblages revealed a gradient of assemblage types from tributaries to main river sites. The
latter were characterised by a strong dominance of cyprinids, particularly Iberian barbel
(Barbus bocagei). The former harboured two kinds of fish assemblages: those closer to the
river mouth were dominated by the cyprinids Iberian chub (Squalius carolitertii) and Iberian
nase (Chondrostoma polylepis), which were also frequently present in the main river; while
in those further upstream the predominant species was the brown trout (Salmo trutta). Although
explanatory variables such as distance from source, altitude, substrate coarseness and
width were the primary correlates of fish assemblage composition, dam construction and
flow regulation also had a significant effect upon assemblage structure, particularly by: i) reducing
the importance of migratory species; ii) constraining the presence of trout in the regulated
segments; and iii) simplifying the community, especially in the case of the constant and
reduced flow regimeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Oxygen depletion affects kinematics and shoaling cohesion of cyprinid fish
CommunicationNumerous anthropogenic stressors impact rivers worldwide. Hypoxia, resulting
from organic waste releases and eutrophication, occurs very commonly in Mediterranean rivers.
Nonetheless, little is known about the effects of deoxygenation on the behavior of Mediterranean
freshwater fish. To fill this knowledge gap, we assessed the impact of three different dissolved
oxygen levels (normoxia, 48.4%, 16.5% saturation) on kinematics indicators (swimming velocity,
acceleration, distance traveled) and shoaling cohesion of adult Iberian barbel, Luciobarbus bocagei,
a widespread cyprinid species inhabiting a broad range of lotic and lentic habitats. We conducted
flume experiments and video-tracked individual swimming movements of shoals of five fish. Our
results reveal significant differences between the treatments regarding kinematics. Swimming velocity,
acceleration, and total distance traveled decreased stepwise from the control to each of the two oxygen
depletion treatments, whereby the difference between the control and both depletion levels was
significant, respectively, but not between the depletion levels themselves. Shoaling cohesion showed
dissimilarities between the treatments regarding the maximum distance between fish, as the high
depletion treatment differed from each of the other two, indicating that under severe oxygen depletion
some individuals move away from the shoal. Overall, our results show how oxygen depletion
changes fish behavior, which may entail ecological responses, highlighting the need to maintain
an unfragmented river network to ensure movement dispersal among habitats, thus providing
conditions for species escapement from hypoxiainfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
A SUSTENTABILIDADE NA PRODUÇÃO DE VINHOS DO ALENTEJO, CONTRIBUTO DA ADEGA DE BORBA
A Adega de Borba está profundamente empenhada em estabelecer um trabalho com os seus viticultores e parceiros, por forma a produzir vinhos que sejam comercialmente viáveis, que preservem os recursos ambientais e que promovam o bem-estar social dos seus colaboradores das comunidades envolventes.
A implementação, por parte da Adega de Borba, de boas práticas para redução do consumo de água e energia na adega e a certificação em produção integrada das vinhas dos seus viticultores, pretendem reduzir o impacto ambiental da produção vitivinícola desta sub-região. Este trabalho apresenta os resultados das boas práticas adotadas
- …