33 research outputs found

    A Influência da monitoria em Fisiologia na graduação

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    A monitoria é uma ferramenta de apoio realizada de aluno para aluno, a fim de oportunizar o melhor desenvolvimento do conteúdo, solução das dúvidas e dificuldades e melhoria do acadêmico. Sendo assim, o presente estudo vem mostrar a importância e os resultados da monitoria de Fisiologia do Exercício ll na graduação de futuros professores de Educação Física. Os resultados apresentados evidenciam que a monitoria serve como instrumento facilitador para o desenvolvimento teórico-prático dos acadêmicos.Mesa 6. Educación física y didáctica.Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educació

    A Influência da monitoria em Fisiologia na graduação

    Get PDF
    A monitoria é uma ferramenta de apoio realizada de aluno para aluno, a fim de oportunizar o melhor desenvolvimento do conteúdo, solução das dúvidas e dificuldades e melhoria do acadêmico. Sendo assim, o presente estudo vem mostrar a importância e os resultados da monitoria de Fisiologia do Exercício ll na graduação de futuros professores de Educação Física. Os resultados apresentados evidenciam que a monitoria serve como instrumento facilitador para o desenvolvimento teórico-prático dos acadêmicos.Mesa 6. Educación física y didáctica.Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educació

    A Influência da monitoria em Fisiologia na graduação

    Get PDF
    A monitoria é uma ferramenta de apoio realizada de aluno para aluno, a fim de oportunizar o melhor desenvolvimento do conteúdo, solução das dúvidas e dificuldades e melhoria do acadêmico. Sendo assim, o presente estudo vem mostrar a importância e os resultados da monitoria de Fisiologia do Exercício ll na graduação de futuros professores de Educação Física. Os resultados apresentados evidenciam que a monitoria serve como instrumento facilitador para o desenvolvimento teórico-prático dos acadêmicos.Mesa 6. Educación física y didáctica.Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educació

    Pervasive gaps in Amazonian ecological research

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    Biodiversity loss is one of the main challenges of our time,1,2 and attempts to address it require a clear un derstanding of how ecological communities respond to environmental change across time and space.3,4 While the increasing availability of global databases on ecological communities has advanced our knowledge of biodiversity sensitivity to environmental changes,5–7 vast areas of the tropics remain understudied.8–11 In the American tropics, Amazonia stands out as the world’s most diverse rainforest and the primary source of Neotropical biodiversity,12 but it remains among the least known forests in America and is often underrepre sented in biodiversity databases.13–15 To worsen this situation, human-induced modifications16,17 may elim inate pieces of the Amazon’s biodiversity puzzle before we can use them to understand how ecological com munities are responding. To increase generalization and applicability of biodiversity knowledge,18,19 it is thus crucial to reduce biases in ecological research, particularly in regions projected to face the most pronounced environmental changes. We integrate ecological community metadata of 7,694 sampling sites for multiple or ganism groups in a machine learning model framework to map the research probability across the Brazilian Amazonia, while identifying the region’s vulnerability to environmental change. 15%–18% of the most ne glected areas in ecological research are expected to experience severe climate or land use changes by 2050. This means that unless we take immediate action, we will not be able to establish their current status, much less monitor how it is changing and what is being lostinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Pervasive gaps in Amazonian ecological research

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    Catálogo Taxonômico da Fauna do Brasil: setting the baseline knowledge on the animal diversity in Brazil

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    The limited temporal completeness and taxonomic accuracy of species lists, made available in a traditional manner in scientific publications, has always represented a problem. These lists are invariably limited to a few taxonomic groups and do not represent up-to-date knowledge of all species and classifications. In this context, the Brazilian megadiverse fauna is no exception, and the Catálogo Taxonômico da Fauna do Brasil (CTFB) (http://fauna.jbrj.gov.br/), made public in 2015, represents a database on biodiversity anchored on a list of valid and expertly recognized scientific names of animals in Brazil. The CTFB is updated in near real time by a team of more than 800 specialists. By January 1, 2024, the CTFB compiled 133,691 nominal species, with 125,138 that were considered valid. Most of the valid species were arthropods (82.3%, with more than 102,000 species) and chordates (7.69%, with over 11,000 species). These taxa were followed by a cluster composed of Mollusca (3,567 species), Platyhelminthes (2,292 species), Annelida (1,833 species), and Nematoda (1,447 species). All remaining groups had less than 1,000 species reported in Brazil, with Cnidaria (831 species), Porifera (628 species), Rotifera (606 species), and Bryozoa (520 species) representing those with more than 500 species. Analysis of the CTFB database can facilitate and direct efforts towards the discovery of new species in Brazil, but it is also fundamental in providing the best available list of valid nominal species to users, including those in science, health, conservation efforts, and any initiative involving animals. The importance of the CTFB is evidenced by the elevated number of citations in the scientific literature in diverse areas of biology, law, anthropology, education, forensic science, and veterinary science, among others
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