Search results for "Neotropic"

showing 10 items of 29 documents

Parallel diversifications of Cremastosperma and mosannona (annonaceae), tropical rainforest trees tracking neogene upheaval of South America

2018

Much of the immense present day biological diversity of Neotropical rainforests originated from the Miocene onwards, a period of geological and ecological upheaval in South America. We assess the impact of the Andean orogeny, drainage of Lake Pebas and closure of the Panama isthmus on two clades of tropical trees ( Cremastosperma , ca 31 spp.; and Mosannona , ca 14 spp.; both Annonaceae). Phylogenetic inference revealed similar patterns of geographically restricted clades and molecular dating showed diversifications in the different areas occurred in parallel, with timing consistent with Andean vicariance and Central American geodispersal. Ecological niche modelling approaches show phyloge…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineDIVERSITY01 natural sciencesNiche modellingDISPERSALlcsh:ScienceMultidisciplinarybiologyEcologyAmazon rainforest70Biology (Whole Organism)ANDEAN UPLIFTPE&RCBiosystematieknicheGeographyGeodispersalinternationalISTHMUSMolecular datingCLADESPebas systemResearch Article1001Neotropics201004PHYLOGENY RECONSTRUCTIONRainforest010603 evolutionary biologymodelling03 medical and health sciencesHISTORICAL BIOGEOGRAPHYDIVERGENCEVicarianceSPECIATIONLaboratorium voor NematologieEcological nicheAndean orogenyAndean orogenyBiology and Life Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationEVOLUTION030104 developmental biologyMosannonaPanama isthmusBiosystematicslcsh:QEPSLaboratory of NematologyTropical rainforestRoyal Society Open Science
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Neotropical primate evolution and phylogenetic reconstruction using chromosomal data

2017

Platyrrhini are a group of Neotropical primates living in central and south America, and have been extensively studied through morphological and molecular data in order to shed light on their phylogeny and evolution. Agreement on the main clades of Neotropical primates has been reached using different approaches, but many phylogenetic nodes remain under discussion. Contrasting hypotheses have been proposed, presumably due to different markers and the presence of polymorphisms in the features considered; furthermore, neither Neotropical primate biodiversity nor their taxonomy are entirely known. In our perspective, a cytogenetic approach can help by making an important contribution to the ev…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineZoologyPlatyrrhiniSettore BIO/08 - Antropologia010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenomehuman associationsMolecular cytogenetics03 medical and health sciencesNeotropical monkeys molecular cytogenetics painting human associations genomePhylogeneticsbiology.animallcsh:ZoologyPrimatelcsh:QL1-991CladegenomePhylogenetic treebiologypaintingNeotropical monkeys030104 developmental biologyEvolutionary biologyAnimal Science and ZoologyTaxonomy (biology)molecular cytogeneticsThe European Zoological Journal
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Visible implant elastomer (VIE) success in early larval stages of a tropical amphibian species

2020

AbstractAnimals are often difficult to distinguish at an individual level, but being able to identify individuals can be crucial in ecological or behavioral studies. In response to this challenge, biologists have developed a range of marking (tattoos, brands, toe-clips) and tagging (PIT, VIA, VIE) methods to identify individuals and cohorts. Animals with complex life cycles are notoriously hard to mark because of the distortion or loss of the tag across metamorphosis. In frogs, few studies have attempted larval tagging and none have been conducted on a tropical species. Here, we present the first successful account of VIE tagging in early larval stages (Gosner stage 25) of the dyeing poison…

0106 biological sciencesAmphibiantägitsammakotRange (biology)Dendrobatesmedia_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:MedicineZoologyElastomertaggingBiologyvärjärinuolimyrkkysammakkoMethods research010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologyeläintiedetoukat03 medical and health sciencesTaggingbiology.animalNeotropical frogMetamorphosiselastomer030304 developmental biologymedia_common0303 health sciencesLarvaEcologyLarval tagGeneral Neurosciencelcsh:Rmethods researchGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationIndividual levelTadpoleVIEkenttätyömenetelmätneotropical frogDendrobates tinctoriuslarval tageläinten merkintäBiological dispersalimplantitGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesZoologyPeerJ
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Fish introductions and light modulate food web fluxes in tropical streams: a whole-ecosystem experimental approach.

2016

Decades of ecological study have demonstrated the importance of top-down and bottom-up controls on food webs, yet few studies within this context have quantified the magnitude of energy and material fluxes at the whole-ecosystem scale. We examined top-down and bottom-up effects on food web fluxes using a field experiment that manipulated the presence of a consumer, the Trinidadian guppy Poecilia reticulata, and the production of basal resources by thinning the riparian forest canopy to increase incident light. To gauge the effects of these reach-scale manipulations on food web fluxes, we used a nitrogen (15 N) stable isotope tracer to compare basal resource treatments (thinned canopy vs. co…

0106 biological sciencesCanopyNeotropicsFood ChainLightPopulation DynamicsContext (language use)010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesRiverstrophic linkagesAnimalsEcosystemTrinidad guppyBiomassEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicstop-down and bottom-up effectsTrophic levelTropical ClimateDetritusbiologyEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologynitrogen fluxFishesWaterbiology.organism_classificationFood webGuppyreach-scale experimentstable isotope tracersTrinidad and TobagoBenthic zoneta1181stream food webbenthic macroinvertebratesprimary productionEcology
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Taxonomic review of the plant bug genera Amapacylapus and Cylapus with descriptions of two new species and a key to the genera of Cylapini (Hemiptera…

2017

The plant bug tribe Cylapini (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Miridae: Cylapinae) is diagnosed and a worldwide key to the genera of the tribe is provided. The taxonomic review of the New World Cylapini genera Amapacylapus Carvalho & Fontes,1968 and Cylapus Say, 1832 is provided, including a key to species, diagnoses and redescriptions of genera and most included species, and descriptions of two new species, Amapacylapus unicolor sp. nov. (Ecuador) and Cylapus luridus sp. nov. (Brazil). Illustrations of the male genitalia, color photographs of the adult and scanning electron micrographs of the selected species are provided. The genus Cylapocerus Carvalho & Fontes, 1968 syn. nov. is proposed …

0106 biological sciencesCylapiniAmapacylapusnew synonymInsectaArthropodanew combinationdiagnosisEcology (disciplines)010607 zoology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHemipteraHeteropterakeyCylapusAnimaliaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNeotropical RegionTaxonomynew speciesbiologyEcologyHeteropteraCylapinaeBiodiversitybiology.organism_classificationMiridaeHemipteraInsect ScienceKey (lock)MiridaeActa Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae
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An annotated checklist of freshwater Copepoda (Crustacea, Hexanauplia) from continental Ecuador and the Galapagos Archipelago.

2019

An annotated checklist of the free-living freshwater Copepoda recorded in different regions in Ecuador (including the Amazon, the Andes, the coastal region, and the Galapagos Islands) is here provided. We revised all published records, critically evaluated the validity of each taxon and provided short taxonomic and biogeographical remarks for each one. A total of 27 taxa have been reported, including species and records at the generic level only. The species and taxa identified only up to the generic level belong to five families and 14 genera. The Cyclopoida is the most diverse group with 16 records belonging to species (or identified to the generic level only) and eight genera, followed b…

0106 biological sciencesHexanaupliaSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaBiodiversityCyclopoida01 natural sciencesCrustacealcsh:ZoologyBilaterialcsh:QL1-991species richnessHarpacticoidaCalanoidaInvertebratageography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyEcologyAmazon rainforestCephalornisHarpacticoidaBiodiversityNeotropicfreshwater CopepodaChecklistBiogeographyArchipelagoEcuadorCoelenterataNeotropicsArthropodaNephrozoa010607 zoologyProtostomiaCircumscriptional names of the taxon underCopepodaFaunistics & DistributionSystematicsgeographical distributionAnimaliaCalanoidaEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsgeography010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyCyclopoidaSouth Americabiology.organism_classificationTaxonNotchiaEcdysozoaAnimal Science and ZoologySpecies richnessCatalogues and ChecklistsAmericasMaxillopodaZooKeys
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New national and regional bryophyte records, 43

2015

During the examination of a collection made by the authors in 2009 in San Pedro de Atacama (Antofagasta Region, Chile) one specimen was identified as Bryum incacorralis Herzog, a moss not previously known from Chile (Müller, 2009) and easily confused with some species of Philonotis Brid. (Ochi, 1980). Comparison with the type material confirmed its identity (Holotype: Bolivia, Cochabamba: an Felsen der "Estradillas" bei Incacorral, 3000 m, Herzog s.n., JE! no. 04003475). Bryum incacorralis was first described by Herzog (1909) based on material collected in Cochabamba (Bolivia), and later recorded by Griffin (1977) and O'Shea (2010) from Venezuela. It is placed in the so-called sect. "Alpini…

0106 biological sciencesNeotropicsBryaceaebiologyForestryBryophytaPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesBryaceaeCiencias BiológicasGeographyBryophyteChile[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyCiencias de las Plantas BotánicaCIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTASEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS010606 plant biology & botany
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Castniidae of the Museum of Natural History of the University of Wrocław: new findings from Friedrich Wilhelm Niepelt's collection with comments on K…

2021

Further results of our research into the Giant Butterfly-Moths (Castniidae) of the Museum of Natural History (University of Wrocław) are presented. Castniids of the Niepelt collection had previously been reviewed. However, while curating other sections of the Lepidoptera collection, we discovered 18 misplaced specimens belonging to nine taxa of Castniidae, several of them bearing typical labels by Niepelt. Among them, two are of particular interest, insofar as they are associated with the world-class botanists August Weberbauer (1871–1948) and Karl Adolf Georg Lauterbach (1864–1937).

0106 biological sciencesNeotropicsInsectaArthropodaQH301-705.5media_common.quotation_subject010607 zoologyArt historyCastniidae010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesSesioideaAnimaliaBiology (General)Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonbiodiversitybiologyCastniidaeArtSouth Americabiology.organism_classificationGiant Butterfly-MothsNatural historyLepidopteramuseum collecnatural historyInsect ScienceAnimal Science and Zoologymuseum collections
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New national and regional bryophyte records, 36

2013

In the moss flora of Uruguay there are recorder ten species of genus Fissidens (Matteri, 2004). Three of them (F. macrobryoides, F. prionocheilos and F. vitreo-limbatus) are species incertae because the type material for the names not was located (Purssel, 2007). As part of project "Studies on Bryophytes in the Cone Sur (Systematic and Phylogeny)" some specimens recently collected in Uruguay were determinate as Fissidens asplenioides a no previously species recorded in this country. The presence of F. asplenioides in Uruguay complete the distribution range of the species in the cone Sur (is present in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile and Paraguay). However, within the Neotropical region th…

0106 biological sciencesSplachnum ampullaceumBRYOPHYTANEOTROPICOAsterella lindenbergianaPlant Science15. Life on land010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesArchaeologyPAMPACiencias BiológicasGeographyBotany[SDE]Environmental SciencesBryophyteFar EastBayEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCiencias de las Plantas BotánicaCIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTASComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS010606 plant biology & botany
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Review of the Neotropical Charipinae (Hymenoptera, Cynipoidea, Figitidae)

2013

A review of the Neotropical Charipinae is given, with 35 species from four genera: Alloxysta, Apocharips, Dilyta and Phaenoglyphis. One new species, Alloxysta centroamericana Ferrer-Suay & Pujade-Villar sp. nov. is described; six Alloxysta species, Alloxysta citripes (Thomson, 1862), Alloxysta fracticornis (Thomson, 1862), Alloxysta melanogaster (Hartig, 1841), Alloxysta piceomaculata (Cameron, 1886), Alloxysta postica (Hartig, 1841) and Alloxysta pusilla (Kieffer, 1902), are recorded for the first time from the Neotropical region; 10 new records for earlier known species are also given. Diagnoses and a key to all species are also provided.

CharipinaeInsectabiologyCynipoideaFigitidaeHymenopteraPhaenoglyphisbiology.organism_classificationCharipinaeInsect Sciencelcsh:ZoologyBotanyKey (lock)lcsh:QL1-991Neotropical region
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