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Dive into the research topics where Airton Torres Carvalho is active.

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Featured researches published by Airton Torres Carvalho.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Bees for development: Brazilian survey reveals how to optimize stingless beekeeping.

Rodolfo Jaffé; Nathaniel Pope; Airton Torres Carvalho; Ulysses Madureira Maia; Betina Blochtein; Carlos Alfredo Lopes de Carvalho; Gislene Almeida Carvalho-Zilse; Breno Magalhães Freitas; Cristiano Menezes; Márcia de Fátima Ribeiro; Giorgio Cristino Venturieri; Vera Lucia Imperatriz-Fonseca

Stingless bees are an important asset to assure plant biodiversity in many natural ecosystems, and fulfill the growing agricultural demand for pollination. However, across developing countries stingless beekeeping remains an essentially informal activity, technical knowledge is scarce, and management practices lack standardization. Here we profited from the large diversity of stingless beekeepers found in Brazil to assess the impact of particular management practices on productivity and economic revenues from the commercialization of stingless bee products. Our study represents the first large-scale effort aiming at optimizing stingless beekeeping for honey/colony production based on quantitative data. Survey data from 251 beekeepers scattered across 20 Brazilian States revealed the influence of specific management practices and other confounding factors over productivity and income indicators. Specifically, our results highlight the importance of teaching beekeepers how to inspect and feed their colonies, how to multiply them and keep track of genetic lineages, how to harvest and preserve the honey, how to use vinegar traps to control infestation by parasitic flies, and how to add value by labeling honey containers. Furthermore, beekeeping experience and the network of known beekeepers were found to be key factors influencing productivity and income. Our work provides clear guidelines to optimize stingless beekeeping and help transform the activity into a powerful tool for sustainable development.


Phytochemistry | 2015

Pollination biology in the dioecious orchid Catasetum uncatum: How does floral scent influence the behaviour of pollinators?

Paulo Milet-Pinheiro; Daniela Maria do Amaral Ferraz Navarro; Stefan Dötterl; Airton Torres Carvalho; Carlos Eduardo Pinto; Manfred Ayasse; Clemens Schlindwein

Catasetum is a neotropical orchid genus that comprises about 160 dioecious species with a remarkable sexual dimorphism in floral morphology. Flowers of Catasetum produce perfumes as rewards, which are collected only by male euglossine bees. Currently, floral scents are known to be involved in the selective attraction of specific euglossine species. However, sexual dimorphism in floral scent and its eventual role in the pollination of Catasetum species have never been investigated. Here, we have investigated the pollination of Catasetum uncatum and asked: (1) Is floral scent a sexual dimorphic trait? (2) Does pollinarium removal/deposition affect scent emission? (3) Does sexual dimorphism in floral scent and changed scent emission have implications with regard to the behaviour of the pollinators? The frequency and behaviour of floral visitors were observed in non-manipulated flowers (both flower sexes) and in manipulated flowers (pistillate only) in which pollinaria were deposited. Scents of staminate and pistillate flowers (both manipulated and non-manipulated) were collected by using dynamic headspace methods and analysed chemically. Electrophysiological analyses were performed to detect compounds triggering antennal depolarisation in the euglossine species. C. uncatum is pollinated mainly by males of Euglossa nanomelanotricha. Pollinators were more frequent in pistillate than in staminate inflorescences. Bees approaching staminate flowers frequently flew away without visiting them, a behavioural pattern not observed in pistillate flowers. In the chemical analyses, we recorded 99 compounds, 31 of which triggered antennal depolarisation in pollinators. Multivariate analyses with the electrophysiological-active compounds did not detect differences between the scent composition of staminate and pistillate flowers. Pollinarium removal or deposition resulted in diminished scent emission within 24h in staminate and pistillate flowers, respectively. Surprisingly, bees discriminated pollinated from non-pollinated pistillate flowers as early as 2h after pollination. The rapid loss in the attractiveness of flowers following pollinarium removal/deposition can be interpreted as a strategy to direct pollinators to non-pollinated flowers. We have found no evidence that euglossine males discriminate staminate from pistillate flowers by means of floral scent. Instead, we speculate that bees use visual cues, such as sex dimorphic traits, to discriminate flowers of different sexes. Together, our results provide interesting insights into the evolution of floral signals in gender-dimorphic species and into its significance in plant reproductive biology.


Journal of Chemical Ecology | 2012

Nocturnal Bees are Attracted by Widespread Floral Scents

Airton Torres Carvalho; Artur Campos Dália Maia; Poliana Yumi Ojima; Adauto Alex dos Santos; Clemens Schlindwein

Flower localization in darkness is a challenging task for nocturnal pollinators. Floral scents often play a crucial role in guiding them towards their hosts. Using common volatile compounds of floral scents, we trapped female nocturnal Megalopta-bees (Halictidae), thus uncovering olfactory cues involved in their search for floral resources. Applying a new sampling method hereby described, we offer novel perspectives on the investigation of nocturnal bees.


Journal of Chemical Ecology | 2014

An aromatic volatile attracts oligolectic bee pollinators in an interdependent bee-plant relationship.

Airton Torres Carvalho; Stefan Dötterl; Clemens Schlindwein

Chemical signals emitted by the plant frequently mediate host-plant localization in specialized animal – plant associations. Studying the interdependent highly specialized association of the narrowly oligolectic bee pollinator Protodiscelis palpalis (Colletidae, Neopasiphaeinae) with Hydrocleys martii (Alismataceae) in ephemeral aquatic water bodies in semi-arid Caatinga of Brazil, we asked if specific volatile compounds produced by the flowers mediate pollinator attraction. The yellow Hydrocleys flowers are the sole pollen and nectar resources, and mating sites for the bees. We analyzed the floral scents of this species and of the closely related H. nymphoides, which is not visited by P. palpalis, and tested the main volatile compounds of both species under field conditions to evaluate their attractiveness to bees of P. palpalis. Methoxylated aromatics were the dominant floral scent components in both species, but each species exhibited a characteristic scent profile. Dual choice bioassays using artificial flowers made of yellow and blue adhesive paper clearly revealed that ρ-methylanisole alone, the dominant volatile of H. martii, attracted significantly more bees than unbaited flowers. This compound represents an olfactory communication channel used by the plant that lures its effective oligolectic pollinators to its flowers. Yellow artificial flowers baited significantly more bees than blue ones. Our study reinforces the recent findings that specific compounds in complex floral scent bouquets are crucial for host-plant location in oligolectic bees.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Pleistocene climate changes shaped the population structure of Partamona seridoensis (Apidae, Meliponini), an endemic stingless bee from the Neotropical dry forest

Elder Assis Miranda; Kátia Maria Ferreira; Airton Torres Carvalho; Celso Feitosa Martins; Carlo Rivero Moura Fernandes; Marco Antonio Del Lama

Partamona seridoensis is an endemic stingless bee from the Caatinga, a Neotropical dry forest in northeastern Brazil. Like other stingless bees, this species plays an important ecological role as a pollinator. The aim of the present study was to investigate the genetic structure and evolutionary history of P. seridoensis across its current geographic range. Workers from 84 nests from 17 localities were analyzed for COI and Cytb genic regions. The population structure tests (Bayesian phylogenetic inference, AMOVA and haplotype network) consistently characterized two haplogroups (northwestern and eastern), with little gene flow between them, generating a high differentiation between them as well as among the populations within each haplogroup. The Mantel test revealed no isolation by distance. No evidence of a potential geographic barrier in the present that could explain the diversification between the P. seridoensis haplogroups was found. However, Pleistocene climatic changes may explain this differentiation, since the initial time for the P. seridoensis lineages diversification took place during the mid-Pleistocene, specifically the interglacial period, when the biota is presumed to have been more associated with dry conditions and had more restricted, fragmented geographical distribution. This event may have driven diversification by isolating the two haplogroups. Otherwise, the climatic changes in the late Pleistocene must not have drastically affected the population dynamics of P. seridoensis, since the Bayesian Skyline Plot did not reveal any substantial fluctuation in effective population size in either haplogroup. Considering its importance and the fact that it is an endemic bee from a very threatened Neotropical dry forest, the results herein could be useful to the development of conservation strategies for P. seridoensis.


Apidologie | 2017

Protecting a managed bee pollinator against climate change: strategies for an area with extreme climatic conditions and socioeconomic vulnerability

Tereza C. Giannini; Camila Maia-Silva; André L. Acosta; Rodolfo Jaffé; Airton Torres Carvalho; Celso Feitosa Martins; Fernando C.V. Zanella; Carlos Alfredo Lopes de Carvalho; Michael Hrncir; Antonio Mauro Saraiva; José Oswaldo Siqueira; Vera Lucia Imperatriz-Fonseca

In the semiarid region of Northeastern Brazil, populations of native bees can be jeopardized by future climate change. The present study aims to analyze the impact of climate change on a native stingless bee (Melipona subnitida Ducke). This species is a locally important pollinator of wild and crop plants, also exploited for honey production by regional beekeepers. Using species distributional modeling, we assessed the effects of climate change on the geographic distribution of M. subnitida. We found a potential shift in future areas where species can find climatically suitable habitats toward the edges of the current pollinator distribution with a consequent central disconnection, which can threaten species dispersal and gene flow. We propose to reconnect the remaining suitable areas through conservation and restoration programs based on the distribution of the plant species that are used by this bee as source of pollen and nectar and propose also, other strategies that aim to increase the welfare of local people


Journal of Insect Behavior | 2013

Plasticity in Male Territoriality of a Solitary Bee Under Different Environmental Conditions

Reisla Oliveira; Airton Torres Carvalho; Clemens Schlindwein

The use of alternative male mating tactics has evolved in most insect orders. The maintenance of these tactics is often associated with discrepancy in morphological attributes of males, especially size (Brockmann 2008). In addition, variations in environmental conditions, such as heterogeneity of habitat and abiotic features (Łukasik et al. 2006; Larison 2007), and demographic conditions, such as population density (Borgia 1980; Radwan 1993; Tomkins and Brown 2004), influence the frequencies of different tactics and their average fitness benefits. Among solitary bees, the simultaneous occurrence of variation in male body size and plasticity in mate searching behaviour is relatively well documented. Larger males adopt tactics that involve struggles for direct access to receptive females in nests or for the guard of attractive floral resources, while the smaller males alternatively search for mates through nonaggressive tactics (e.g. Alcock 1996, 1997; Oliveira and Schlindwein 2010; Oliveira et al. 2012). How environmental or social conditions influence behavioural plasticity, however, has been poorly examined. J Insect Behav (2013) 26:690–694 DOI 10.1007/s10905-013-9385-5


Biological Journal of The Linnean Society | 2013

The cowl does not make the monk: scarab beetle pollination of the Neotropical aroid Taccarum ulei (Araceae: Spathicarpeae)

Artur Campos Dália Maia; Marc Gibernau; Airton Torres Carvalho; Eduardo Gonçalves; Clemens Schlindwein


Flora | 2009

Permanent stigma closure in Bignoniaceae: Mechanism and implications for fruit set in self-incompatible species

Paulo Milet-Pinheiro; Airton Torres Carvalho; Peter G. Kevan; Clemens Schlindwein


Biological Journal of The Linnean Society | 2011

Obligate association of an oligolectic bee and a seasonal aquatic herb in semi‐arid north‐eastern Brazil

Airton Torres Carvalho; Clemens Schlindwein

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Clemens Schlindwein

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Paulo Milet-Pinheiro

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Rodolfo Jaffé

University of São Paulo

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Artur Campos Dália Maia

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Carlos Alfredo Lopes de Carvalho

Universidade Federal do Recôncavo da Bahia

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Celso Feitosa Martins

Federal University of Paraíba

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Reisla Oliveira

Universidade Federal de Ouro Preto

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Ulysses Madureira Maia

Universidade Federal Rural do Semi-Árido

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