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Dive into the research topics where Ana Cristina Petry is active.

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Featured researches published by Ana Cristina Petry.


Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management | 2007

Fish diversity in the upper Paraná River basin: habitats, fisheries, management and conservation

Angelo Antonio Agostinho; Fernando Mayer Pelicice; Ana Cristina Petry; Luiz Carlos Gomes; Horácio F. Júlio

The Paraná River is the second longest river in South America and the tenth largest river in the world in water discharge. The upper stretches are characterized by high human occupation and intense anthropogenic activities, and few areas are still in pristine conditions. Despite this, fish diversity is remarkably high in the upper Paraná River basin, and the existence of different habitats greatly influences fish biodiversity. Although most species are sedentary, migratory species are considered the most important, since they have historically sustained commercial and recreational fisheries. Recently, stocks of migratory species have diminished in many rivers due to overfishing and habitat modifications caused by dams. Impoundments have a long history in the basin and constitute the main source of impacts for both sedentary and migratory fish species. Government agencies have implemented management actions to mitigate the effects of damming on fish populations, which included fish stocking (using native and non-native species), the construction of transposition mechanisms and fishery control. However, their efficacy for conservation has been severely questioned and, in many instances, these actions have produced negative outcomes to biodiversity. The lack of studies and monitoring programs contributed to the uncritical adoption of some dubious management actions. Inevitably, management plans directed to conserve fish biodiversity in the basin need urgent revision.


Neotropical Ichthyology | 2003

Fish assemblages of tropical floodplain lagoons: exploring the role of connectivity in a dry year

Ana Cristina Petry; Angelo Antonio Agostinho; Luiz Carlos Gomes

Irregular rainfall and pronounced reductions of the hydrometric level in the year 2000 resulted in drastically altered hydrological connectivity of lentic environments in the upper Parana River floodplain. The objective of the present work was to examine spatial and temporal patterns of fish assemblage attributes and structure in relation to limnological variables associated with hydrological connectivity. Fish were collected quarterly by seining in the marginal areas of 15 lagoons belonging to two biotopic categories (connected and disconnected). Variation in assemblage composition reflected the degree of hydrological connectivity. Values of assemblage attributes (species richness, density and biomass) were significantly lower in connected lagoons than in disconnected lagoons. Significantly higher values of species richness and biomass were recorded in November than in August. Rare species had the greatest effect on observed patterns in fish assemblage ordination (DCA). Observed patterns of variation in assemblage attributes were directly correlated with factors related to hydrological connectivity, such as depth, resources (zooplankton and chlorophyll a) and nutrients (total phosphorus).


Hydrobiologia | 2015

Spatio-temporal organization patterns in the fish assemblages of a Neotropical floodplain

Jean Carlo Gonçalves Ortega; Rosa Maria Dias; Ana Cristina Petry; Edson Fontes de Oliveira; Angelo Antonio Agostinho

Communities can be structured over time by deterministic, stochastic, or both mechanisms. This study evaluated whether the fish assemblages of the Upper Paraná River floodplain were spatio-temporally structured and examined the mechanisms driving these organizational patterns. The floodplain ichthyofauna was sampled quarterly with seines and gillnets. The structure of the assemblage was assessed using the C-Score co-occurrence index and null models. The influence of both the environment (physical and chemical variables and hydrometric levels) and time on the species’ organization patterns was assessed via principal component analysis, multiple and simple regressions, and analyses of variance. Assemblages with larger species showed patterns of species segregation at both spatial and temporal scales, while those composed of smaller species often exhibited random patterns. The physical and chemical variables did not predict co-occurrence among species. For assemblages of large species, the patterns of co-occurrence tended to be random when the river level increased but only during high-water months. Therefore, the life history traits of the species, such as body size, may predict the structure of the assemblages in floodplains, but this effect depends on variations in the hydrometric level.


Iheringia Serie Zoologia | 2009

Influência do ciclo hidrológico na dieta e estrutura trófica da ictiofauna do Rio Cuiabá, Pantanal Mato-Grossense

Carlos Eduardo Corrêa; Ana Cristina Petry; Norma Segatti Hahn

This paper evaluate the influence of the hydrological cycle on the diet and trophic structure of the ichthyofauna from the Pantanal. Samplings were carried out monthly between March 2000 and February 2001, in the Cuiaba River and the Chacorore Lagoon. Analysis of the stomach contents of 58 species determined eight trophic categories. Species of the piscivore, detritivore and lepidophage trophic categories presented little variation in the intake food items and, therefore, they did not contribute to the variation in the composition of the diet in both environments, independently of the hydrological cycle. The effects of the flood pulse were more pronounced in the numerical abundance and biomass of detritivore and omnivore trophic categories and were depended on the environment for piscivore, invertivore, and insectivore. Apparently, specificity of the food items along with the probable high availability of food resources in the studied environments contributed to the low variation due to the hydrological seasonality in the trophic organization of the ichthyofauna. By the increment of the hydrological connectivity, the flood pulse of the Cuiaba River allows the exchange of organisms throughout the system, thus determining the variability in the structure of the trophic categories.


Acta Limnologica Brasiliensia | 2013

An update on the fish composition (Teleostei) of the coastal lagoons of the Restinga de Jurubatiba National Park and the Imboassica Lagoon, northern Rio de Janeiro State

Fabio Di Dario; Ana Cristina Petry; Matheus Maia de Souza Pereira; Michael Maia Mincarone; Lorena Soares Agostinho; Ellen Martins Camara; Érica Pellegrini Caramaschi; Marcelo R. Britto

OBJETIVO: Apresentamos uma atualizacao sobre a composicao das especies de peixes do Parque Nacional da Restinga de Jurubatiba e da lagoa Imboassica, na porcao norte do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, com base em esforcos de coleta de quase duas decadas, registros historicos em museus, e uma revisao da literatura. METODOS: Os especimes foram coletados atraves de uma variedade de tecnicas, principalmente entre 1994 e 2012, e foram fixados com a utilizacao de uma solucao de formalina a 10%, sendo subsequentemente armazenados em solucao de alcool a 70%. Todos os especimes examinados foram depositados nas colecoes de peixes do Nucleo em Ecologia e Desenvolvimento Socioambiental de Macae, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (NPM), e Museu Nacional, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (MNRJ). Especies de peixes continentais (agua doce) e algumas especies marinhas ou estuarinas frequentemente coletadas foram consideradas como Residentes, enquanto especies marinhas coletadas apenas esporadicamente foram consideradas como Ocasionais. Possiveis associacoes entre a orientacao das lagoas e a composicao de peixes Residentes foram exploradas atraves de uma Analise de Correspondencia (CA). RESULTADOS: Um total de 100 especies, pertencentes a 19 ordens e 41 familias de Teleostei, foi registrado. Quando especies Residentes e Ocasionais sao consideradas, as familias Carangidae e Engraulidae, com nove e oito especies respectivamente, sao as mais representativas. Quando apenas especies Residentes sao consideradas, Gerreidae e Gobiidae, ambas com sete especies, sao as mais representativas. A lagoa Imboassica, com 76 especies, possui a maior riqueza de especies entre as lagoas incluidas neste estudo. Um total de 81 especies foi registrado no Parque Nacional da Restinga de Jurubatiba, um numero duas vezes maior do que o relatado em estudos anteriores. Uma chave de identificacao, incluindo 57 especies Residentes, tambem e apresentada. CONCLUSOES: Lagoas Paralelas foram caracterizadas por um pequeno grupo de especies continentais presumivelmente de ancestralidade marinha (Divisao Secundaria), enquanto especies marinhas foram mais representativas em lagoas Ortogonais. A maior frequencia de especies marinhas em lagoas Ortogonais pode estar associada com aberturas da barra arenosa. Conexoes temporarias e esporadicas entre lagoas Paralelas durante periodos de maior pluviosidade podem promover uma maior similaridade em termos de composicao de especies.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2016

Fish composition and species richness in eastern South American coastal lagoons: additional support for the freshwater ecoregions of the world.

Ana Cristina Petry; T. F. R. Guimarães; F. M. Vasconcellos; Sandra Maria Hartz; Fernando Becker; Ricardo S. Rosa; Guillermo Goyenola; Érica Pellegrini Caramaschi; J. M. Díaz de Astarloa; L. M. Sarmento-Soares; João Paes Vieira; A. M. Garcia; F. Teixeira de Mello; F. A. G. de Melo; Mariana Meerhoff; J. L. Attayde; R. F. Menezes; Néstor Mazzeo; F. Di Dario

The relationships between fish composition, connectivity and morphometry of 103 lagoons in nine freshwater ecoregions (FEOW) between 2·83° S and 37·64° S were evaluated in order to detect possible congruence between the gradient of species richness and similarities of assemblage composition. Most lagoons included in the study were <2 km(2) , with a maximum of 3975 km(2) in surface area. Combined surface area of all lagoons included in the study was 5411 km(2) . Number of species varied locally from one to 76. A multiple regression revealed that latitude, attributes of morphometry and connectivity, and sampling effort explained a large amount of variability in species richness. Lagoon area was a good predictor of species richness except in low latitude ecoregions, where lagoons are typically small-sized and not affected by marine immigrants, and where non-native fish species accounted for a significant portion of species richness. Relationships between species and area in small-sized lagoons (<2 km(2) ) is highly similar to the expected number in each ecoregion, with systems located between 18·27° S and 30·15° S attaining higher levels of species richness. Similarities in species composition within the primary, secondary and peripheral or marine divisions revealed strong continental biogeographic patterns only for species less tolerant or intolerant to salinity. Further support for the FEOW scheme in the eastern border of South America is therefore provided, and now includes ecotonal systems inhabited simultaneously by freshwater and marine species of fishes.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2014

Body size and allometric shape variation in the molly Poecilia vivipara along a gradient of salinity and predation

Márcio S. Araújo; S. Ivan Perez; Maria Julia C Magazoni; Ana Cristina Petry

BackgroundPhenotypic diversity among populations may result from divergent natural selection acting directly on traits or via correlated responses to changes in other traits. One of the most frequent patterns of correlated response is the proportional change in the dimensions of anatomical traits associated with changes in growth or absolute size, known as allometry. Livebearing fishes subject to predation gradients have been shown to repeatedly evolve larger caudal peduncles and smaller cranial regions under high predation regimes. Poecilia vivipara is a livebearing fish commonly found in coastal lagoons in the north of the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Similar to what is observed in other predation gradients, lagoons inhabited by P. vivipara vary in the presence of piscivorous fishes; contrary to other poeciliid systems, populations of P. vivipara vary greatly in body size, which opens the possibility of strong allometric effects on shape variation. Here we investigated body shape diversification among six populations of P. vivipara along a predation gradient and its relationship with allometric trajectories within and among populations.ResultsWe found substantial body size variation and correlated shape changes among populations. Multivariate regression analysis showed that size variation among populations accounted for 66% of shape variation in females and 38% in males, suggesting that size is the most important dimension underlying shape variation among populations of P. vivipara in this system. Changes in the relative sizes of the caudal peduncle and cranial regions were only partly in line with predictions from divergent natural selection associated with predation regime.ConclusionsOur results suggest the possibility that adaptive shape variation among populations has been partly constrained by allometry in P. vivipara. Processes governing body size changes are therefore important in the diversification of this species. We conclude that in species characterized by substantial among-population differences in body size, ignoring allometric effects when investigating divergent natural selection’s role in phenotypic diversification might not be warranted.


Neotropical Ichthyology | 2013

Effects of the interannual variations in the flood pulse mediated by hypoxia tolerance: the case of the fish assemblages in the upper Paraná River floodplain

Ana Cristina Petry; Fabiane Abujanra; Luiz Carlos Gomes; Horácio F. Júlio; Angelo Antonio Agostinho

The effects of the duration of the floods on abiotic variables and attributes of species tolerant and intolerant to hypoxia (STH and SIH respectively) were evaluated in rivers and lakes of the upper Parana River. Fish were sampled once a year, in six sampling stations, during the high water period from 2000 to 2003. There were overall reductions in dissolved oxygen levels and increases in transparency of water in lakes in years of moderate floods. The duration of floods influenced species differentially based on their tolerance to hypoxia: in moderate floods, richness of STH increased and numerical abundance and biomass of SIH reduced significantly. Opposite relationships were detected between dissolved oxygen and the attributes of STH and SIH. Dissolved oxygen was the best predictor of variability of STH and SIH in years of moderate floods, whereas water transparency predicted significant amounts of STH in years of short floods. Being positively affected by dissolved oxygen reductions, STH seem to take advantages in persisting in seasonally harsh lentic habitats. The incorporation of abiotic data as well the differential tolerance of species to hypoxia would improve further investigations of the effects of interannual variations in the flood pulse on tropical fish assemblages


Acta Limnologica Brasiliensia | 2013

Zooplankton resting egg banks in permanent and temporary tropical aquatic systems

Luciana Rabelo Araújo; Paloma Marinho Lopes; Jayme Magalhães Santangelo; Ana Cristina Petry; Reinaldo Luiz Bozelli

AIM: We evaluated zooplankton resting egg banks and active communities in five coastal lagoons and in five temporary pools, aiming to compare the active and the dormant communities in such environments. As they differ in hydroperiod, we expected that pools present richer resting egg banks in comparison to those found in lagoons. METHODS: Zooplankton community was sampled twice in 2006 (lagoons) and in 2010 (pools) and resting egg banks were sampled once in December 2007 (lagoons) and in May 2010 (pools). Resting eggs were isolated from the sediment by applying the sugar flotation method. RESULTS: In opposition to our expectation, species richness in the resting egg banks of pools did not differ from those of lagoons. Additionally, no difference was found between the active and the dormant zooplankton communities in each water body for both temporary and permanent environments. However, similarity between active and dormant communities was greater in permanent environments than it was in temporary environments. CONCLUSIONS: It seems that the diapause strategy observed in certain tropical zooplankton populations cannot be predicted based on the awareness of the environment type (permanent or temporary), since hatching cues may be species-specific.


Hydrobiologia | 2018

Abundance of invasive peacock bass increases with water residence time of reservoirs in southeastern Brazil

Ana Clara Sampaio Franco; Luciano Neves dos Santos; Ana Cristina Petry; Emili García-Berthou

Neotropical freshwater ecosystems are experiencing a great expansion in the number of invasive species, which is especially alarming since this region harbours 30% of the world’s fish biodiversity with high levels of endemism. We aimed to evaluate the main predictors of peacock basses (Cichla spp.) abundance outside their native range, which are the Amazon and Tocantins-Araguaia river basins. We used multivariate ordination techniques and multimodel inference to analyse peacock basses abundance in twelve reservoirs of the Paraíba do Sul river basin, southeastern Brazil. Interestingly, reservoirs at higher (southernmost) latitudes, located in more populated areas, had higher water temperature and lower turbidity, due to increased water residence time, and these three variables were also positively correlated with abundance of this warm-water invasive fish. Habitat structure was less important in explaining peacock basses abundance, which was not significantly related to biotic factors (fish species richness and time since peacock basses introduction). We hypothesize that the observed effects of reservoir management on limnological features and peacock bass abundance, particularly water residence time (as a mediator of temperature and turbidity), may apply to other Neotropical basins and could influence the impact of this invader.

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Angelo Antonio Agostinho

Universidade Estadual de Maringá

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Paula Araújo Catelani

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Fabio Di Dario

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Luiz Carlos Gomes

Universidade Estadual de Maringá

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Michael Maia Mincarone

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Érica Pellegrini Caramaschi

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Arthur de Barros Bauer

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Ellen Martins Camara

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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F. Di Dario

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Alexandre de Azevedo

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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