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Dive into the research topics where Artur R. M. Serrano is active.

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Featured researches published by Artur R. M. Serrano.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2005

Ranking protected areas in the Azores using standardised sampling of soil epigean arthropods

Paulo A. V. Borges; Carlos Aguiar; João Amaral; Isabel R. Amorim; Genage André; Anabela Arraiol; Arturo Baz; Francisco Dinis; H. Enghoff; Clara Gaspar; Fernando A. Ilharco; V. Mahnert; Catarina Melo; Fernando E. A. P. Pereira; José A. Quartau; Sérvio P. Ribeiro; Jordi Ribes; Artur R. M. Serrano; António Sousa; R. Z. Strassen; Luís Vieira; Virgílio Vieira; Álvaro Vitorino; Joerg Wunderlich

Nineteen areas in seven of the nine Azorean islands were evaluated for species diversity and rarity based on soil epigean arthropods. Fifteen out of the 19 study areas are managed as Natural Forest Reserves and the remaining four were included due to their importance as indigenous forest cover. Four of the 19 areas are not included in the European Conservation network, NATURA 2000. Two sampling replicates were run per study area, and a total of 191 species were collected; 43 of those species (23%) are endemic to the archipelago and 12 have yet to be described. To produce an unbiased multiple-criteria index (importance value for conservation, IV-C) incorporating diversity and rarity based indices, an iterative partial multiple regression analysis was performed. In addition, an irreplaceability index and the complementarity method (using both optimisation and heuristic methods) were used for priority-reserves analyses. It was concluded that at least one well-managed reserve per island is absolutely necessary to have a good fraction of the endemic arthropods preserved. We found that for presence/absence data the suboptimal complementarity algorithm provides solutions as good as the optimal algorithm. For abundance data, optimal solutions indicate that most reserves are needed if we want that at least 50% of endemic arthropod populations are represented in a minimum set of reserves. Consistently, two of the four areas not included in the NATURA 2000 framework were considered of high priority, indicating that vascular plants and bird species used to determine NATURA 2000 sites are not good surrogates of arthropod diversity in the Azores. The most irreplaceable reserves are those located in older islands, which indicates that geological history plays an important role in explaining faunal diversity of arthropods in the Azores. Based both on the uniqueness of species composition and high species richness, conservation efforts should be focused on the unmanaged Pico Alto region in the archipelago’s oldest island, Santa Maria.


Ecological Entomology | 2007

Seasonality of spiders (Araneae) in Mediterranean ecosystems and its implications in the optimum sampling period

Pedro Cardoso; Israel de Faria e Silva; Nuno G. Oliveira; Artur R. M. Serrano

Abstract 1. Fields such as ecology, macroecology, and conservation biology rely on accurate and comparable data. This is especially important for mostly unknown and megadiverse taxa such as spiders and regions such as the Mediterranean. Short‐term sampling programmes are increasingly seen as the best option for sampling spiders. Comparability of results, however, demands standard procedures both in methodology and in sampling period. Cost‐efficiency dictates that this period should be the most species rich.


Molecular Ecology | 2009

Morphological and molecular variation in tiger beetles of the Cicindela hybrida complex: is an ‘integrative taxonomy’ possible?

A. Cardoso; Artur R. M. Serrano; Alfried P. Vogler

Current taxon assignments at the species level are frequently discordant with DNA‐based analyses. Recent studies on tiger beetles in the Cicindela hybrida complex identified discordance between mtDNA patterns and the entities currently defined by the taxonomic literature. To test the accuracy of morphologically delimited groups, five named taxa (species) from 24 representative sampling sites across Europe were scored for 41 external morphological characters. Three of the named taxa were ‘diagnosable’, that is, defined by between one and three characters unique to each group. Newly sequenced ITS1 and existing mitochondrial cox1 markers established 20 and 22 different haplotypes, respectively, but only cox1 produced (four) diagnosable units. Phylogenetic analysis and statistical parsimony networks showed poor congruence of character variation with the taxonomic entities (and each other). Variation in morphological characters was therefore tested directly for association with DNA‐based nesting groups at various hierarchical levels using permutational contingency analysis. Significant statistical associations of 11 (of 13 variable) morphological characters were observed with nesting groups from ITS1 and mitochondrial DNA markers, predominantly at the 4‐step level. The analysis demonstrates the need for formal tests of congruence with morphological variation at the level of individual characters, a step that is omitted from recent studies of ‘integrative taxonomy’. In addition, statistical correlation of particular morphological characters with DNA‐based nesting groups can identify the lowest hierarchical level at which various character sets show congruence, as a means to define evolutionarily separated entities supported by diverse data sources.


Journal of Neuroengineering and Rehabilitation | 2016

A systematic review of the characteristics and validity of monitoring technologies to assess Parkinson’s disease

Catarina Godinho; Josefa Domingos; Guilherme Cunha; Ana Santos; Ricardo M. Fernandes; Daisy Abreu; Nilza Gonçalves; Helen Matthews; Tom Isaacs; Joy Duffen; Ahmed Al-Jawad; Frank Larsen; Artur R. M. Serrano; Peter Weber; Andrea Thoms; Stefan Sollinger; Holm Graessner; Walter Maetzler; Joaquim J. Ferreira

BackgroundThere is growing interest in having objective assessment of health-related outcomes using technology-based devices that provide unbiased measurements which can be used in clinical practice and scientific research. Many studies have investigated the clinical manifestations of Parkinson’s disease using such devices. However, clinimetric properties and clinical validation vary among the different devices.MethodsGiven such heterogeneity, we sought to perform a systematic review in order to (i) list, (ii) compare and (iii) classify technological-based devices used to measure motor function in individuals with Parkinsons disease into three groups, namely wearable, non-wearable and hybrid devices. A systematic literature search of the PubMed database resulted in the inclusion of 168 studies. These studies were grouped based on the type of device used. For each device we reviewed availability, use, reliability, validity, and sensitivity to change. The devices were then classified as (i) ‘recommended’, (ii) ‘suggested’ or (iii) ‘listed’ based on the following criteria: (1) used in the assessment of Parkinson’s disease (yes/no), (2) used in published studies by people other than the developers (yes/no), and (3) successful clinimetric testing (yes/no).ResultsSeventy-three devices were identified, 22 were wearable, 38 were non-wearable, and 13 were hybrid devices. In accordance with our classification method, 9 devices were ‘recommended’, 34 devices were ‘suggested’, and 30 devices were classified as ‘listed’. Within the wearable devices group, the Mobility Lab sensors from Ambulatory Parkinson’s Disease Monitoring (APDM), Physilog®, StepWatch 3, TriTrac RT3 Triaxial accelerometer, McRoberts DynaPort, and Axivity (AX3) were classified as ‘recommended’. Within the non-wearable devices group, the Nintendo Wii Balance Board and GAITRite® gait analysis system were classified as ‘recommended’. Within the hybrid devices group only the Kinesia® system was classified as ‘recommended’.


International Journal of Speleology | 2011

The subterranean fauna of a biodiversity hotspot region - Portugal: an overview and its conservation

Ana Sofia P.S. Reboleira; Paulo A. V. Borges; Fernando Gonçalves; Artur R. M. Serrano; Pedro Oromí

INTRODUCTION Extensive biological studies have been made in the main karst areas around the world, namely in the eastern United States of America and in the region from the Pyrenees to Slovenia and the Dinaric karst (Culver et al., 2000; Culver & Pipan, 2009). Information about subterranean fauna in mainland Portugal is sparse and scattered along many publications mostly from the middle of the 20th century. The main thrust in the subterranean biology was given by the survey of caves made by Barros Machado during the 1940s, and by the prospection of well-dwelling crustaceans in the north of the country by researchers of the former Instituto de Zoologia “Dr. Augusto Nobre” from Porto University (Gama & Afonso, 1994). In addition, endogean habitats have been subject of considerable coleopterological


Ecological Entomology | 2010

Trophic level modulates carabid beetle responses to habitat and landscape structure : a pan-European study

Adam J. Vanbergen; Ben A. Woodcock; Matti Koivula; Jari Niemelä; D. Johan Kotze; Thomas Bolger; Valerie Golden; Florence Dubs; Guillaume Boulanger; José Serrano; José Luís Lencina; Artur R. M. Serrano; Carlos Aguiar; Anne-Catherine Grandchamp; Silvia Stofer; Gyözö Szél; Eva Ivits; Petra Adler; Jochum Markus; Allan D. Watt

1. Anthropogenic pressures have produced heterogeneous landscapes expected to influence diversity differently across trophic levels and spatial scales.


Journal of Insect Conservation | 2000

Ranking the Azorean Natural Forest Reserves for conservation using their endemic arthropods

Paulo A. V. Borges; Artur R. M. Serrano; José A. Quartau

Endemic arthropods were used to evaluate the conservation value of the 16 Natural Forest Reserves (NFRs) of the Azores (Macaronesia). For each of the 280 known Azorean endemic species of arthropods, a rarity index was calculated, using distribution and abundance data obtained from the literature. In addition, several scoring indices were used to rank the 16 NFRs. Frequency distributions of the rarity index indicated that there was a tendency for a greater proportion of the commonest species being represented in the NFRs in contrast with a lower representation of the rarest species. About 60% of the endemic arthropod species that were recorded from the NFRs are ‘single NFR endemics’, that is, are known from only one of the 16 NFRs. Species richness was considered to be a very good surrogate measure of the conservation value of the 16 NFRs under study. The fact that the six highest ranked NFRs (using a composite multi-criteria index) are located in different islands has some important conservation management implications; to preserve a large proportion of the Azorean arthropod biodiversity there is a need to protect sites in all islands. If the five highest ranked NFRs are correctly managed in terms of conservation, then at least 80% of the endemic arthropods known from the NFRs could be protected. Most of the tested taxa (Acari-Oribatei; Lepidoptera; Diptera; Coleoptera) are good surrogates of the overall total set of species present in the 16 NFRs when using a species richness index.


Forensic Science International | 2013

Coleoptera of forensic interest: A study of seasonal community composition and succession in Lisbon, Portugal

Catarina Prado e Castro; María Dolores Ayuso García; Pedro Martins da Silva; Israel de Faria e Silva; Artur R. M. Serrano

Some Coleoptera are recognised as being forensically important as post-mortem interval (PMI) indicators, especially in the later stages of cadaver decomposition. Because insect species and their timings of appearance in cadavers vary according to geographic location, it is important to know their succession patterns, as well as seasonality at a regional level. In this study, we aimed to contribute to broaden this knowledge by surveying beetle communities from the Lisbon area during the four seasons of the year, using piglet carcasses as animal models. Five stages were recognised during the decomposition process and they could be separated taking into account the occurrence and abundance of the specific groups of Coleoptera collected. Decay stages in general recorded higher abundance and richness of beetle species. A total of 82 species were identified, belonging to 28 families, in a total of 1968 adult Coleoptera collected. Autumn yielded the highest values of species abundance and richness, while the lowest values were recorded during winter. Staphylinidae was the most abundant family in all seasons, although in spring and summer Dermestidae was also quite dominant. In general, most species were related to the decay stages, particularly Margarinotus brunneus (Histeridae) and Creophilus maxillosus (Staphylinidae), and also Saprinus detersus (Histeridae) and Thanatophilus sinuatus (Silphidae), while only few were related to the dry stage, namely Oligota pusillima (Staphylinidae) and Dermestidae spp. larvae. On the other hand, Anotylus complanatus and Atheta pertyi (Staphylinidae) were apparently more associated with the fresh and bloated stages, respectively. The presence of some species was markedly seasonal, allowing a season characterisation based on the occurrence of certain taxa, which can be useful for forensic purposes.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2009

Cork-oak woodlands as key-habitats for biodiversity conservation in Mediterranean landscapes: a case study using rove and ground beetles (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae, Carabidae)

Pedro Martins da Silva; Carlos Aguiar; Jari Niemelä; José Paulo Sousa; Artur R. M. Serrano

Land-use intensification in Mediterranean agro-forest systems became a pressure on biodiversity, concerning particularly the woodland sensitive species. In 2001, the effects of a land-use gradient from old-growth cork-oak forest to a homogeneous agricultural area were assessed using rove beetles as indicators in a Mediterranean landscape. The aim was to find which species were negatively affected by land-use intensification at the landscape level and whether they benefited from cork-oak patches occurring along the land-use gradient. A total of 3,196 rove beetles from 88 taxa were sampled from all landscape types. Agricultural area recorded significantly higher numbers of abundance and species richness in relation to the cork-oak mosaics, i.e. the old-growth forest and the managed agro-forest landscapes (montados). Moreover, 70% of rove beetle indicator species common enough to be tested by IndVal displayed their highest indicator value for agriculture, showing a lower number of woodland indicators in comparison to ground beetles. Nevertheless, one rove beetle taxon was considered a specialist of closed woodland mosaics while no specialist ground beetle was found for that landscape typology. Some rare rove beetle species were also important in typifying diversity patterns of old-growth cork-oak forests. Hence, future management in Mediterranean landscapes should take into account not only indicator species common enough to be tested by IndVal, but also rare and endemic species. Considering the added value of cork-oak woodland cover for sensitive rove and ground beetle diversity, the strengthening of cork-oak woodland connectivity seems to be a crucial management that is required in agricultural Mediterranean landscapes.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Spatial Factors Play a Major Role as Determinants of Endemic Ground Beetle Beta Diversity of Madeira Island Laurisilva

Mário Boieiro; José Carvalho; Pedro Cardoso; Carlos Aguiar; Carla Rego; Israel de Faria e Silva; Isabel R. Amorim; Fernando E. A. P. Pereira; Eduardo Brito de Azevedo; Paulo A. V. Borges; Artur R. M. Serrano

The development in recent years of new beta diversity analytical approaches highlighted valuable information on the different processes structuring ecological communities. A crucial development for the understanding of beta diversity patterns was also its differentiation in two components: species turnover and richness differences. In this study, we evaluate beta diversity patterns of ground beetles from 26 sites in Madeira Island distributed throughout Laurisilva – a relict forest restricted to the Macaronesian archipelagos. We assess how the two components of ground beetle beta diversity (βrepl – species turnover and βrich - species richness differences) relate with differences in climate, geography, landscape composition matrix, woody plant species richness and soil characteristics and the relative importance of the effects of these variables at different spatial scales. We sampled 1025 specimens from 31 species, most of which are endemic to Madeira Island. A spatially explicit analysis was used to evaluate the contribution of pure environmental, pure spatial and environmental spatially structured effects on variation in ground beetle species richness and composition. Variation partitioning showed that 31.9% of species turnover (βrepl) and 40.7% of species richness variation (βrich) could be explained by the environmental and spatial variables. However, different environmental variables controlled the two types of beta diversity: βrepl was influenced by climate, disturbance and soil organic matter content whilst βrich was controlled by altitude and slope. Furthermore, spatial variables, represented through Moran’s eigenvector maps, played a significant role in explaining both βrepl and βrich, suggesting that both dispersal ability and Madeira Island complex orography are crucial for the understanding of beta diversity patterns in this group of beetles.

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Carla Rego

University of the Azores

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Sérvio P. Ribeiro

Universidade Federal de Ouro Preto

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