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Dive into the research topics where Bárbara B. Moura is active.

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Featured researches published by Bárbara B. Moura.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2014

Response of Brazilian native trees to acute ozone dose

Bárbara B. Moura; Silvia Ribeiro de Souza; Edenise Segala Alves

Ozone (O3) is a toxic secondary pollutant able to cause an intense oxidative stress that induces visual symptoms on sensitive plant species. Controlled fumigation experiment was conducted with the aim to verify the O3 sensibility of three tropical species: Piptadenia gonoachanta (Mart.) Macbr. (Fabaceae), Astronium graveolens Jacq. (Anacardiaceae), and Croton floribundus Spreng. (Euphorbiaceae). The microscopical features involved in the oxidative stress were recognized based on specific histochemical analysis. The three species showed visual symptoms, characterized as necrosis and stippling between the veins, mostly visible on the adaxial leaf surface. All the studied species presented hypersensitive-like response (HR-like), and peroxide hydrogen accumulation (H2O2) followed by cell death and proanthocyanidin oxidation in P. gonoachanta and A. graveolens. In P. gonoachanta, a decrease in chlorophyll autofluorescence occurred on symptomatic tissues, and in A. graveolens and C. floribundus, a polyphenol compound accumulation occurred. The responses of Brazilian native species were similar to those described for sensitive species from temperate climate, and microscopical markers may be useful for the detection of ozone symptoms in future studies in the field.


Physiologia Plantarum | 2017

S‐nitrosoglutathione spraying improves stomatal conductance, Rubisco activity and antioxidant defense in both leaves and roots of sugarcane plants under water deficit

Neidiquele M. Silveira; Fernanda Castro Correia Marcos; Lucas Frungillo; Bárbara B. Moura; Amedea B. Seabra; Ione Salgado; Eduardo Caruso Machado; John T. Hancock; Rafael Vasconcelos Ribeiro

Water deficit is a major environmental constraint on crop productivity and performance and nitric oxide (NO) is an important signaling molecule associated with many biochemical and physiological processes in plants under stressful conditions. This study aims to test the hypothesis that leaf spraying of S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO), an NO donor, improves the antioxidant defense in both roots and leaves of sugarcane plants under water deficit, with positive consequences for photosynthesis. In addition, the roles of key photosynthetic enzymes ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) in maintaining CO2 assimilation of GSNO-sprayed plants under water deficit were evaluated. Sugarcane plants were sprayed with water or GSNO 100 μM and subjected to water deficit, by adding polyethylene glycol (PEG-8000) to the nutrient solution. Sugarcane plants supplied with GSNO presented increases in the activity of antioxidant enzymes such as superoxide dismutase in leaves and catalase in roots, indicating higher antioxidant capacity under water deficit. Such adjustments induced by GSNO were sufficient to prevent oxidative damage in both organs and were associated with better leaf water status. As a consequence, GSNO spraying alleviated the negative impact of water deficit on stomatal conductance and photosynthetic rates, with plants also showing increases in Rubisco activity under water deficit.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2016

Tillandsia usneoides: a successful alternative for biomonitoring changes in air quality due to a new highway in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Poliana Cardoso-Gustavson; Francine Faia Fernandes; Edenise Segala Alves; Mariana Pereira Victorio; Bárbara B. Moura; Marisa Domingos; Caroline Albuquerque Rodrigues; Andreza Portella Ribeiro; Catarina Carvalho Nievola; Ana Maria Graciano Figueiredo

Tillandsia usneoides is an aerial epiphytic bromeliad that absorbs water and nutrients directly from the atmosphere by scales covering its surface. We expanded the use of this species as a broader biomonitor based on chemical and structural markers to detect changes in air quality. The usefulness of such comprehensive approach was tested during the construction and opening of a highway (SP-21) in São Paulo State, Brazil. The biomonitoring study was performed from 2009 to 2012, thus comprising the period during construction and after the highway inauguration. Metal accumulation and structural alterations were assessed, in addition to microscopy analyses to understand the metal chelation in plant tissues and to assess the causes of alterations in the number and shape of scale cells. Altogether, our analyses support the use of this species as a wide biomonitor of air quality in urbanized areas.


Environmental Pollution | 2015

Searching for native tree species and respective potential biomarkers for future assessment of pollution effects on the highly diverse Atlantic Forest in SE-Brazil

Marisa Domingos; Patricia Bulbovas; Carla Z.S. Camargo; Cristiane Aguiar-Silva; Solange E. Brandão; Marcelle Dafré-Martinelli; Ana Paula L. Dias; Marcela Regina Gonçalves da Silva Engela; Janayne Gagliano; Bárbara B. Moura; Edenise Segala Alves; Mirian C.S. Rinaldi; Eduardo P.C. Gomes; Cláudia M. Furlan; Ana Maria Graciano Figueiredo


Environmental Pollution | 2014

Ozone phytotoxic potential with regard to fragments of the Atlantic Semi-deciduous Forest downwind of Sao Paulo, Brazil

Bárbara B. Moura; Edenise Segala Alves; Silvia Ribeiro de Souza; Marisa Domingos; Pierre Vollenweider


Environmental Pollution | 2011

The efficiency of tobacco Bel-W3 and native species for ozone biomonitoring in subtropical climate, as revealed by histo-cytochemical techniques

Edenise Segala Alves; Bárbara B. Moura; Andrea Nunes Vaz Pedroso; Fernanda Tresmondi; Marisa Domingos


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2018

Ozone risk assessment in three oak species as affected by soil water availability

Yasutomo Hoshika; Bárbara B. Moura; Elena Paoletti


Environmental Pollution | 2014

Climatic factors influence leaf structure and thereby affect the ozone sensitivity of Ipomoea nil ‘Scarlet O'Hara’

Bárbara B. Moura; Edenise Segala Alves


Environmental Pollution | 2016

Ozone stomatal flux and O3 concentration-based metrics for Astronium graveolens Jacq., a Brazilian native forest tree species.

Jéssica C. Cassimiro; Bárbara B. Moura; R. Alonso; Sérgio Tadeu Meirelles; Regina M. Moraes


Atmospheric Environment | 2018

Exposure- and flux-based assessment of ozone risk to sugarcane plants

Bárbara B. Moura; Yasutomo Hoshika; Rafael Vasconcelos Ribeiro; Elena Paoletti

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Elena Paoletti

National Research Council

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A. G. Balliana

Federal University of Paraná

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Amedea B. Seabra

Universidade Federal do ABC

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