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Dive into the research topics where C. S. Mateus is active.

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Featured researches published by C. S. Mateus.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Investigating population structure of Sea Lamprey (Petromyzon marinus, L.) in Western Iberian Peninsula using morphological characters and heart fatty acid signature analyses.

Maria João Lança; María José Machado; C. S. Mateus; Marta C. Lourenço; Ana Filipa Ferreira; Bernardo R. Quintella; P. R. Almeida

This study hypothesizes the existence of three groups of sea lamprey Petromyzon marinus L. in Portugal (North/Central group, Tagus group, and Guadiana group), possibly promoted by seabed topography isolation during the oceanic phase of the life cycle. Within this context, our purpose was to analyze the existence of a stock structure on sea lamprey populations sampled in the major Portuguese river basins using both morphological characters and heart tissue fatty acid signature. In both cases, the multiple discriminant analysis revealed statistically significant differences among groups, and the overall corrected classification rate estimated from cross-validation procedure was particularly high for the cardiac muscle fatty acid profiles (i.e. 83.8%). Morphometric characters were much more useful than meristic ones to discriminate stocks, and the most important variables for group differentiation were eye length, second dorsal fin length and branchial length. Fatty acid analysis showed that all lampreys from the southern Guadiana group were correctly classified and not mixing with individuals from any other group, reflecting a typical heart fatty acid signature. Our results revealed that 89.5% and 72.2% of the individuals from the Tagus and North/Central groups, respectively, were also correctly classified, despite some degree of overlap between individuals from these groups. The fatty acids that contributed to the observed segregation were C16:0; C17:0; C18:1ω9; C20:3ω6 and C22:2ω6. Detected differences are probably related with environmental variables to which lampreys may have been exposed, which leaded to different patterns of gene expression. These results suggest the existence of three different sea lamprey stocks in Portugal, with implication in terms of management and conservation.


PLOS ONE | 2016

European Lampreys: New Insights on Postglacial Colonization, Gene Flow and Speciation

C. S. Mateus; P. R. Almeida; Natacha Mesquita; Bernardo R. Quintella; Maria Judite Alves

Ice ages are known to be the most dominant palaeoclimatic feature occurring on Earth, producing severe climatic oscillations and consequently shaping the distribution and the population structure of several species. Lampreys constitute excellent models to study the colonization of freshwater systems, as they commonly appear in pairs of closely related species of anadromous versus freshwater resident adults, thus having the ability to colonize new habitats, through the anadromous species, and establish freshwater resident derivates. We used 10 microsatellite loci to investigate the spatial structure, patterns of gene flow and migration routes of Lampetra populations in Europe. We sampled 11 populations including the migratory L. fluviatilis and four resident species, L. planeri, L. alavariensis, L. auremensis and L. lusitanica, the last three endemic to the Iberian Peninsula. In this southern glacial refugium almost all sampled populations represent a distinct genetic cluster, showing high levels of allopatric differentiation, reflecting long periods of isolation. As result of their more recent common ancestor, populations from northern Europe are less divergent among them, they are represented by fewer genetic clusters, and there is evidence of strong recent gene flow among populations. These previously glaciated areas from northern Europe may have been colonized from lampreys expanding out of the Iberian refugia. The pair L. fluviatilis/L. planeri is apparently at different stages of speciation in different locations, showing evidences of high reproductive isolation in the southern refugium, and low differentiation in the north.


Endangered Species Research | 2012

Lampreys of the Iberian Peninsula: distribution, population status and conservation

C. S. Mateus; Rolando Rodríguez-Muñoz; Bernardo R. Quintella; M. Judite Alves; P. R. Almeida


Journal of Fish Biology | 2008

The critical swimming speed of Iberian barbel Barbus bocagei in relation to size and sex

C. S. Mateus; Bernardo R. Quintella; P. R. Almeida


Conservation Genetics | 2011

MtDNA markers reveal the existence of allopatric evolutionary lineages in the threatened lampreys Lampetra fluviatilis (L.) and Lampetra planeri (Bloch) in the Iberian glacial refugium

C. S. Mateus; P. R. Almeida; Bernardo R. Quintella; Maria Judite Alves


Current Biology | 2013

Strong genome-wide divergence between sympatric European river and brook lampreys

C. S. Mateus; Madlen Stange; Daniel Berner; Marius Roesti; Bernardo R. Quintella; M. Judite Alves; P. R. Almeida; Walter Salzburger


Ecological Engineering | 2013

Use of electromyogram telemetry to assess the behavior of the Iberian barbel (Luciobarbus bocagei Steindachner, 1864) in a pool-type fishway

Carlos M. Alexandre; Bernardo R. Quintella; Ana T. Silva; C. S. Mateus; Filipe Romão; Paulo José da Costa Branco; Maria Teresa Ferreira; P. R. Almeida


Journal of Applied Ichthyology | 2010

Critical swimming speed of yellow‐ and silver‐phase European eel (Anguilla anguilla, L.)

Bernardo R. Quintella; C. S. Mateus; José Lino Costa; Isabel Domingos; P. R. Almeida


Contributions to Zoology | 2013

Three new cryptic species of the lamprey genus Lampetra Bonnaterre, 1788 (Petromyzontiformes: Petromyzontidae) from the Iberian Peninsula

C. S. Mateus; Maria Judite Alves; Bernardo R. Quintella; P. R. Almeida


Ecohydrology | 2016

Effects of flow regulation on the movement patterns and habitat use of a potamodromous cyprinid species

C. Alexandre; P. R. Almeida; T. Neves; C. S. Mateus; José Lino Costa; Bernardo R. Quintella

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