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Dive into the research topics where Carlos Alberto de Moura Barboza is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlos Alberto de Moura Barboza.


PeerJ | 2017

Storm effects on intertidal invertebrates: increased beta diversity of few individuals and species

Guilherme Nascimento Corte; Thomas A. Schlacher; Helio H. Checon; Carlos Alberto de Moura Barboza; Eduardo Siegle; Ross A. Coleman; Antonia Cecília Zacagnini Amaral

Climate change is predicted to lead to more extreme weather events, including changes to storm frequency, intensity and location. Yet the ecological responses to storms are incompletely understood for sandy shorelines, the globe’s longest land-ocean interface. Here we document how storms of different magnitude impacted the invertebrate assemblages on a tidal flat in Brazil. We specifically tested the relationships between wave energy and spatial heterogeneity, both for habitat properties (habitat heterogeneity) and fauna (β-diversity), predicting that larger storms redistribute sediments and hence lead to spatially less variable faunal assemblages. The sediment matrix tended to become less heterogeneous across the flat after high-energy wave events, whereas β-diversity increased after storms. This higher β-diversity was primarily driven by species losses. Significantly fewer species at a significantly lower density occurred within days to weeks after storms. Negative density and biomass responses to storm events were most prominent in crustaceans. Invertebrate assemblages appeared to recover within a short time (weeks to months) after storms, highlighting that most species typical of sedimentary shorelines are, to some degree, resilient to short-term changes in wave energy. Given that storm frequency and intensity are predicted to change in the coming decades, identifying properties that determine resilience and recovery of ecosystems constitute a research priority for sedimentary shorelines and beyond.


From Pole to Pole | 2013

Environmental Processes, Biodiversity and Changes in Admiralty Bay, King George Island, Antarctica

Lúcia S. Campos; Carlos Alberto de Moura Barboza; Manuela Bassoi; Marcelo Bernardes; Sandra Bromberg; Thais Navajas Corbisier; Roberto Fioravanti Carelli Fontes; Paula Foltran Gheller; Eduardo Hajdu; Helena G. Kawall; Priscila Kienteca Lange; Andre Monnerat Lanna; Helena Passeri Lavrado; Gabriel C. S. Monteiro; Rosalinda Carmela Montone; Tatiana Morales; R Moura; Cristina R. Nakayama; Thayane Oackes; Rodolfo Paranhos; Flávio Dias Passos; Mônica Angélica Varella Petti; Vivian H. Pellizari; Carlos Eduardo Rezende; Mariane Rodrigues; Luiz H. Rosa; Eduardo R. Secchi; Denise Rivera Tenenbaum; Yocie Yoneshigue-Valentin

The isolation of Antarctica from South America during the Oligocene (~35 mya) formed the Southern Ocean, generated the northward flow of the Atlantic Antarctic Bottom Water, and numerous unique geological and oceanic processes (e.g. an active spreading centre in the Bransfield Strait, ridge trench collision, gas hydrates on modern sediments, and complex circulation) along the northern end of the Antarctic Peninsula in particular (Barker and Burrell 1982; Pearse et al. 2001; Barker and Thomas 2004; Thomson 2004; Turner et al. 2009).


Environmental Pollution | 2017

Heavy metal contamination in sandy beach macrofauna communities from the Rio de Janeiro coast, Southeastern Brazil

Tatiana M.B. Cabrini; Carlos Alberto de Moura Barboza; Viviane Skinner; Rachel A. Hauser-Davis; Rafael Christian Chávez Rocha; Tatiana D. Saint'Pierre; Jean Louis Valentin; Ricardo S. Cardoso

We evaluated concentrations of eight heavy metals Cr, Zn, Pb, Ni, Cu, Cd, Co and V, in tissues of representative macrofauna species from 68 sandy beaches from the coast of Rio de Janeiro state. The links between contamination levels and community descriptors such as diversity, evenness, density and biomass, were also investigated. Metal concentrations from macrofaunal tissues were compared to maximum permissible limits for human ingestion stipulated by the Brazilian regulatory agency (ANVISA). Generalized linear models (GLMs) were used to investigate the variability in macrofauna density, richness, eveness and biomass in the seven different regions. A non-metric multidimensional scaling analysis (n-MDS) was used to investigate the spatial pattern of heavy metal concentrations along the seven regions of Rio de Janeiro coast. Variation partitioning was applied to evaluate the variance in the community assemblage explained by the environmental variables and the heavy metal concentrations. Our data suggested high spatial variation in the concentration of heavy metals in macrofauna species from the beaches of Rio de Janeiro. This result highlighted a diffuse source of contamination along the coast. Most of the metals concentrations were under the limits established by ANVISA. The variability in community descriptors was related to morphodynamic variables, but not with metal contamination values, indicating the lack of direct relationships at the community level. Concentration levels of eight heavy metals in macrofauna species from 68 sandy beaches on Rio de Janeiro coast (Brazil) were spatially correlated with anthropogenic activities such as industrialization and urbanization.


Marine Biodiversity Records | 2015

Brittle stars from the Saint Peter and Saint Paul Archipelago: morphological and molecular data

Carlos Alberto de Moura Barboza; Gustavo Mattos; Paulo Cesar Paiva

Morphological and molecular data on brittle stars from the Saint Peter and Saint Paul Archipelago, a very small isolated group of islets situated between South America and Africa, are hereby presented. We found no endemic ophiuroids. Instead, the five species, Amphipholis squamata , Ophiactis lymani, Ophiactis savignyi, Ophiocomella ophiactoides and Ophiothrix ( Ophiothrix ) angulata , are either cosmopolitan or derived from the equatorial western Atlantic region. Results indicated a western Atlantic colonization and highlighted the existence of cryptic species in the genus Ophiactis .


Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2018

Investigating heavy metal bioaccumulation by macrofauna species from different feeding guilds from sandy beaches in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Tatiana M.B. Cabrini; Carlos Alberto de Moura Barboza; Viviane Skinner; Rachel Ann Hauser-Davis; Rafael Christian Chávez Rocha; Tatiana D. Saint'Pierre; Jean Louis Valentin; Ricardo S. Cardoso

The relationship between metal accumulation and feeding behavior of macrofauna species is a key concept to understand the bioavailability of different metals in the marine environment. We examined and compared the concentrations of eight heavy metals (Cr, Zn, Pb, Ni, Cu, Cd, Co and V) in different feeding guilds of macrofauna species, from a data set including 68 sandy beaches along the Rio de Janeiro coast. For this purpose, macrofauna species were classified in five feeding guild categories: carnivorous, herbivorous, detritivorous, suspensivorous and filter feeders. The coast of Rio de Janeiro was divided into seven regions according to environmental characteristics and historical human activities. For each region, generalized linear models were adjusted to test for differences between feeding guild abundances. Redundancy Analysis was performed to explore the relationship among the feeding guilds composition and the environmental variables. We found high variability in abundance and composition among feeding guilds, linked with environmental heterogeneity. In general, carnivorous species showed a higher heavy metal concentrations compared to other trophic guilds evaluated. However, bioaccumulation across the feeding guild was not the rule and patterns varied across regions. Our hypothesis is that variations are probably related to the different magnitudes of metal contamination along the coast as also in to the trophic structure found in each beach. This data highlighted the crucial role of the relationship between variability of environmental drivers and bioaccumulation in macrofauna species in sandy beaches ecosystem.


Oecologia Australis | 2011

ECHINODERMS AS CLUES TO ANTARCTIC ~ SOUTH AMERICAN CONNECTIVITY

Carlos Alberto de Moura Barboza; R Moura; Andre Monnerat Lanna; Thayane Oackes; Lúcia S. Campos


Global Ecology and Biogeography | 2017

Aggregate patterns of macrofaunal diversity: An interocean comparison

Omar Defeo; Carlos Alberto de Moura Barboza; Francisco R. Barboza; William H. Aeberhard; Tatiana M.B. Cabrini; Ricardo S. Cardoso; Leonardo Ortega; Viviane Skinner; Boris Worm


Ecological Indicators | 2017

Long-term decline of brown algal assemblages from southern Brazil under the influence of a nuclear power plant

Maria Teresa Menezes de Széchy; Victor de Souza Koutsoukos; Carlos Alberto de Moura Barboza


Comunidades Demersais e Bioconstrutores#R##N#Caracterização Ambiental Regional Da Bacia de Campos, Atlântico Sudoeste | 2017

Biota de fundos carbonáticos da plataforma continental da Bacia de Campos: algas calcárias e fauna associada

Maria Patricia Curbelo-Fernandez; Ivan Daniel Della Giustina; Livia de Laia Loiola; Renata Carolina Mikosz Arantes; R Moura; Carlos Alberto de Moura Barboza; Frederico Silva Nunes; Frederico Tapajós de Souza Tâmega; Maria Carolina Henriques; Marcia Abreu de Oliveira Figueiredo; Ana Paula da Costa Falcão; Sergio Rosso


INCT-APA Annual Activity Report | 2013

Species Composition and Spatial Distribution of Echinoderms in the Shallow Coast of Admiralty Bay, King George Island, Antarctica

Andre Monnerat Lanna; Carlos Alberto de Moura Barboza; R Moura; Helena Passeri Lavrado; Adriana Galindo Dalto; Lúcia S. Campos

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R Moura

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Lúcia S. Campos

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Andre Monnerat Lanna

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Ricardo S. Cardoso

Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro

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Tatiana M.B. Cabrini

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Viviane Skinner

Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro

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Helena Passeri Lavrado

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Jean Louis Valentin

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Rafael Christian Chávez Rocha

Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro

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Tatiana D. Saint'Pierre

Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro

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