Cláudia Inês da Silva
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Cláudia Inês da Silva.
Apidologie | 2013
Patrícia Nunes-Silva; Michael Hrncir; Cláudia Inês da Silva; Yara Sbrolin Roldão; Vera Lucia Imperatriz-Fonseca
Detailed studies of the behavior of pollinators allow insights into pollination mechanisms and may indicate which pollinators are more efficient for a particular plant species. Our aim was to evaluate if Melipona fasciculata is an efficient pollinator of eggplant (Solanum melongena L., Solanaceae) in greenhouses. We analyzed (1) the colony foraging pattern of M. fasciculata in greenhouses, (2) the behavior of bees during the visits to flowers, and (3) fruit set and fruit quality after different pollination treatments (hand pollination: autogamy, geitonogamy, xenogamy; bee pollination). Our results show that M. fasciculata is an efficient pollinator of eggplants and, consequently, may be a viable alternative to bumblebees in Brazil.
Apidologie | 2015
Camila Maia-Silva; Michael Hrncir; Cláudia Inês da Silva; Vera Lucia Imperatriz-Fonseca
Unpredictable environments are a challenge to highly eusocial bees because unreliable food availability, owing mainly to seasonally unpredictable precipitation rates, renders the maintenance of permanent colonies difficult. Here, we investigated the strategy of the stingless bee Melipona subnitida to cope with elevated temperatures and extended, irregular periods of drought in the Brazilian tropical dry forest. We found a high association between colony behaviour (pollen foraging and brood production) and environmental parameters (abiotic factors and availability of pollen sources), suggesting that colonies tightly adjust their activities to the respective environmental conditions. This minimises unnecessary costs related to foraging and brood rearing when forage availability is low. Additionally, M. subnitida selectively foraged at the most lucrative pollen-sources (mass-flowering trees, plants with poricidal flowers), which indicates that the colonies maximise their food intake as soon as resources are available.
Acta Botanica Brasilica | 2012
Cláudia Inês da Silva; Glein Monteiro de Araújo; Paulo Eugênio Oliveira
Several factors can influence the distribution of floral resources and pollination systems in ecosystems, such as climate, altitude, geographic region, fragmentation of natural areas and differences in floristic composition along the vertical stratification. This study aimed to evaluate the distribution of the vertical stratification of biotic pollination systems in cerrado (sensu stricto) fragments in the Triângulo Mineiro. There was no significant difference (χ20.05,9=14.17; P = 0.12) in total plant species richness among fragments, nor in the species richness of each layer (trees, shrubs, herbs and lianas) and the shrub layer was the best represented. Likewise, there was no significant difference between fragments for the systems of pollination (χ20.05,21 =13.80; P = 0.8778). Pollination by bees was the most common, corresponding to 85% of species in each fragment. In relative terms, plants pollinated by bees were dominant in all strata, reaching 100% for the lianas in fragments 1, 3 and 4 and for the herbs in fragments 1 and 4. In this study, based on floristic composition and distribution of biotic pollination systems in the vertical stratification, we could define a vertical mosaic in the cerrado studied, which has implications for the sustainability of communities in the cerrado, as well as the horizontal mosaic of vegetation types.
Apidologie | 2017
Kátia Paula Aleixo; Cristiano Menezes; Vera Lúcia Imperatriz Fonseca; Cláudia Inês da Silva
The foraging success of a bee species is related to a combination of climatic factors and resource availability. Here, we analyzed how food storage by the stingless bee Scaptotrigona aff. depilis relates to the seasonal variation in floral resources availability in a tropical environment with two well-defined seasons. We found a positive relationship between the amount of food stored and resource availability, suggesting that colonies intensify food collection in the season with higher food availability (rainy season). This ensures the perennial state of stingless bee colonies during the dry season (food scarcity and lower ambient temperatures). Bees collected pollen from at least 60 plant species, but food pots were dominated by just nine plants. Additionally, S. aff depilis attempted to unevenly use the plant species for food storage in the rainy season, which indicates that the colonies maximize their food intake as soon as resources are available.
Rodriguésia | 2016
Isabel Alves-dos-Santos; Cláudia Inês da Silva; Mardiore Pinheiro; Astrid de Matos Peixoto Kleinert
Os visitantes florais sao animais que buscam, nas flores, recursos para si ou para sua prole. As vezes uma mesma planta pode receber um espectro grande de visitantes, como e o caso de especies cujas flores oferecem muito nectar. Porem, nem todo visitante floral realiza a polinizacao. Para ser um polinizador efetivo e necessario cumprir alguns requisitos, como: contato com a antera e o estigma, frequencia de visita suficiente, fidelidade floral e a realizacao de uma rota adequada de visitacao. Em muitos trabalhos sobre a estrutura de comunidades e, principalmente, sobre a rede trofica (ex. animal-planta), os autores adotam o termo polinizador para todo e qualquer visitante floral, categorizando-os com o mesmo papel e funcao para a planta. Neste trabalho, relatamos casos de visitantes florais que sao polinizadores legitimos e efetivos, dos quais a planta depende de seu servico para producao de frutos e sementes, distinguindo-os daqueles visitantes que nao efetuam a polinizacao, ou nao se tem certeza que o facam. Assim, espera-se ilustrar as diferencas, dando a devida importância e o peso correto para os muitos visitantes. Utilizamos abelhas como modelo, mas a ideia pode ser extrapolada para qualquer outro grupo de polinizador.
Journal of Insect Behavior | 2017
William de Oliveira Sabino; Cláudia Inês da Silva; Isabel Alves-dos-Santos
We describe the mating behaviour of males of Centris (Paracentris) burgdorfi, a solitary, univoltine bee, with a wide distribution in Brazil. We also describe the unusual sleeping sites of males and females. The study was performed during two breeding seasons, in northeastern Brazil, where the species nests in aggregations in petrified dunes. Data on mating behaviour were collected through direct observations of the bees at the nesting-emergence site. Males compete intensely for virgin females in the morning, sometimes killing rivals. The high competition for females near the nesting site makes that the male has to take the female to another place to get genital contact. In the evening, males do not use plants to spend the night, instead they aggregate in sleeping clusters inside old burrows in the nesting-emergence area while females sleep in groups on plants that provide the floral oil used in nest construction.
Arthropod-plant Interactions | 2017
Cláudia Inês da Silva; Carolina Mayumi Hirotsu; Alípio José de Suza Pacheco Filho; Elisa Pereira Queiroz; Carlos A. Garófalo
Spatiotemporal variation in the availability of food resources may be a determining factor for reproductive success and maintenance of bees, but the extent of these variations is poorly understood. For management and conservation of bees, the first step is to know the behavior and the food resources used. Currently, urban areas are considered refuge zones for bees, and understanding the availability of floral resources and the influence on reproductive processes is very important for management of bees. We used the protocols applied in phenological studies with bees and plant species to evaluate both throughout the year in an urbanized area. At the same time, we used palynology protocols to analyze the pollen material collected from brood cells (food and feces) of immature Centris analis. These protocols allowed to evaluate the availability of floral resources in the studied area and the plant species effectively used by C. analis females to feed immature larvae during the reproductive period. The maximum reproductive period of C. analis was not associated with the highest floral resources availability. However, there was a strong selectivity of pollen in flowers of Malpighia emarginata (Malpighiaceae), which represented more than 59% of all the pollen grains provisioned throughout the year. This means that in the case of more specialized bees like C. analis, the availability of the preferred plants is more important than the overall floral resource availability in the area. Thus, to keep C. analis in the city, it is necessary to maintain or introduce Malpighiaceae species in the urban planning. On the other hand, at least 27% of the plant species found in the study area are pollinated by C. analis, emphasizing the importance of preserving this bee.
Brittonia | 2011
Carla Poleselli Bruniera; Cláudia Inês da Silva; Milton Groppo
A new species of Almeidea (Rutaceae) belonging to the neotropical tribe Galipeeae (subtribe Galipeinae) is described and illustrated. This new species, Almeidea albiflora, is known so far only from a few collections made in small disturbed forest remnants in the vicinity of Cachoeiro de Itapemirim, in the state of Espírito Santo, and by a single collection from northern Rio de Janeiro state, both in the domain of the Atlantic Forest, Eastern Brazil. Diagnostic features, like white petals, sericeous ovary and distal secondary axes as long as the proximal ones are identified. Pollen morphology is also described, and brief discussions of the relationships of the new taxon to other species of Almeidea, as well as comments on its conservation status, are provided.
Frontiers in Plant Science | 2018
Cristiane Krug; Guaraci Duran Cordeiro; Irmgard Schäffler; Cláudia Inês da Silva; Reisla Oliveira; Clemens Schlindwein; Stefan Dötterl; Isabel Alves-dos-Santos
Floral scent is an important component of the trait repertoire of flowering plants, which is used to attract and manipulate pollinators. Despite advances during the last decades about the chemicals released by flowers, there is still a large gap in our understanding of chemical communication between flowering plants and their pollinators. We analyzed floral scents of guarana (Paullinia cupana, Sapindaceae), an economically important plant of the Amazon, using chemical analytical approaches, and determined the attractiveness of the scent to its nocturnal bee pollinators using behavioral assays in the field. Pollen loads of attracted bees were also analyzed. Inflorescences of guarana emit strong scents, both during day and at night, with some semi-quantitative differences between day- and night-time scents. Synthetic scent mixtures containing some of the identified floral scent components, including the most abundant ones, i.e., linalool and (E)-β-ocimene, successfully attracted the nocturnal Megalopta bee pollinators. Pollen analyses revealed that many of the attracted bees had pollen grains from previous visits to guarana flowers on their bodies. Overall, our data show that guarana flowers attract nocturnal bee visitors by their strong scents and suggest that the chemical communication between this plant and its pollinators is a key component in crop production of this economically important plant species.
Applied Vegetation Science | 2018
Paula María Montoya-Pfeiffer; Ricardo Ribeiro Rodrigues; Jean Paul Metzger; Cláudia Inês da Silva; Oswaldo Santos Baquero; Isabel Alves dos Santos
QUESTIONS: Do the assemblages of pollination modes in restored (tree plantings) and secondary (naturally regenerated) forests change in comparison to primary forests, and how do these assemblages relate to species turnover at regional scale? LOCATION: Southeast region of Brazil. METHODS: We classified tree species found in a total of 40 forest sites (18 primary, 11 restored, 11 secondary) according to pollination mode, based on the literature. We calculated and compared functional dissimilarity distances, amounts of species and accumulated abundance of pollination modes, and functional indices of richness and evenness between forest types. RESULTS: Functional dissimilarity distances were much smaller than species dissimilarity distances within forest types (mean 80%, respectively), indicating a small variation in pollination modes between sites. Functional indices of richness and evenness did not differ between forest types. However, significant changes were found in the species and abundance proportions of several pollination modes. Primary forests were characterized by the predominance of generalized insect‐pollinated species, followed by secondary proportions of bee, wind and moth pollination; other pollination modes were underrepresented. In restored forests, reductions were found in generalized insect, moth, wind, fly, pollen‐consuming insect and very‐small insect pollination, whereas the species pollinated by bees and bats more than doubled. Smaller changes were found among secondary forests, including reductions in moth, fly and fig‐wasp pollination, whereas there were incremental changes in bee, beetle, big animal and small insect pollination. CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate a rather stable assemblage of pollination modes and also high ecological redundancy among trees regardless of the species replacement at the regional scale. Major changes among restored forests are probably in response to larger disturbance effects and/or restoration practices conducted in these sites. In contrast, smaller changes among secondary forests could be in response to smaller disturbance effects and natural selection processes, and also seem to suggest that highly resilient degraded areas are more likely to recuperate their functional diversity through natural regeneration alone. In both cases, however, efforts to recover such patterns should be encouraged to avoid possible negative effects in plant–pollinator interactions.