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Dive into the research topics where Colin Robert Beasley is active.

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Featured researches published by Colin Robert Beasley.


Genetics and Molecular Biology | 2010

Molecular identification, phylogeny and geographic distribution of Brazilian mangrove oysters (Crassostrea)

Aline Grasielle Costa de Melo; Eduardo Sousa Varela; Colin Robert Beasley; Horacio Schneider; Iracilda Sampaio; Patrick M. Gaffney; Kimberly S. Reece; Claudia Helena Tagliaro

Oysters (Ostreidae) manifest a high degree of phenotypic plasticity, whereby morphology is of limited value for species identification and taxonomy. By using molecular data, the aim was to genetically characterize the species of Crassostrea occurring along the Brazilian coast, and phylogenetically relate these to other Crassostrea from different parts of the world. Sequencing of the partial cytochrome oxidase c subunit I gene (COI), revealed a total of three species of Crassostrea at 16 locations along the Brazilian coast. C. gasar was found from Curuçá (Pará state) to Santos (São Paulo state), and C. rhizophorae from Fortim (Ceará state) to Florianópolis (Santa Catarina state), although small individuals of the latter species were also found at Ajuruteua beach (municipality of Bragança, Pará state). An unidentified Crassostrea species was found only on Canela Island, Bragança. Crassostrea gasar and C. rhizophorae grouped with C. virginica, thereby forming a monophyletic Atlantic group, whereas Crassostrea sp. from Canela Island was shown to be more similar to Indo-Pacific oysters, and either arrived in the Atlantic Ocean before the convergence of the Isthmus of Panama or was accidentally brought to Brazil by ship.


Acta Amazonica | 2003

The occurrence of the Asian Clam Corbicula fluminea in the lowe amazon basin

Colin Robert Beasley; Claudia Helena Tagliaro; Wilsea Batista Figueiredo

This paper records for the first time the presence of Corbicula fluminea (Philipi, 1844) in the Brazilian Amazon Basin. This exotic bivalve was found in localities on the Amazonas, Para and Tocantins rivers. Density and population size structure were measured in some localities. Mean density is between 6.66 and 7.3 individuals m-2. Population size structure and the dates of the first records suggest that the introductions may have occurred between 1997 and 1998. The introductions may have been mediated by ocean-going vessels visiting the ports of Manaus and Belem. The potential impact of the invasion on native freshwater bivalves is discussed along with the need for monitoring and prevention of further introductions of non-indigenous bivalves in Brazil.


Iheringia Serie Zoologia | 2008

Seasonal abundance of the shipworm Neoteredo reynei (Bivalvia, Teredinidae) in mangrove driftwood from a northern Brazilian beach

Carlos Santos Filho; Claudia Helena Tagliaro; Colin Robert Beasley

Shipworms are important decomposers of wood, especially in mangrove forests where productivity is high. However, little emphasis has been given to the activity of shipworms in relation to the export of nutrients from mangroves to adjacent coastal areas. As a first step to obtaining such information, the frequency of colonized mangrove driftwood as well as shipworm density and length were studied by collecting washed up logs during a year at Ajuruteua beach, state of Para, northern Brazil. A single species, Neoteredo reynei (Bartsch, 1920), was found colonizing driftwood. Although large colonized logs were most common on the beach, shipworm density was higher in small logs, especially during the dry season. In general, however, density was higher during the wet season (January to April) and lowest in July. Overall shipworm mean length was 9.66cm. In large logs, mean length increased between the wet and dry seasons. However, there was no difference in length among log size categories. Mean shipworm length was similar throughout most of the year but tended to be greater in July. Although salinity varied between 10.9 and 40 during the year, no relationship was found between salinity and density or length. The results suggest that shipworm activity in driftwood logs is relatively constant throughout the year. Increased air humidity and rainfall may promote survival during the wet season. Large logs may take longer to colonize and thus have lower densities than small ones which are scarce probably because they are destroyed rapidly by shipworm activity. However, data on the disintegration of logs would be necessary to test this hypothesis. Larger size of shipworms in the dry season may be related to growth after an earlier recruitment period. Shipworms in large logs during the dry season may be better protected from dessication and high temperatures by the insulating properties of the larger volume of wood.


Genetics and Molecular Biology | 2005

Taxonomic implications of molecular studies on Northern Brazilian Teredinidae (Mollusca: Bivalvia) specimens

Sonia Maria Lima Santos; Claudia Helena Tagliaro; Colin Robert Beasley; Horacio Schneider; Iracilda Sampaio; Carlos Santos Filho; Ana Cláudia de Paula Müller

The current taxonomy of the Teredinidae (shipworms) is wholly based on morphology and up to now no molecular studies of the phylogeny of this group have been published. In the present study the relationships between four genera of the subfamilies Teredininae and Bankiinae were established and the efficiency of the 16S rRNA gene in characterizing four Teredinidae species was tested. Phylogenetic trees support the grouping of Bankia fimbriatula with Nausitora fusticula and of Neoteredo reynei with Psiloteredo healdi, but the genetic distances do not justify the classification of these species into two distinct subfamilies. The results show that B. fimbriatula, N. reynei and P. healdi specimens from the coast of the Brazilian state of Para have five distinct 16S rRNA haplotypes, with one N. reynei haplotype differing from the other haplotypes in respect to at least seven sequences sites, indicating the existence of two very distinct sympatric lineages.


Wetlands Ecology and Management | 2011

Benthic macroinfaunal assemblages associated with Amazonian saltmarshes

Cesar França Braga; Viviane Ferreira Monteiro; José Souto Rosa-Filho; Colin Robert Beasley

The composition and abundance of the poorly known benthic macroinfauna associated with northern Brazilian saltmarshes, were described from eight sites (between 0°42′2.5″S, 47°52′44.1″W and 0°50′17.3″S, 46°36′13.3″W) along the Pará coast, Brazil. Sampling was carried out in November of 2007. Univariate and multivariate analyses were used to test for differences in sediment, vegetation and macroinfaunal variables among sites. No vertical zonation of the macroinfauna was detected. Macroinfaunal structure differed greatly among sites with different sediment and vegetation characteristics. Number of individuals and taxa were low in sites with sandy sediments and short, sparse vegetation and high in those with silty sediments with high organic matter and water contents, and tall, dense vegetation. Increasing number of individuals and taxa were associated with a geographical gradient in pore water salinity, which increases from west to east, coinciding with patterns of rainfall described for the Pará coast.


Genetics and Molecular Biology | 2009

Significant genetic differentiation among populations of Anomalocardia brasiliana (Gmelin, 1791): a bivalve with planktonic larval dispersion

Cinthya Cristina Bulhões Arruda; Colin Robert Beasley; Marcelo Vallinoto; Nelane do Socorro Marques-Silva; Claudia Helena Tagliaro

Four Brazilian populations of Anomalocardia brasiliana were tested for mutual genetic homogeneity, using data from 123 sequences of the mtDNA cytochrome oxidase c subunit I gene. A total of 36 haplotypes were identified, those shared being H3 (Canela Island, Prainha and Acupe) and both H5 and H9 (Prainha and Acupe). Haplotype diversity values were high, except for the Camurupim population, whereas nucleotide values were low in all the populations, except for that of Acupe. Only the Prainha population showed a deviation from neutrality and the SSD test did not reject the demographic expansion hypothesis. Fst values showed that the Prainha and Acupe populations represent a single stock, whereas in both the Canela Island and Camurupim stocks, population structures are different and independent. The observed structure at Canela Island may be due to the geographic distance between this population and the remainder. The Camurupim population does not share any haplotype with the remaining populations in northeastern Brazil. The apparent isolation could be due to the rocky barrier located facing the mouth of the Mamanguape River. The results highlight the importance of wide-scale studies to identify and conserve local genetic diversity, especially where migration is restricted.


Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology | 2009

Effects of plant cover on the macrofauna of Spartina marshes in northern Brazil

Cesar França Braga; Colin Robert Beasley; Victoria Isaac

Dados sobre a densidade e diversidade da macrofauna em relacao a altura e densidade de Spartina brasiliensis foram obtidos em bancos de marismas em um estuario tropical no norte do Brasil. A amostragem foi realizada quatro vezes durante um ano, nas estacoes chuvosa, seca e nos periodos de transicao entre estas. A amostragem foi realizada em marismas de tres classes de tamanho: pequeno, medio e grande. As variaveis foram analisadas em relacao as estacoes do ano e das classes de tamanho das marismas. Um total de 46 taxons foram encontrados, com os poliquetos, isopodos e o gastropodo Neritina virginea dominando a fauna, resultados similares a estudos realizados em marismas no sul do Brasil. A densidade e a diversidade da macrofauna foram correlacionadas positivamente com a densidade de colmos da vegetacao, indicando um possivel papel da vegetacao em protecao contra predacao. Todas as tres variaveis foram maiores durante os periodos transicionais entre as estacoes chuvosa e seca e mudancas sazonais em precipitacao, salinidade e disponibilidade de luz possam influenciar mortalidade, disponibilidade de alimento e assentamento da macrofauna. Nao houve um efeito de tamanho da marisma sobre a macrofauna ou a vegetacao. O efeito beneficial da vegetacao sobre a macrofauna e apoiado por outros estudos de marismas brasileiras.


Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2016

Genetic relationships among freshwater mussel species from fifteen Amazonian rivers and inferences on the evolution of the Hyriidae (Mollusca: Bivalvia: Unionida).

Guilherme da Cruz Santos-Neto; Colin Robert Beasley; Horacio Schneider; Daniel Mansur Pimpão; Walter R. Hoeh; Luiz Ricardo Lopes de Simone; Claudia Helena Tagliaro

The current phylogenetic framework for the South American Hyriidae is solely based on morphological data. However, freshwater bivalve morphology is highly variable due to both genetic and environmental factors. The present study used both mitochondrial (COI and 16S) and nuclear (18S-ITS1) sequences in molecular phylogenetic analyses of nine Neotropical species of Hyriidae, collected from 15 South American rivers, and sequences of hyriids from Australia and New Zealand obtained from GenBank. The present molecular findings support traditional taxonomic proposals, based on morphology, for the South American subfamily Hyriinae, currently divided in three tribes: Hyriini, Castaliini and Rhipidodontini. Phylogenetic trees based on COI nucleotide sequences revealed at least four geographical groups of Castalia ambigua: northeast Amazon (Piriá, Tocantins and Caeté rivers), central Amazon, including C. quadrata (Amazon and Aripuanã rivers), north (Trombetas river), and C. ambigua from Peru. Genetic distances suggest that some specimens may be cryptic species. Among the Hyriini, a total evidence data set generated phylogenetic trees indicating that Paxyodon syrmatophorus and Prisodon obliquus are more closely related, followed by Triplodon corrugatus. The molecular clock, based on COI, agreed with the fossil record of Neotropical hyriids. The ancestor of both Australasian and Neotropical Hyriidae is estimated to have lived around 225million years ago.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2014

Spatial and temporal variation in the abundance and taxonomic composition of estuarine and terrestrial macrofauna associated with mangrove logs

Jennifer T.M. Andrade; Natália Barros Palhano; Claudia Helena Tagliaro; Colin Robert Beasley

jennifer t.m. andrade, nata’ lia barros palhano, claudia helena tagliaro and colin robert beasley Laboratorio de Moluscos, Instituto de Estudos Costeiros, Universidade Federal do Para, Alameda Leandro Ribeiro, s/n, Bairro Aldeia, Braganca 68.600-000, Para, Brazil, Laboratorio de Conservacao e Biologia Evolutiva, Instituto de Estudos Costeiros, Universidade Federal do Para, Alameda Leandro Ribeiro, s/n, Bairro Aldeia, Braganca 68.600-000, Para, Brazil


Acta Amazonica | 2009

Características sedimentares fluviais associadas ao grau de reservação da mata Ciliar - Rio Urumajó, Nordeste Paraense

Roney Nonato Reis de Brito; Nils Edvin Asp; Colin Robert Beasley; Helane Súzia Silva dos Santos

Rivers are the main ways of sediment transport from inland to the coastal zone and oceans. Despite direct influence of climate, the vegetation coverage plays a central role in liquid and solid fluvial discharge. In this context, the present work aimed to study the fluvial sedimentology of the Urumajo River (Para, Brazil) in relation to the preservation state of riparian vegetation. Sediment samples were collected at five sites (A to E), including a five-sample transversal profile at each site. The sites were distributed from the source to the estuarine area. The characteristics and preservation state of the riparian vegetation were analyzed at each site as well. The collected sediments were submitted to grain size analysis, where mean grain size, median, asymmetry, selection and kurtosis were obtained. The results made it possible to recognize the regular characteristics (sites A and C), which included median sand as the main sediment class and well-sorted and approximate symmetric grain size distribution, directly related to the well-preserved riparian vegetation at sites A and C. On the other hand, sites B, D and E showed substantial differences in relation to the regular pattern. This fact could be associated to the vegetation degradation at those sites, resulting in margin erosion. Furthermore, at site E, reflexes of tide influence on the sediment characteristics could be observed, subsidizing the estuary delimitation.

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Horacio Schneider

Federal University of Pará

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Cleidson Paiva Gomes

Federal University of Maranhão

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Iracilda Sampaio

Federal University of Pará

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