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Dive into the research topics where Diogo Carvalho is active.

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Featured researches published by Diogo Carvalho.


Bird Study | 2014

Differential mortality of birds killed at wind farms in Northern Portugal

Francisco Morinha; Paulo Travassos; F. Seixas; Ana Martins; Rita Bastos; Diogo Carvalho; Paula Magalhães; Mário Santos; Estela Bastos; João Alexandre Cabral

Capsule The Skylark Alauda arvensis had the highest overall mortality in ten Northern Portuguese wind farms surveyed between 2006 and 2011. Analysis from the integration of conventional and molecular techniques suggest a sex and age biased mortality affecting mainly adult males (90.9%), which may be related to their characteristic breeding male song-flights making them highly vulnerable to collision with wind turbines. The results highlight the added value of more complete population impact assessments that go beyond simple carcass identification at wind farms.


Landscape Ecology | 2016

Integrating land cover structure and functioning to predict biodiversity patterns: a hierarchical modelling framework designed for ecosystem management

Rita Bastos; Antonio T. Monteiro; Diogo Carvalho; Carla Gomes; Paulo Travassos; João Honrado; Mário Santos; João Alexandre Cabral

ContextLand-use/land-cover (LU/LC) dynamics is one of the main drivers of global environmental change. In the last years, aerial and satellite imagery have been increasingly used to monitor the spatial extent of changes in LU/LC, deriving relevant biophysical parameters (i.e. primary productivity, climate and habitat structure) that have clear implications in determining spatial and temporal patterns of biodiversity, landscape composition and ecosystem services.ObjectivesAn innovative hierarchical modelling framework was developed in order to address the influence of nested attributes of LU/LC on community-based ecological indicators.MethodsFounded in the principles of the spatially explicit stochastic dynamic methodology (StDM), the proposed methodological advances are supported by the added value of integrating bottom-up interactions between multi-scaled drivers.ResultsThe dynamics of biophysical multi-attributes of fine-scale subsystem properties are incorporated to inform dynamic patterns at upper hierarchical levels. Since the most relevant trends associated with LU/LC changes are explicitly modelled within the StDM framework, the ecological indicators’ response can be predicted under different social-economic scenarios and site-specific management actions. A demonstrative application is described to illustrate the framework methodological steps, supporting the theoretic principles previously presented.ConclusionsWe outline the proposed multi-model framework as a promising tool to integrate relevant biophysical information to support ecosystem management and decision-making.


Molecular Ecology | 2017

Extreme genetic structure in a social bird species despite high dispersal capacity

Francisco Morinha; José A. Dávila; Estela Bastos; João Alexandre Cabral; Óscar Frías; José L. González; Paulo Travassos; Diogo Carvalho; Borja Milá; Guillermo Blanco

Social barriers have been shown to reduce gene flow and contribute to genetic structure among populations in species with high cognitive capacity and complex societies, such as cetaceans, apes and humans. In birds, high dispersal capacity is thought to prevent population divergence unless major geographical or habitat barriers induce isolation patterns by dispersal, colonization or adaptation limitation. We report that Iberian populations of the red‐billed chough, a social, gregarious corvid with high dispersal capacity, show a striking degree of genetic structure composed of at least 15 distinct genetic units. Monitoring of marked individuals over 30 years revealed that long‐distance movements over hundreds of kilometres are common, yet recruitment into breeding populations is infrequent and highly philopatric. Genetic differentiation is weakly related to geographical distance, and habitat types used are overall qualitatively similar among regions and regularly shared by individuals of different populations, so that genetic structure is unlikely to be due solely to isolation by distance or isolation by adaptation. Moreover, most population nuclei showed relatively high levels of genetic diversity, suggesting a limited role for genetic drift in significantly differentiating populations. We propose that social mechanisms may underlie this unprecedented level of genetic structure in birds through a pattern of isolation by social barriers not yet described, which may have driven this remarkable population divergence in the absence of geographical and environmental barriers.


Mitochondrial DNA | 2014

Next-generation sequencing and comparative analysis of Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax and Pyrrhocorax graculus (Passeriformes: Corvidae) mitochondrial genomes

Francisco Morinha; Carla Clemente; João Alexandre Cabral; Magdalena Lewicka; Paulo Travassos; Diogo Carvalho; José A. Dávila; Mário Santos; Guillermo Blanco; Estela Bastos

Abstract The complete mitochondrial genomes of Red-billed Chough (Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax) and Yellow-billed Chough (Pyrrhocorax graculus) were sequenced using the Ion Torrent PGM platform. These mitogenomes contain 16,889 bp (Red-billed Chough) and 16,905 bp (Yellow-billed Chough), including 13 protein-coding genes (PCGs), two ribosomal RNA (rRNA) genes, 22 transfer RNA (tRNA) genes, and a control region (D-loop). The gene content, orientation, and structure are similar to a wide range of other vertebrate species and the nucleotide composition is very similar to other Passeriformes. All PCGs start with ATG, except for COX1 that starts with GTG, and four stop codons and one incomplete stop codon are used (TAA, TAG, AGG, AGA, and T-). The size of PCGs is the same in both mitogenomes, except for ND6 that has one codon less in the Yellow-billed Chough. All the tRNAs can fold into a typical cloverleaf secondary structure. These mitogenomic data can be of great value in complementing forthcoming approaches on molecular ecology, comparative and functional genomics.


Ecological Modelling | 2013

How do hydrological and climatic conditions influence the diversity and behavioural trends of water birds in small Mediterranean reservoirs? A community-level modelling approach

Diogo Carvalho; Pedro Horta; Helena Raposeira; Mário Santos; António Luís; João Alexandre Cabral


Journal of Molluscan Studies | 2014

DNA sampling from body swabs of terrestrial slugs (Gastropoda: Pulmonata): a simple and non-invasive method for molecular genetics approaches

Francisco Morinha; Paulo Travassos; Diogo Carvalho; Paula Magalhães; João Alexandre Cabral; Estela Bastos


Ecological Indicators | 2017

A spatial explicit agent based model approach to evaluate the performance of different monitoring options for mortality estimates in the scope of onshore windfarm impact assessments

Mário Santos; Rita Bastos; Daniel Ferreira; Andreia Santos; Paulo Barros; Paulo Travassos; Diogo Carvalho; Carla Gomes; Hélia Vale-Gonçalves; Luís Braz; Francisco Morinha; Maria das Neves Paiva-Cardoso; Samantha Jane Hughes; João Alexandre Cabral


Biological Conservation | 2017

A spatially-explicit dynamic modelling framework to assess habitat suitability for endangered species: The case of Red-billed Chough under land use change scenarios in Portugal

Francisco Morinha; Rita Bastos; Diogo Carvalho; Paulo Travassos; Mário Santos; Guillermo Blanco; Estela Bastos; João Alexandre Cabral


Ecological Indicators | 2018

How good are the ecological assumptions and predictions made in the past? Insights from a dynamic modelling approach applied to changing landscapes

Mário Santos; Sara Silva; Rita Bastos; Diogo Carvalho; João Alexandre Cabral


Anais do V Congresso Brasileiro de Eletromiografia e Cinesiologia e X Simp�sio de Engenharia Biom�dica | 2018

HARDWARE E SOFTWARE PARA APLICAO EM CADEIRA DE AFERIO DA FORA ISOMTRICA

S. P. da Silva; Mouhamed Zorkot; Diogo Carvalho; Crisanta Rocha; A. C. Lima Neto

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Mário Santos

University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro

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Paulo Travassos

University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro

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Francisco Morinha

University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro

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Rita Bastos

University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro

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Estela Bastos

University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro

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Carla Gomes

Universidade Católica de Brasília

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Hélia Vale-Gonçalves

University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro

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Paulo Barros

University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro

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Guillermo Blanco

Spanish National Research Council

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