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Dive into the research topics where Filipe M. Porteiro is active.

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Featured researches published by Filipe M. Porteiro.


Seafloor Geomorphology as Benthic Habitat#R##N#GeoHAB Atlas of Seafloor Geomorphic Features and Benthic Habitats | 2012

Mapping Condor Seamount Seafloor Environment and Associated Biological Assemblages (Azores, NE Atlantic)

Fernando Tempera; Eva Giacomello; Neil C. Mitchell; Aldino S. Campos; Andreia Braga Henriques; Igor Bashmachnikov; Ana Martins; Ana Mendonça; Telmo Morato; Ana Colaço; Filipe M. Porteiro; Diana Catarino; João T. Gonçalves; Mário Rui Pinho; Eduardo Isidro; Ricardo S. Santos; Gui Menezes

Publisher Summary Seamounts are among the most common topographic features in the world ocean. Depending on their particular morphological traits, they can also be referred to as banks, knolls, guyots, mounds, or hills. Condor seamount is a linear volcano located in the Azores (northeast Atlantic), 35 km in length, 2–6 km wide, and of varied seafloor morphology. A scientific observatory devoted to research on seamount ecosystem structure and functioning has been established on Condor, secured by a temporary fishing closure. Multiple projects have contributed to this observatory by targeting the seamount with snapshots and long-term deployments of moored, satellite-based, and shipborne technologies. This chapter presents a brief characterization of the seamounts seafloor environment by focusing on the multibeam bathymetry data and a series of video, oceanographic, and fishery surveys. A classification based upon the bathymetric position index is presented to characterize the landscape composition of the seamount. Habitats of conservation importance, such as coral gardens and deep-sea sponge aggregations, are documented. A qualitative zonation of the benthic assemblages based on the video surveys is presented along with dominant fish and crustacean catch data for comparable depth strata. Understanding how deep-sea habitat-building species like corals and sponges distribute at fine scales over the complex topography of individual seamounts is therefore critical information to design usage zonation schemes.


Zoologica Scripta | 2011

The use of the DNA barcode gene 16S mRNA for the clarification of taxonomic problems within the family Sertulariidae (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa)

Carlos J. Moura; Marina R. Cunha; Filipe M. Porteiro; Alex D. Rogers

Moura, C. J., Cunha, M. R., Porteiro, F. M. & Rogers, A. D. (2011). The use of the DNA barcode gene 16S mRNA for the clarification of taxonomic problems within the family Sertulariidae (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa). —Zoologica Scripta, 40, 520–537.


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 1999

RNA concentration and the RNA to protein ratio in cephalopod tissues: sources of variation and relationship with growth rate

Graham J. Pierce; L.N. Key; Peter Boyle; K.J. Siegert; J.M. Gonçalves; Filipe M. Porteiro; Helen R. Martins

Abstract RNA and protein concentrations, and the RNA to protein ratio, were measured in four species of cephalopods, to evaluate sources of variation and the potential for using RNA concentration and the RNA to protein ratio as growth indices. In field samples of Loligo forbesi and Eledone cirrhosa , RNA concentrations and the RNA to protein ratio were higher in immature animals than in mature animals. In Loligo forbesi , values were also higher in males than in females and higher in smaller individuals than in large individuals. Both these trends are consistent with expected differences in growth rate, i.e. RNA is higher in faster growing animals. Mature female Eledone cirrhosa , a species in which the female is larger and presumably grows faster, had higher RNA concentrations than mature males. However, no such difference between the sexes was seen for immature E. cirrhosa or Todarodes sagittatus . Methods for transport and maintenance of Loligo forbesi in captivity in the Azores are described. Many of the captive squid showed poor growth and survival but results from these animals nevertheless confirmed that RNA concentrations were higher in males than in females and higher in animals with smaller gonads than in animals with large gonads. Higher protein concentrations were found in males than in females, and protein concentration was also positively correlated with feeding rate and digestive gland indices. Octopus vulgaris held in captivity grew rapidly and consistently and RNA concentrations were lower in bigger animals than in smaller animals. Neither experiment provided direct support for the hypothesis that RNA concentration or the RNA to protein ratio is directly related to growth rate. Systematic variation in protein concentration, e.g. in relation to recent feeding, leads us to suggest that protein concentration (mg/g fresh body weight) is likely to provide a more reliable index than the RNA to protein ratio.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2001

Mercury concentrations in invertebrates from Mid-Atlantic Ridge hydrothermal vent fields

Inês Martins; Valentina Costa; Filipe M. Porteiro; Alexandra Cravo; Ricardo S. Santos

Mercury determinations were carried out in mussels ( Bathymodiolus azoricus ) from three Mid-Atlantic Ridge hydrothermal vents (Lucky Strike, Menez Gwen and Rainbow) and shrimps ( Rimicaris exoculata and Mirocaris fortunata ) from Rainbow. Among the three hydrothermal vents, mussels of Menez Gwen show the highest levels of total Hg and comparing mussels and shrimps from Rainbow the former show more Hg than shrimps. Mussels from different hydrothermal vents are exposed to different kinds of environment which may result in distinct bioaccumulation processes. Detoxification processes in shrimps are related to the low concentrations found. When compared with coastal species from unpolluted sites, mussels show higher concentrations of total Hg and shrimps lower levels. The methyl-mercury concentrations found were very low, not exceeding the detection limit of the technique.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 1990

Some observations on the behaviour of adult squids, Loligo forbesi, in captivity

Filipe M. Porteiro; Helen R. Martins; Roger T. Hanlon

Thirty-four adult individuals of Loligo forbesi (males and females with dorsal mantle lengths from 27–77 cm) were observed in captivity in a 3 m diameter closed sea-water system on Faial Island, Azores. Squids were caught by jigging and were fed with horse mackerel (Trachurus picturatus) and chub mackerel (Scomber japonicus), either alive or dead. The maximum survival was 73 days. Feeding behaviour was dependent upon both the size of prey and its state of preservation;e.g. the squid would eat the head of small fish ( about 35 cm) or a fish poorly preserved. Seventeen chromatic, 9 postural and 6 movement components of body patterns were observed and described. Conspecific interactions considered to be aggression and dominance were observed among males; no such interactions occurred when one male and two females were kept together. Body patterns in relation to relaxation, stress, shock, feeding, locomotion and aggression are also described.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Deep-water longline fishing has reduced impact on Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems

Christopher K. Pham; Hugo Diogo; Gui Menezes; Filipe M. Porteiro; Andreia Braga-Henriques; Frederic Vandeperre; Telmo Morato

Bottom trawl fishing threatens deep-sea ecosystems, modifying the seafloor morphology and its physical properties, with dramatic consequences on benthic communities. Therefore, the future of deep-sea fishing relies on alternative techniques that maintain the health of deep-sea ecosystems and tolerate appropriate human uses of the marine environment. In this study, we demonstrate that deep-sea bottom longline fishing has little impact on vulnerable marine ecosystems, reducing bycatch of cold-water corals and limiting additional damage to benthic communities. We found that slow-growing vulnerable species are still common in areas subject to more than 20 years of longlining activity and estimate that one deep-sea bottom trawl will have a similar impact to 296–1,719 longlines, depending on the morphological complexity of the impacted species. Given the pronounced differences in the magnitude of disturbances coupled with its selectivity and low fuel consumption, we suggest that regulated deep-sea longlining can be an alternative to deep-sea bottom trawling.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2013

New and rare coastal fishes in the Azores islands: occasional events or tropicalization process?

Pedro Afonso; Filipe M. Porteiro; Jorge Fontes; Fernando Tempera; Telmo Morato; Frederico Cardigos; Ricardo S. Santos

Seven coastal fish species are newly reported for the remote north Atlantic archipelago of the Azores: Mediterranean sand eel Gymnammodytes cicerelus, bar jack Caranx ruber, two-banded seabream Diplodus vulgaris, bastard grunt Pomadasys incisus, unicorn leatherjacket filefish Aluterus scriptus and longspined porcupinefish Diodon holacanthus. The occurrence is also confirmed for 19 species that had been hitherto cited occasionally for the region, totalling a list of two elasmobranchs and 23 teleosts. Diplodus vulgaris, which appears to have recently colonized the islands, as well as roughtail stingray Dasyatis centroura and golden grey mullet Liza aurata, re-cited based on new records, are frequent or common coastal species in the Azores. The remaining 22 species, exceptional or rare in the region, are of tropical or subtropical affinity and find their northernmost distribution limit within the central and north-east Atlantic Ocean precisely in the Azores. This biogeographical pattern contrasts with that of the Azorean coastal fish community and suggests a tropicalization process in the region in line with previous findings of similar patterns across the north-east Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. These novel data from the most isolated archipelago of the North Atlantic Ocean, located in a biogeographic boundary area where colonization opportunities are reduced, reinforce the need for long-term monitoring programmes of coastal fish communities and, in particular, of indicator species groups to improve understanding of the effects of climate change on marine communities.


Fisheries Research | 1994

Biology of Loligo forbesi Steenstrup, 1856 (Mollusca: Cephalopoda) in the Azores: sample composition and maturation of squid caught by jigging

Filipe M. Porteiro; Helen R. Martins

Abstract In the period from November 1990 to March 1992, 1820 squid of the species Loligo forbesi Steenstrup, 1856, from the Azores fishery, were sampled. Males comprised 58.9%, ranging from 240 to 937 mm in dorsal mantle length ( ML ) (mean 590 mm) and 41.1% were females, ranging from 200 to 462 ML (mean 359 mm). Eighty-one percent of the males were sexually mature (mean ML 620.5 mm) and 87.4% of the females (mean ML 365 mm). Three maturity indices for females and for males were applied. Both sexes showed highest maturity values in winter and spring, lowest in autumn, but mature squid were found in all monthly samples. Recruitment into the fishery was higher during autumn.


Marine Biodiversity | 2012

Carrying behavior in the deep-sea crab Paromola cuvieri (Northeast Atlantic)

Andreia Braga-Henriques; Marina Carreiro-Silva; Fernando Tempera; Filipe M. Porteiro; Kirsten Jakobsen; Joachim Jakobsen; Mónica Albuquerque; Ricardo S. Santos

Observations of deep-sea homolids are becoming more common, but good-resolution imagery of these crabs in the natural environment is still scarce. Sixteen new in situ observations of Paromola cuvieri from various locations within the central and eastern groups of the Azores Archipelago (Northeast Atlantic) are described here based on video footage collected by two submersible vehicles. Crabs were found on coral gardens and deep-sea sponge aggregations, which are priority habitats of conservation importance under OSPARCOM. Diverse sessile megafauna were recorded (>59 taxa), including sponges, hydroids, corals, brachiopods, crinoids and oysters. Overall, 75% of the crabs were carrying live specimens of sessile invertebrates, mainly sponges and cold-water corals. Object selection shows to be a more complex process than previously thought, in which factors such as morphology, size and weight of objects and also palatability seem to be more important in the process of object selection than their availability.


Zoologica Scripta | 2012

Evolution of Nemertesia hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa, Plumulariidae) from the shallow and deep waters of the NE Atlantic and western Mediterranean

Carlos J. Moura; Marina R. Cunha; Filipe M. Porteiro; Chris Yesson; Alex D. Rogers

Moura, C. J., Cunha, M. R., Porteiro, F. M., Yesson, C. & Rogers, A. D. (2011) Evolution of Nemertesia hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa, Plumulariidae) from the shallow and deep waters of the NE Atlantic and Western Mediterranean. —Zoologica Scripta, 41, 79–96.

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Tracey Sutton

Nova Southeastern University

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Gui Menezes

University of the Azores

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Telmo Morato

University of the Azores

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