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Dive into the research topics where Gleissy Mary Amaral Dino Alves dos Santos is active.

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Featured researches published by Gleissy Mary Amaral Dino Alves dos Santos.


Science of The Total Environment | 2017

Spatial and temporal distribution of urban heat islands

Alexandre Rosa dos Santos; Felício Santos de Oliveira; Aderbal Gomes da Silva; José Marinaldo Gleriani; Wantuelfer Gonçalves; Giselle Lemos Moreira; Felipe Gimenes Silva; Elvis Ricardo Figueira Branco; Marks Melo Moura; Rosane Gomes da Silva; Ronie Silva Juvanhol; Kaíse Barbosa de Souza; Carlos Antonio Alvares Soares Ribeiro; Vagner Tebaldi de Queiroz; Adilson Vidal Costa; Alexandre Simões Lorenzon; Getulio Fonseca Domingues; Gustavo Eduardo Marcatti; Nero Lemos Martins de Castro; Rafael Tassinari Resende; Duberli Elera Gonzales; Lucas Arthur de Almeida Telles; Thaisa Ribeiro Teixeira; Gleissy Mary Amaral Dino Alves dos Santos; Pedro Henrique Santos Mota

The formation of an urban heat island (UHI) is one of the most common impacts of the urbanization process. To mitigate the effects of UHI, the planning of urban forests (e.g., creation of parks, forests and afforestation streets) has been the major tool applied in this context. Thus, the aim of this study is to evaluate the spatial and temporal distribution of heat islands in Vila Velha, ES, Brazil using the mono-window algorithm. The study followed these methodological steps: 1) mapping of urban green areas through a photointerpretation screen; 2) application of the mono-window algorithm to obtain the spatial and temporal patterns of land surface temperature (LST); 3) correlation between LST and the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) and normalized difference build-up index (NDBI); 4) application of ecological evaluation index. The results showed that the mean values of LST in urban areas were at least 2.34 to 7.19°C higher than undeveloped areas. Moreover, the positive correlation between LST and NDBI showed an amplifying effect of the developed areas for UHI, while areas with a predominance of vegetation attenuated the effect of UHI. Urban centers, clustered in some parts of the city, received the worst ecological assessment index. Finally, the adoption of measures to guide the urban forest planning within urban centers is necessary to mitigate the effect of heat islands and provide thermal comfort in urban areas.


Journal of Venomous Animals and Toxins Including Tropical Diseases | 2014

Bioclimatic distribution and prevalence maps for Fasciola hepatica in Espírito Santo State, Brazil

Deivid França Freitas; Isabella Vilhena Freire Martins; Gleissy Mary Amaral Dino Alves dos Santos; Alexandre Rosa dos Santos; Daniel da Silva Gomes

BackgroundFasciolosis affects different ruminant species and leads to great economic losses for cattle farmers worldwide. Thus, the current study aimed to evaluate bovine fasciolosis prevalence in the state of Espírito Santo, Brazil, using slaughter maps provided by slaughterhouses and verifying the origin of cattle.MethodsA map was created based on analysis of epidemiological data. The ArcGIS/ArcINFO 10.1 software was employed in order to elaborate updated bioclimatic maps that displayed the fasciolosis prevalence within the state – per city– between 2009 and 2011.ResultsAccording to the bioclimatic map it was clear that 52.24% of the state’s total area comprise regions considered favorable for the development and survival of Fasciola hepatica. According to the data provided by slaughterhouses, the parasite was more frequent in the cities of Atílio Vivácqua, Itapemirim and Anchieta with respective prevalence of 28.41, 25.50 and 24.95%. Although the northern portion of the state is also favorable for the disease maintenance (reaching rates above 90%), several cities presented prevalence of only 0.99 and 1.94% respectively. These findings indicate that climatic and environmental factors only cannot be considered preponderant to fasciolosis occurrence. Regarding the slaughterhouse located in Anchieta city, the higher prevalence was registered in the cities of Jerônimo Monteiro, Alegre and Cachoeiro de Itapemirim, with mean prevalence of 1.21, 1.07 and 2.09% respectively.ConclusionAlthough the present findings suggest a pattern for the prevalence of fasciolosis, records of the cities for the occurrence of the disease usually do not reflect the true origin of animals.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Influence of relief on permanent preservation areas.

Alexandre Rosa dos Santos; Tessa Chimalli; João Batista Esteves Peluzio; Aderbal Gomes da Silva; Gleissy Mary Amaral Dino Alves dos Santos; Alexandre Simões Lorenzon; Thaisa Ribeiro Teixeira; Nero Lemos Martins de Castro; Carlos Antonio Alvares Soares Ribeiro

Many countries have environmental legislation to protecting natural resources on private property. In Brazil, the Brazilian Forestry Code determines specific areas to maintain with natural vegetation cover, known as areas of permanent preservation (APP). Currently, there are few studies that relate topographic variables on APP. In this context, we sought to evaluate the influence of relief on the conservation of areas of permanent preservation (APP) in the areas surrounding Caparaó National Park, Brazil. By using the chi-squared statistical test, we verified that the presence of forest cover is closely associated with altitude. The classes of APP in better conservation status are slopes in addition to hilltops and mountains, whereas APP streams and springs are among the areas most affected by human activities. The most deforested areas are located at altitudes below 1100.00 m and on slopes less than 45°. All orientations of the sides were significant for APP conservation status, with the southern, southeastern, and southwestern sides showing the lower degrees of impact. The methodology can be adjusted to environmental legislation to other countries.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

GIS applied to location of fires detection towers in domain area of tropical forest

Fernando Coelho Eugenio; Alexandre Rosa dos Santos; Nilton Cesar Fiedler; Guido Assunção Ribeiro; Aderbal Gomes da Silva; Ronie Silva Juvanhol; Vitor Roberto Schettino; Gustavo Eduardo Marcatti; Getulio Fonseca Domingues; Gleissy Mary Amaral Dino Alves dos Santos; José Eduardo Macedo Pezzopane; Beatriz Duguy Pedra; Aureo Banhos; Lima Deleon Martins

In most countries, the loss of biodiversity caused by the fires is worrying. In this sense, the fires detection towers are crucial for rapid identification of fire outbreaks and can also be used in environmental inspection, biodiversity monitoring, telecommunications mechanisms, telemetry and others. Currently the methodologies for allocating fire detection towers over large areas are numerous, complex and non-standardized by government supervisory agencies. Therefore, this study proposes and evaluates different methodologies to best location of points to install fire detection towers considering the topography, risk areas, conservation units and heat spots. Were used Geographic Information Systems (GIS) techniques and unaligned stratified systematic sampling for implementing and evaluating 9 methods for allocating fire detection towers. Among the methods evaluated, the C3 method was chosen, represented by 140 fire detection towers, with coverage of: a) 67% of the study area, b) 73.97% of the areas with high risk, c) 70.41% of the areas with very high risk, d) 70.42% of the conservation units and e) 84.95% of the heat spots in 2014. The proposed methodology can be adapted to areas of other countries.


Journal of Environmental Management | 2016

Geotechnology and landscape ecology applied to the selection of potential forest fragments for seed harvesting

Alexandre Rosa dos Santos; Carlos Antonio Alvares Soares Ribeiro; Telma Machado de Oliveira Peluzio; João Batista Esteves Peluzio; Vagner Tebaldi de Queiroz; Elvis Ricardo Figueira Branco; Alexandre Simões Lorenzon; Getulio Fonseca Domingues; Gustavo Eduardo Marcatti; Nero Lemos Martins de Castro; Thaisa Ribeiro Teixeira; Gleissy Mary Amaral Dino Alves dos Santos; Pedro Henrique Santos Mota; Samuel Ferreira da Silva; Rozimelia Vargas; José Romário de Carvalho; Leandro Levate Macedo; Cintia da Silva Araújo; Samira Luns Hatum de Almeida

The Atlantic Forest biome is recognized for its biodiversity and is one of the most threatened biomes on the planet, with forest fragmentation increasing due to uncontrolled land use, land occupation, and population growth. The most serious aspect of the forest fragmentation process is the edge effect and the loss of biodiversity. In this context, the aim of this study was to evaluate the dynamics of forest fragmentation and select potential forest fragments with a higher degree of conservation for seed harvesting in the Itapemirim river basin, Espírito Santo State, Brazil. Image classification techniques, forest landscape ecology, and multi-criteria analysis were used to evaluate the evolution of forest fragmentation to develop the landscape metric indexes, and to select potential forest fragments for seed harvesting for the years 1985 and 2013. According to the results, there was a reduction of 2.55% of the occupancy of the fragments in the basin between the years 1985 and 2013. For the years 1985 and 2013, forest fragment units 2 and 3 were spatialized with a high potential for seed harvesting, representing 6.99% and 16.01% of the total fragments, respectively. The methodology used in this study has the potential to be used to support decisions for the selection of potential fragments for seed harvesting because selecting fragments in different environments by their spatial attributes provides a greater degree of conservation, contributing to the protection and conscious management of the forests. The proposed methodology can be adapted to other areas and different biomes of the world.


Journal of Environmental Management | 2017

Fuzzy logic applied to prospecting for areas for installation of wood panel industries

Alexandre Rosa dos Santos; Ewerthon Mattos Paterlini; Nilton Cesar Fiedler; Carlos Antonio Alvares Soares Ribeiro; Alexandre Simões Lorenzon; Getulio Fonseca Domingues; Gustavo Eduardo Marcatti; Nero Lemos Martins de Castro; Thaisa Ribeiro Teixeira; Gleissy Mary Amaral Dino Alves dos Santos; Ronie Silva Juvanhol; Elvis Ricardo Figueira Branco; Pedro Henrique Santos Mota; Lilianne Gomes da Silva; Daiani Bernardo Pirovani; Waldir Cintra de Jesus; Ana Carolina de Albuquerque Santos; Helio Garcia Leite; Setsuo Iwakiri

Prospecting for suitable areas for forestry operations, where the objective is a reduction in production and transportation costs, as well as the maximization of profits and available resources, constitutes an optimization problem. However, fuzzy logic is an alternative method for solving this problem. In the context of prospecting for suitable areas for the installation of wood panel industries, we propose applying fuzzy logic analysis for simulating the planting of different species and eucalyptus hybrids in Espírito Santo State, Brazil. The necessary methodological steps for this study are as follows: a) agriclimatological zoning of different species and eucalyptus hybrids; b) the selection of the vector variables; c) the application of the Euclidean distance to the vector variables; d) the application of fuzzy logic to matrix variables of the Euclidean distance; and e) the application of overlap fuzzy logic to locate areas for installation of wood panel industries. Among all the species and hybrids, Corymbia citriodora showed the highest percentage values for the combined very good and good classes, with 8.60%, followed by Eucalyptus grandis with 8.52%, Eucalyptus urophylla with 8.35% and Urograndis with 8.34%. The fuzzy logic analysis afforded flexibility in prospecting for suitable areas for the installation of wood panel industries in the Espírito Santo State can bring great economic and social benefits to the local population with the generation of jobs, income, tax revenues and GDP increase for the State and municipalities involved. The proposed methodology can be adapted to other areas and agricultural crops.


Journal of Environmental Management | 2017

Itaipu royalties: The role of the hydroelectric sector in water resource management

Alexandre Simões Lorenzon; Carlos Antonio Alvares Soares Ribeiro; Alexandre Rosa dos Santos; Gustavo Eduardo Marcatti; Getulio Fonseca Domingues; Vicente Paulo Soares; Nero Lemos Martins de Castro; Thaisa Ribeiro Teixeira; Sady Júnior Martins da Costa de Menezes; Elias Silva; Kelly de Oliveira Barros; Gleissy Mary Amaral Dino Alves dos Santos; Samuel Ferreira da Silva; Pedro Henrique Santos Mota

For countries dependent on hydroelectricity, water scarcity poses a real risk. Hydroelectric plants are among the most vulnerable enterprises to climate change. Investing in the conservation of the hydrographic basin is a solution found by the hydropower sector. Given the importance of the Itaipu plant to the energy matrix of Brazil and Paraguay, the aim of this study is to review the current distribution of royalties from Itaipu, using the hydrographic basin as a of criterion of analysis. Approximately 98.73% of the Itaipu basin is in Brazil. The flow contributes 99% of the total electricity generated there, while the drop height of the water contributes only 1%. Under the current policy, royalties are shared equally between Brazil and Paraguay. In the proposed approach, each country would receive a percentage for their participation in the drop height and water flow in the output of the turbines, which are intrinsic factors for electricity generation. Thus, Brazil would receive 98.35% of the royalties and Paraguay, 1.65%. The inclusion of the hydrographic basin as a criterion for the distribution of royalties will promote more efficient water resource management, since the payment will be distributed throughout the basin of the plant. The methodology can be applied to hydroelectric projects worldwide.


Química Nova | 2015

PESTICIDE RESIDUES IN CONVENTIONALLY AND ORGANICALLY GROWN TOMATOES IN ESPÍRITO SANTO (BRAZIL)

Gleissy Mary Amaral Dino Alves dos Santos; Luciano José Quintão Teixeira; Olavo S. Pereira Júnior; Alexandre Rosa dos Santos; Marcio Fronza; Ary Gomes da Silva; Rodrigo Scherer

The aim of this study was to investigate the presence of acephate, carbaryl, carbendazim, chlorpyrifos, dichlorvos, fenpropathrin, methamidophos and permethrin in conventionally and organically grown tomatoes from Espirito Santo, Brazil, between May 2012 and April 2013. QuEChERS sample preparation was used and analysis was performed by LC-MS/MS and GC-MS. The method validation showed good linearity (R > 0.99), precision (RSD < 13%) and accuracy (89 - 123%), and the limits of quantification were below 0.01 mg kg-1 for all pesticides. The pesticides acephate, carbaryl (0.23 mg kg-1; exceeding maximum residue levels), carbendazim, chlorpyriphos, dichlorvos, fenpropathrin (0.41 mg kg-1; exceeding maximum residue levels), methamidophos and permethrin (0.51 mg kg-1, exceeding maximum residue levels) were found in conventional tomatoes. In organic tomatoes, only one sample exhibited the presence of permethrin (0.21 mg kg-1). Considering that the pesticides found are toxic and carcinogenic, and given the high incidence of irregularities, it is important to implement government actions to ensure consumer safety.


Journal of Contaminant Hydrology | 2018

Environmental risk assessment for sustainable pesticide use in coffee production

Vagner Tebaldi de Queiroz; Mariane Martins Azevedo; Iana Pedro da Silva Quadros; Adilson Vidal Costa; Atanásio Alves do Amaral; Gleissy Mary Amaral Dino Alves dos Santos; Ronie Silva Juvanhol; Lucas Arthur de Almeida Telles; Alexandre Rosa dos Santos

The extensive use of pesticides in agricultural practices has been associated with human health problems and environmental contamination worldwide. Brazil is the largest consumer of pesticides in the world and Espírito Santo State stands out as the second Brazilian producer of coffee. However, there is no information about environmental impact of coffee producing at Itapemirim River Basin (IRB) region, Espírito Santo State, Brazil; hence a simple and quick method using open access softwares (AGROSCRE and ARAquá Web) to estimate surface entrainment and pesticide leaching potential was carried out. AGROSCRE evaluates the contamination risk of superficial and groundwater by Active Ingredients (AIs), using GOSS Method, GUS index and US EPA criteria, while ARAquá Web estimates AI concentrations in water resources, indicating their suitability based on water quality requirements for different uses. Regarding pesticides used in coffee plantations, there is 44.7% chance of surface water and 23.7% chance of groundwater contamination. Results showed that ametryne, cyproconazole, diuron, epoxiconazole, flutriafol, triadimenol and triazophos pose contamination risk to both surface water and groundwater in the IRB region. Of these, 10.5% of the total AIs are triazoles and fall under environmental classes II and III (Product Very/Dangerous to the Environment). The AIs ametryne, thiamethoxam, iprodione, flutriafol, triazophos, endosulfan, triadimenol, cyproconazole, diuron, pendimethalin, chlorpyrifos, copper II hydroxide, etion, epoxiconazole and paraquat dichloride, were found to be potentially toxic, presenting environmental concentrations ranging from 123.40 μg L-1 to 0.14 μg L-1, which are higher than the safety standard for potable water (0.1 μg L-1). With respect to these AIs, chlorpyrifos, ethion and triazophos showed concentrations higher than EC50 values for aquatic invertebrates and ametryne and diuron for algae. Thus, local residents and environment may be at high risk of pesticide exposure, when these AIs are used in coffee plantations next to surface water or groundwater.


Floresta e Ambiente | 2015

Confronto do Uso e Ocupação da Terra em APPs no Município de Muqui, ES

Taís Rizzo Moreira; Alexandre Rosa dos Santos; Raphael Lima Dalfi; Rafael Ferraço de Campos; Gleissy Mary Amaral Dino Alves dos Santos; Fernando Coelho Eugenio

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Alexandre Rosa dos Santos

Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

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Fernando Coelho Eugenio

Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

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Gustavo Eduardo Marcatti

Universidade Federal de Viçosa

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Ronie Silva Juvanhol

Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

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Aderbal Gomes da Silva

Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

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Deivid França Freitas

Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

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Elvis Ricardo Figueira Branco

Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

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Rafael Ferraço de Campos

Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

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