Jean Lucas Poppe
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jean Lucas Poppe.
Journal of Pest Science | 2014
Maríndia Deprá; Jean Lucas Poppe; Hermes José Schmitz; Daniela Cristina De Toni; Vera L. S. Valente
This paper presents the first report of the occurrence of Drosophila suzukii (Diptera: Drosophilidae) in South America. Several samples were collected during various seasons in 2012 and 2013, and a significant number of individuals were obtained and identified. Based on the data recorded during each sampling campaign, including the locality, temperature, time of year, and number of individuals collected, several conclusions were drawn about the development of this invasion in southern Brazil.
Zootaxa | 2015
Jean Lucas Poppe; Hermes José Schmitz; Vera L. S. Valente
The genus Rhinoleucophenga Hendel comprises 26 nominal species with New World distribution. In the present study, two new species are described from samples in the Pampa and Caatinga biomes in Brazil, R. punctuloides sp. nov. and R. trivisualis sp. nov., respectively. Rhinoleucophenga punctuloides sp. nov. is a sibling species of R. punctulata Duda. Furthermore, two females of R. joaquina Schmitz, Gottschalk & Valente were found for the first time and a description is presented. A taxonomic dichotomous key with pictures is given for the Rhinoleucophenga species recorded in the Caatinga and Pampa biomes. The Neotropical open environments are areas of high diversity for Rhinoleucophenga. The description of new species and review of some older descriptions can change the area of species distribution and improve the faunistic knowledge of other localities in which previous studies have shown unidentified or misidentified Rhinoleucophenga species.
Zootaxa | 2016
Jean Lucas Poppe; Vera L. S. Valente; João Pedro Junges dos Santos; Marco Silva Gottschalk
The genus Rhinoleucophenga Hendel comprises 29 nominal species with New World distribution. In the present study five species are redescribed: R. angustifrons Malogolowkin; R. lopesi Malogolowkin; R. matogrossensis Malogolowkin; R. nigrescens Malogolowkin and Rhinoleucophenga personata Malogolowkin. R. capixabensis Culik & Ventura is proposed as a new junior synonymy of R. lopesi. Other species, R. jacareacanga sp. nov., is described from the specimens deposited at CEIOC/Fiocruz. The description of new species and review of some former descriptions of Rhinoleucophenga is indispensable since the distribution records of some species are doubtful.
Neotropical Entomology | 2015
Jean Lucas Poppe; Hermes José Schmitz; S M Callegari-Jacques; Vera L. S. Valente
The species composition and the relative abundance of species in an insect community can vary in time and space for many reasons, including climatic variables and habitat preferences. Drosophilids were collected each quarter from April 2011 to April 2012 (five collections in all) in a natural area of the Pampa biome, considering three environments: open field, forest edge and the interior of forest patches. Kruskal-Wallis and chi-square tests were used to examine the effects of temporal and spatial components on the drosophilid assemblage. Four diversity measures: Sobs, Srar, H’ and Evar were used to evaluate the community structure. A total of 7164 drosophilids belonging to 51 species were collected. The interaction of species in each environment varied among sampling periods. The abundance of both Neotropical and exotic species was affected by temporal and spatial components. The species of the D. repleta group were predominantly more abundant in the open field, but they migrated to the forest patches during periods of thermal stress. Generally, diversity was greatest in the interior of forest patches. Nevertheless, temporal components appear to be the predominant environmental determinant of the characteristics of the drosophilid community of the Pampas. Furthermore, the forest patches appear to act as a center of recolonization, reinforcing their importance in the maintenance of biodiversity in the Pampas; this function will be even more important in the future, when the temperatures will, most likely, be higher.
Neotropical Entomology | 2018
Jean Lucas Poppe; Vera L. S. Valente; Marco Silva Gottschalk
Rhinoleucophenga Hendel comprises an unusual Drosophilidae (Diptera) genus with predaceous larvae, currently compounded by 29 nominal species with New World distribution. In the present study, Rhinoleucophenga brasiliensis (Costa Lima) and R. fluminensis (Costa Lima) are redescribed. These two species are commonly misidentified in Drosophilidae species inventories, mainly by the few morphological character details presented in the original taxonomic description. Thus, by the morphological review performed here, lectotype and paralectotypes designed to R. brasiliensis and R. fluminensis, as well as new morphological characters, drawings and photos (for the first time) are presented in order to avoid further taxonomic mistakes with those referred sibling species of Rhinoleucophenga.
Entomological Science | 2017
Jean Lucas Poppe; Maríndia Deprá; Hermes José Schmitz; Vera L. S. Valente
Despite the fact that Drosophilidae is a very diverse and well‐studied taxon, the New World genus Rhinoleucophenga is yet poorly understood even in regard to species distribution and morphological variability pattern. In this sense, R. punctulata is a species widely distributed in the Neotropical region. Specimens of R. punctulata were collected from different biomes in Brazil: Pampa, Cerrado and Caatinga sensu strictu, and a southern Amazonian savannah enclave area. Geographical variations in the external body morphology and in the morphology of spermatheca were noticed among the different populations. The hypothesis that each population could be a different species was tested through molecular data. A fragment of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxydase subunit I (COI) gene was sequenced to perform phylogenetic analyses through neighbor‐joining and Bayesian inferences. Pairwise genetic divergences of COI sequences were calculated using DNA barcode premises. The analyzed populations presented different variation levels in both morphology and molecular traits. However, new species were not proposed because the intra‐population nucleotide variations exceeded the inter‐population ones. The noticeable morphological and genetic variations revealed among the four studied populations of R. punctulata in different biomes of Brazil suggest the necessity that morphological, distributional and molecular data at the population level should be integrated into complementary datasets to better understand the biological diversity of Rhinoleucophenga through Neotropical environments.
Archive | 2015
Jean Lucas Poppe; Hermes José Schmitz; Vera L. S. Valente
FIGURE 3. Male terminalia of the holotype of R. trivisualis sp. nov. a – c: aedeagus and aedeagal apodeme. a: dorsal view; b: ventral view; c: lateral view; d: epandrium, cerci and surstyli, caudal view (scale bar: 0.05 mm).
Zootaxa | 2014
Jean Lucas Poppe; Hermes José Schmitz; David A. Grimaldi; Vera L. S. Valente
Neotropical Entomology | 2013
Jean Lucas Poppe; Vera L. S. Valente; Hermes José Schmitz
Papéis Avulsos de Zoologia (São Paulo) | 2012
Jean Lucas Poppe; SilVa Valente