Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Luciana O. Vidal is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Luciana O. Vidal.


Nature | 2014

Amazon River carbon dioxide outgassing fuelled by wetlands

Gwenaël Abril; Julian Martínez; Luis Felipe Artigas; Patricia Moreira-Turcq; Marc F. Benedetti; Luciana O. Vidal; Tarik Meziane; Jin-Kwang Kim; Marcelo Bernardes; Nicolas Savoye; Jonathan Deborde; E.L. Souza; Patrick Albéric; M.F.L. de Souza; Fábio Roland

River systems connect the terrestrial biosphere, the atmosphere and the ocean in the global carbon cycle. A recent estimate suggests that up to 3 petagrams of carbon per year could be emitted as carbon dioxide (CO2) from global inland waters, offsetting the carbon uptake by terrestrial ecosystems. It is generally assumed that inland waters emit carbon that has been previously fixed upstream by land plant photosynthesis, then transferred to soils, and subsequently transported downstream in run-off. But at the scale of entire drainage basins, the lateral carbon fluxes carried by small rivers upstream do not account for all of the CO2 emitted from inundated areas downstream. Three-quarters of the world’s flooded land consists of temporary wetlands, but the contribution of these productive ecosystems to the inland water carbon budget has been largely overlooked. Here we show that wetlands pump large amounts of atmospheric CO2 into river waters in the floodplains of the central Amazon. Flooded forests and floating vegetation export large amounts of carbon to river waters and the dissolved CO2 can be transported dozens to hundreds of kilometres downstream before being emitted. We estimate that Amazonian wetlands export half of their gross primary production to river waters as dissolved CO2 and organic carbon, compared with only a few per cent of gross primary production exported in upland (not flooded) ecosystems. Moreover, we suggest that wetland carbon export is potentially large enough to account for at least the 0.21 petagrams of carbon emitted per year as CO2 from the central Amazon River and its floodplains. Global carbon budgets should explicitly address temporary or vegetated flooded areas, because these ecosystems combine high aerial primary production with large, fast carbon export, potentially supporting a substantial fraction of CO2 evasion from inland waters.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Divergent biophysical controls of aquatic CO2 and CH4 in the World’s two largest rivers

Alberto Borges; Gwenaël Abril; François Darchambeau; Cristian R. Teodoru; Jonathan Deborde; Luciana O. Vidal; Thibault Lambert; Steven Bouillon

Carbon emissions to the atmosphere from inland waters are globally significant and mainly occur at tropical latitudes. However, processes controlling the intensity of CO2 and CH4 emissions from tropical inland waters remain poorly understood. Here, we report a data-set of concurrent measurements of the partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2) and dissolved CH4 concentrations in the Amazon (n = 136) and the Congo (n = 280) Rivers. The pCO2 values in the Amazon mainstem were significantly higher than in the Congo, contrasting with CH4 concentrations that were higher in the Congo than in the Amazon. Large-scale patterns in pCO2 across different lowland tropical basins can be apprehended with a relatively simple statistical model related to the extent of wetlands within the basin, showing that, in addition to non-flooded vegetation, wetlands also contribute to CO2 in river channels. On the other hand, dynamics of dissolved CH4 in river channels are less straightforward to predict, and are related to the way hydrology modulates the connectivity between wetlands and river channels.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2013

Tropical freshwater ecosystems have lower bacterial growth efficiency than temperate ones.

André Megali Amado; Frederico Meirelles-Pereira; Luciana O. Vidal; Hugo Sarmento Sarmento; Albert Luiz Suhett; Vinicius F. Farjalla; James B. Cotner; Fábio Roland

Current models and observations indicate that bacterial respiration should increase and growth efficiency (BGE) should decrease with increasing temperatures. However, these models and observations are mostly derived from data collected in temperate regions, and the tropics are under-represented. The aim of this work was to compare bacterial metabolism, namely bacterial production (BP) and respiration (BR), bacterial growth efficiency (BGE) and bacterial carbon demand (BCD) between tropical and temperate ecosystems via a literature review and using unpublished data. We hypothesized that (1) tropical ecosystems have higher metabolism than temperate ones and, (2) that BGE is lower in tropical relative to temperate ecosystems. We collected a total of 498 coupled BP and BR observations (Ntotal = 498; Ntemperate = 301; Ntropical = 197), calculated BGE (BP/(BP+BR)) and BCD (BP+BR) for each case and examined patterns using a model II regression analysis and compared each parameter between the two regions using non-parametric Mann–Whitney U test. We observed a significant positive linear regression between BR and BP for the whole dataset, and also for tropical and temperate data separately. We found that BP, BR and BCD were higher in the tropics, but BGE was lower compared to temperate regions. Also, BR rates per BP unit were at least two fold higher in the tropics than in temperate ecosystems. We argue that higher temperature, nutrient limitation, and light exposure all contribute to lower BGE in the tropics, mediated through effects on thermodynamics, substrate stoichiometry, nutrient availability and interactions with photochemically produced compounds. More efforts are needed in this study area in the tropics, but our work indicates that bottom-up (nutrient availability and resource stoichiometry) and top-down (grazer pressure) processes, coupled with thermodynamic constraints, might contribute to the lower BGE in the tropics relative to temperate regions.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2013

Spatial variation of sediment mineralization supports differential CO2 emissions from a tropical hydroelectric reservoir

Simone J. Cardoso; Luciana O. Vidal; Raquel Mendonça; Lars J. Tranvik; Sebastian Sobek; Roland Fábio

Substantial amounts of organic matter (OM) from terrestrial ecosystems are buried as sediments in inland waters. It is still unclear to what extent this OM constitutes a sink of carbon, and how much of it is returned to the atmosphere upon mineralization to carbon dioxide (CO2). The construction of reservoirs affects the carbon cycle by increasing OM sedimentation at the regional scale. In this study we determine the OM mineralization in the sediment of three zones (river, transition, and dam) of a tropical hydroelectric reservoir in Brazil as well as identify the composition of the carbon pool available for mineralization. We measured sediment organic carbon mineralization rates and related them to the composition of the OM, bacterial abundance and pCO2 of the surface water of the reservoir. Terrestrial OM was an important substrate for the mineralization. In the river and transition zones most of the OM was allochthonous (56 and 48%, respectively) while the dam zone had the lowest allochthonous contribution (7%). The highest mineralization rates were found in the transition zone (154.80 ± 33.50 mg C m-2 d-1) and the lowest in the dam (51.60 ± 26.80 mg C m-2 d-1). Moreover, mineralization rates were significantly related to bacterial abundance (r2 = 0.50, p < 0.001) and pCO2 in the surface water of the reservoir (r2 = 0.73, p < 0.001). The results indicate that allochthonous OM has different contributions to sediment mineralization in the three zones of the reservoir. Further, the sediment mineralization, mediated by heterotrophic bacteria metabolism, significantly contributes to CO2 supersaturation in the water column, resulting in higher pCO2 in the river and transition zones in comparison with the dam zone, affecting greenhouse gas emission estimations from hydroelectric reservoirs.


Archive | 2012

Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Hydroelectric Reservoirs: What Knowledge Do We Have and What is Lacking?

Raquel Mendonça; Nathan Barros; Luciana O. Vidal; Felipe S. Pacheco; Sarian Kosten; Fábio Roland

Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Hydroelectric Reservoirs: What Knowledge Do We Have and What is Lacking?


Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology | 2014

Visualizing aquatic bacteria by light and transmission electron microscopy

Thiago P. Silva; Natália P. Noyma; Thabata L. A. Duque; Juliana P. Gamalier; Luciana O. Vidal; Lúcia M. Lobão; Hélio Chiarini-Garcia; Fábio Roland; Rossana C. N. Melo

The understanding of the functional role of aquatic bacteria in microbial food webs is largely dependent on methods applied to the direct visualization and enumeration of these organisms. While the ultrastructure of aquatic bacteria is still poorly known, routine observation of aquatic bacteria by light microscopy requires staining with fluorochromes, followed by filtration and direct counting on filter surfaces. Here, we used a new strategy to visualize and enumerate aquatic bacteria by light microscopy. By spinning water samples from varied tropical ecosystems in a cytocentrifuge, we found that bacteria firmly adhere to regular slides, can be stained by fluorochoromes with no background formation and fast enumerated. Significant correlations were found between the cytocentrifugation and filter-based methods. Moreover, preparations through cytocentrifugation were more adequate for bacterial viability evaluation than filter-based preparations. Transmission electron microscopic analyses revealed a morphological diversity of bacteria with different internal and external structures, such as large variation in the cell envelope and capsule thickness, and presence or not of thylakoid membranes. Our results demonstrate that aquatic bacteria represent an ultrastructurally diverse population and open avenues for easy handling/quantification and better visualization of bacteria by light microscopy without the need of filter membranes.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2015

Hydrological pulse regulating the bacterial heterotrophic metabolism between Amazonian mainstems and floodplain lakes

Luciana O. Vidal; Gwenaël Abril; Luiz F. Artigas; Michaela L. Melo; Marcelo Bernardes; Lúcia M. Lobão; Mariana C. Reis; Patricia Moreira-Turcq; Marc F. Benedetti; Valdemar L. Tornisielo; Fábio Roland

We evaluated in situ rates of bacterial carbon processing in Amazonian floodplain lakes and mainstems, during both high water (HW) and low water (LW) phases (p < 0.05). Our results showed that bacterial production (BP) was lower and more variable than bacterial respiration, determined as total respiration. Bacterial carbon demand was mostly accounted by BR and presented the same pattern that BR in both water phases. Bacterial growth efficiency (BGE) showed a wide range (0.2–23%) and low mean value of 3 and 6%, (in HW and LW, respectively) suggesting that dissolved organic carbon was mostly allocated to catabolic metabolism. However, BGE was regulated by BP in LW phase. Consequently, changes in BGE showed the same pattern that BP. In addition, the hydrological pulse effects on mainstems and floodplains lakes connectivity were found for BP and BGE in LW. Multiple correlation analyses revealed that indexes of organic matter (OM) quality (chlorophyll-a, N stable isotopes and C/N ratios) were the strongest seasonal drivers of bacterial carbon metabolism. Our work indicated that: (i) the bacterial metabolism was mostly driven by respiration in Amazonian aquatic ecosystems resulting in low BGE in either high or LW phase; (ii) the hydrological pulse regulated the bacterial heterotrophic metabolism between Amazonian mainstems and floodplain lakes mostly driven by OM quality.


Brazilian Journal of Biology | 2013

Addressing key ecological questions to support policy-making in Brazil

Rafael M. Almeida; Vg Pinto; Mm Castro; Ac Divino; Aca Alves; D Vasconcelos; Magalhães Silva; N Mamede; Rns Lima; Rm Mello; Ts Siviero; Tereza S. Martins; V. P. Campos; Be Conde; Ps Brito; Fc Favoreto; Luciana O. Vidal; Fábio Roland

In Brazil, there is generally a lack of information flow between scientists and policy makers. Here, we address 29 ecological questions of high policy relevance in Brazil, in an attempt to encourage the participation of science in decision-making. Similar addresses have been made by British and American scientists (Fleishman et al., 2011; Sutherland et al., 2006), and it is our goal to bring such matters to the Brazilian reality. We had several meetings during an Ecosystem Ecology seminar held at the Federal University of Juiz de Fora and categorised our questions into five different topics. Brief introductory paragraphs are shown below each topic and the questions are presented subsequently without any order of relevance.


Aquatic Sciences | 2010

Variability of carbon dioxide flux from tropical (Cerrado) hydroelectric reservoirs

Fábio Roland; Luciana O. Vidal; Felipe S. Pacheco; Nathan Barros; Arcilan Assireu; Jean Pierre Henry Balbaud Ometto; André C. P. Cimbleris; Jonathan J. Cole


Geophysical Research Letters | 2013

Thermal enhancement of gas transfer velocity of CO2 in an Amazon floodplain lake revealed by eddy covariance measurements

Pierre Polsenaere; Jonathan Deborde; Guillaume Detandt; Luciana O. Vidal; Marcela A.P. Pérez; Vincent Marieu; Gwenaël Abril

Collaboration


Dive into the Luciana O. Vidal's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fábio Roland

Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lúcia M. Lobão

Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marcelo Bernardes

Federal Fluminense University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nathan Barros

Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marc F. Benedetti

Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patricia Moreira-Turcq

Institut de recherche pour le développement

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

André Megali Amado

Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Felipe S. Pacheco

National Institute for Space Research

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge