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Featured researches published by Maria de Lourdes Zani-Teixeira.


Brazilian Journal of Oceanography | 1986

Contribuição ao conhecimento da biologia da manjuba, Anchoviella lepidentostole (Fowler, 1911), no Estuário de São Vicente, SP (Osteichthyes, Engraulidae)

Alfredo Martins Paiva Filho; Maria de Lourdes Zani-Teixeira; Paulo Kiyoshi Kihara

As many as 3408 specimens from 16 samples were collected in Sao Vicente Estuary, Sao Paulo, Brazil, from June 1979 to July 1980. The occurrence, growth, length-weight relationship and condition factor of the species are analysed. This estuarine region is one of the areas where the species grows, moving from it when the maturation process begins.


Brazilian Journal of Oceanography | 2011

Ichthyoplankton distribution and abundance in the northern Todos os Santos and Camamu Bays, Bahia State - Brazil

Mario Katsuragawa; Maria de Lourdes Zani-Teixeira; Cássia Gôngora Goçalo; Márcio Hidekazu Ohkawara; Michael Kengo Itagaki

The occurrence, distribution and abundance of ichthyoplankton in Todos os Santos and Camamu Bays were analyzed based on four samplings (winter 2003, summer 2003, winter 2004 and summer 2005). Samples were obtained by surface horizontal hauls, using a 200-µm mesh conical-cylinder plankton net. The distribution and abundance of eggs indicate a remarkable seasonal and annual variation of spawning activity in the region, especially when the two summer campaigns are compared. In summer 2003 the highest quantitative values were recorded, especially for Camamu, where the maximum reached 106.56 eggs.m-3, with an overall average of 43.46 eggs.m-3 for the two areas. In summer 2005 values were relatively low, the overall average being 3.49 eggs.m-3. The larval taxonomic composition is characterized by the predominance of gobiids, with small variation from summer to winter. Considering all the campaigns and samplings undertaken in both areas, larvae of 11 families were identified: Engraulidae, Clupeidae, Mugilidae, Atherinopsidae, Hemiramphidae, Syngnathidae, Blenniidae, Carangidae, Gobiidae, Achiridae and Tetraodontidae.


Check List | 2012

Larval fish of the Campos Basin, southeastern Brazil

Ana Cristina Teixeira Bonecker; Mario Katsuragawa; Márcia Salustiano de Castro; Eduardo de Araújo Pinto Gomes; Cláudia Namiki; Maria de Lourdes Zani-Teixeira

Studies on the vertical distribution of larval fish in water masses along the Brazilian coast are very rare. The present study aimed to identify larval fish occurring in the surface (1 m) layer and at depth in four water masses of the Campos Basin, southeastern Brazil: South Atlantic Central Water (SACW) (250 m), Antarctic Intermediate Water (AAIW) (800 m), Upper Circumpolar Deep Water (UCDW) (1,200 m) and North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) (2,300 m). Material used in this study was obtained in 2009 through nocturnal horizontal stratified hauls using a Multinet (500 μm mesh size) during both rainy (February to April) and dry periods (August to September). A total of 10,978 fish larvae comprising 169 taxa were identified during the rainy (n = 6,015) and dry (n = 4,963) periods. The number of taxa decreased as the sampling depth increased. Larvae of Clupeidae, Engraulidae and Scombridae dominated in samples collected in the surface layer, while Sternoptychidae and Myctophidae were the most representative families in SACW. The other three water masses were dominated by Gonostomatidae larvae.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2015

Growth and mortality of larval Myctophum affine (Myctophidae, Teleostei)

Cláudia Namiki; Mario Katsuragawa; Maria de Lourdes Zani-Teixeira

The growth and mortality rates of Myctophum affine larvae were analysed based on samples collected during the austral summer and winter of 2002 from south-eastern Brazilian waters. The larvae ranged in size from 2·75 to 14·00 mm standard length (L(S)). Daily increment counts from 82 sagittal otoliths showed that the age of M. affine ranged from 2 to 28 days. Three models were applied to estimate the growth rate: linear regression, exponential model and Laird-Gompertz model. The exponential model best fitted the data, and L(0) values from exponential and Laird-Gompertz models were close to the smallest larva reported in the literature (c. 2·5 mm L(S)). The average growth rate (0·33 mm day(-1)) was intermediate among lanternfishes. The mortality rate (12%) during the larval period was below average compared with other marine fish species but similar to some epipelagic fishes that occur in the area.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2009

Biometric relationships of the spotted lobster, Panulirus echinatus , from Tamandaré coastal reefs, Pernambuco State, Brazil

Aline do Vale Barreto; Maria de Lourdes Zani-Teixeira; Carlos Tassito Correa Ivo; Mario Katsuragawa

Biometric relationships were recorded for 2431 male and female Panulirus echinatus sampled at Tamandare coastal reefs, Pernambuco, Brazil. The following body measurements were taken: carapace length and width, abdomen length and width, total length, third and fifth pereiopod length, cephalothorax-abdomen and total weight. Twelve relationships were studied to compare the biometric characteristics of males and females. Eleven of them showed difference between the sexes. Comparing sexes with the same carapace length, males have a heavier cephalothorax and longer third and fifth pereiopods than females, whereas females are longer, wider, and have a heavier abdomen than males. For genders with the same total length, males are heavier and have a longer carapace than females, while females have a larger abdomen. For genders with the same abdomen length, males have a heavier abdomen than females. The relationships TWg/TL and A Wg/AL showed positive allometric growth for the males. All other relationships involving weight, presented negative allometric growth for both sexes.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2015

Using new tools to identify eggs of Engraulis anchoita (Clupeiformes, Engraulidae)

Jana Menegassi del Favero; Mario Katsuragawa; Maria de Lourdes Zani-Teixeira; Jefferson T. Turner

Efficiency of the identification of eggs of Engraulis anchoita can be greatly improved by a method developed from egg measurements, using photography and the ImageJ programme, analysed by discriminant analysis using R software.


Brazilian Journal of Oceanography | 2015

Comparison of the effects of two bongo net mesh sizes on the estimation of abundance and size of Engraulidae eggs

Jana Menegassi del Favero; Mario Katsuragawa; Maria de Lourdes Zani-Teixeira; Jefferson T. Turner

Studies of ichthyoplankton retention by nets of different mesh sizes are important because they help in choosing a sampler when planning collection and the establishment of correction factors. These factors make it possible to compare studies performed with nets of different mesh sizes. In most studies of mesh retention of fish eggs, the taxonomic identification is done at the family level, resulting in the loss of detailed information. We separated Engraulidae eggs, obtained with 0.333 mm and 0.505 mm mesh bongo nets at 172 oceanographic stations in the southeastern Brazilian Bight, into four groups based on their morphometric characteristics. The difference in the abundance of eggs caught by the two nets was not significant for those groups with highest volume, types A and B, but in type C (Engraulis anchoita), the most eccentric, and in type D, of the smallest volume, the difference was significant. However, no significant difference was observed in the egg size sampled with each net for E. anchoita and type D, which exhibited higher abundance in the 0.333 mm mesh net and minor axis varying from 0.45-0.71 mm, smaller than the 0.505 mm mesh aperture and the mesh diagonal.


Check List | 2017

First record of an Apterichtus kendalli (Gilbert, 1891) (Anguilliformes, Ophichthidae) leptocephalus in the Southeast Brazilian Bight: a southward occurrence record extension

Cláudia Namiki; Maria Luiza Flaquer da Rocha; Mario Katsuragawa; Maria de Lourdes Zani-Teixeira; Frederico Pereira Brandini

The first record of Apterichtus kendalli in the Southeast Brazilian Bight is reported based on one leptocephalus collected at around the 100 m isobath during an oceanographic cruise in 1979. It is the southernmost record of this species in the Atlantic. The leptocephalus of A. kendalli was identified based on myomeres counts, fin positions, nine moderate gut swellings, and midline prominent patches of pigments.


Journal of Marine Systems | 2017

Hydrodynamically-driven distribution of lanternfish larvae in the Southeast Brazilian Bight

Cláudia Namiki; Mario Katsuragawa; Dante Campagnoli Napolitano; Maria de Lourdes Zani-Teixeira; Rafael Augusto de Mattos; Ilson Carlos Almeida da Silveira


Progress in Oceanography | 2017

Spawning areas of Engraulis anchoita in the Southeastern Brazilian Bight during late-spring and early summer

Jana Menegassi del Favero; Mario Katsuragawa; Maria de Lourdes Zani-Teixeira; Jefferson T. Turner

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Jefferson T. Turner

University of Massachusetts Dartmouth

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Ana Cristina Teixeira Bonecker

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Eduardo de Araújo Pinto Gomes

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Márcia Salustiano de Castro

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Aline do Vale Barreto

Federal University of Pernambuco

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