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Featured researches published by Michael Maia Mincarone.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2016

Fish biodiversity and conservation in South America

Roberto E. Reis; James S. Albert; F. Di Dario; Michael Maia Mincarone; P. Petry; Luiz A. Rocha

The freshwater and marine fish faunas of South America are the most diverse on Earth, with current species richness estimates standing above 9100 species. In addition, over the last decade at least 100 species were described every year. There are currently about 5160 freshwater fish species, and the estimate for the freshwater fish fauna alone points to a final diversity between 8000 and 9000 species. South America also has c. 4000 species of marine fishes. The mega-diverse fish faunas of South America evolved over a period of >100 million years, with most lineages tracing origins to Gondwana and the adjacent Tethys Sea. This high diversity was in part maintained by escaping the mass extinctions and biotic turnovers associated with Cenozoic climate cooling, the formation of boreal and temperate zones at high latitudes and aridification in many places at equatorial latitudes. The fresh waters of the continent are divided into 13 basin complexes, large basins consolidated as a single unit plus historically connected adjacent coastal drainages, and smaller coastal basins grouped together on the basis of biogeographic criteria. Species diversity, endemism, noteworthy groups and state of knowledge of each basin complex are described. Marine habitats around South America, both coastal and oceanic, are also described in terms of fish diversity, endemism and state of knowledge. Because of extensive land use changes, hydroelectric damming, water divergence for irrigation, urbanization, sedimentation and overfishing 4-10% of all fish species in South America face some degree of extinction risk, mainly due to habitat loss and degradation. These figures suggest that the conservation status of South American freshwater fish faunas is better than in most other regions of the world, but the marine fishes are as threatened as elsewhere. Conserving the remarkable aquatic habitats and fishes of South America is a growing challenge in face of the rapid anthropogenic changes of the 21st century, and deserves attention from conservationists and policy makers.


Science | 2015

A better way forward for Brazil's fisheries.

Fabio Di Dario; Carlos Bernardo Mascarenhas Alves; Harry Boos; Flávia Lucena Frédou; Rosangela Lessa; Michael Maia Mincarone; Marcelo Antonio Amaro Pinheiro; Carla N. M. Polaz; Roberto E. Reis; Luiz A. Rocha; Francisco M. Santana; Roberta Aguiar dos Santos; Sonia Barbosa dos Santos; Marcelo Vianna; Fábio Vieira

In December 2014, the Brazilian Minister of the Environment released the new national red lists enumerating 2113 plants and 1173 animals threatened with extinction ([ 1 ][1]). Of the 475 aquatic species on the list, 83 are commercially exploited by fisheries, mainly as by-catch. The industrial


Acta Limnologica Brasiliensia | 2013

An update on the fish composition (Teleostei) of the coastal lagoons of the Restinga de Jurubatiba National Park and the Imboassica Lagoon, northern Rio de Janeiro State

Fabio Di Dario; Ana Cristina Petry; Matheus Maia de Souza Pereira; Michael Maia Mincarone; Lorena Soares Agostinho; Ellen Martins Camara; Érica Pellegrini Caramaschi; Marcelo R. Britto

OBJETIVO: Apresentamos uma atualizacao sobre a composicao das especies de peixes do Parque Nacional da Restinga de Jurubatiba e da lagoa Imboassica, na porcao norte do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, com base em esforcos de coleta de quase duas decadas, registros historicos em museus, e uma revisao da literatura. METODOS: Os especimes foram coletados atraves de uma variedade de tecnicas, principalmente entre 1994 e 2012, e foram fixados com a utilizacao de uma solucao de formalina a 10%, sendo subsequentemente armazenados em solucao de alcool a 70%. Todos os especimes examinados foram depositados nas colecoes de peixes do Nucleo em Ecologia e Desenvolvimento Socioambiental de Macae, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (NPM), e Museu Nacional, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (MNRJ). Especies de peixes continentais (agua doce) e algumas especies marinhas ou estuarinas frequentemente coletadas foram consideradas como Residentes, enquanto especies marinhas coletadas apenas esporadicamente foram consideradas como Ocasionais. Possiveis associacoes entre a orientacao das lagoas e a composicao de peixes Residentes foram exploradas atraves de uma Analise de Correspondencia (CA). RESULTADOS: Um total de 100 especies, pertencentes a 19 ordens e 41 familias de Teleostei, foi registrado. Quando especies Residentes e Ocasionais sao consideradas, as familias Carangidae e Engraulidae, com nove e oito especies respectivamente, sao as mais representativas. Quando apenas especies Residentes sao consideradas, Gerreidae e Gobiidae, ambas com sete especies, sao as mais representativas. A lagoa Imboassica, com 76 especies, possui a maior riqueza de especies entre as lagoas incluidas neste estudo. Um total de 81 especies foi registrado no Parque Nacional da Restinga de Jurubatiba, um numero duas vezes maior do que o relatado em estudos anteriores. Uma chave de identificacao, incluindo 57 especies Residentes, tambem e apresentada. CONCLUSOES: Lagoas Paralelas foram caracterizadas por um pequeno grupo de especies continentais presumivelmente de ancestralidade marinha (Divisao Secundaria), enquanto especies marinhas foram mais representativas em lagoas Ortogonais. A maior frequencia de especies marinhas em lagoas Ortogonais pode estar associada com aberturas da barra arenosa. Conexoes temporarias e esporadicas entre lagoas Paralelas durante periodos de maior pluviosidade podem promover uma maior similaridade em termos de composicao de especies.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2010

Review of the Australian hagfishes with description of two new species of Eptatretus (Myxinidae)

Michael Maia Mincarone; Bo Fernholm

This paper revises and updates taxonomic and distributional information about hagfishes (Myxinidae) from Australia. It covers five species of the genus Eptatretus: Eptatretus cirrhatus known from eastern Australia and also distributed around New Zealand, Eptatretus longipinnis endemic to South Australia, Eptatretus strahani originally described from the Philippines and reported here as a new record from Western Australia and two new species described herein as Eptatretus alastairi and Eptatretus gomoni, both from Western Australia. Eptatretus alastairi is distinguished from all congeners by the unique combination of the following characters: six pairs of gill pouches; three-cusp multicusps on the anterior and posterior rows of cusps; anterior unicusps 9-12; posterior unicusps 8-11; total cusps 48-56; prebranchial pores 13-16; branchial pores 5-6; trunk pores 50-55; tail pores 11-13; total pores 83-88; two bilaterally symmetrical nasal-sinus papillae in the dorsal surface of the nasal sinus. Eptatretus gomoni is distinguished from all congeners by the unique combination of the following characters: eight pairs of gill pouches; three-cusp multicusps on the anterior and two-cusp multicusps on the posterior row of cusps; anterior unicusps 10-11; posterior unicusps 9-10; total cusps 50; prebranchial pores 12-13; branchial pores 7-8; trunk pores 57-58; tail pores 14-15; total pores 91-93; no nasal-sinus papillae. An identification key for the Australian species of Eptatretus is also provided.


Marine Biology Research | 2015

Megafaunal communities along a depth gradient on the tropical Brazilian continental margin

Paulo Alberto Silva da Costa; Michael Maia Mincarone; Adriana da Costa Braga; Agnaldo Silva Martins; Helena Passeri Lavrado; Manuel Haimovici; Ana Paula da Costa Falcão

Abstract The species composition, abundance and diversity patterns of the epibenthic megafauna and fish community from the tropical Brazilian continental margin were analysed based on 42 bottom trawls from the Campos Basin continental shelf and slope. Trawls were collected aboard R/V Gyre during autumn 2008 from depths of 13 to 2030 m. Overall, 452 species belonging to five main taxa were identified: teleosts (Actinopterygii) were represented by 196 species, crustaceans by 113 species and echinoderms by 108 species. These three groups contributed 92% to the 452 taxa. Several species (289) were recorded only once or twice, and the species accumulation curves showed no signs of being close to reaching asymptotic values. A tendency of increasing diversity and richness with depth was observed. Analysis of the trawls showed the existence of megafaunal assemblages significantly associated with depth and water mass. The shelf group (13–100 m) had subgroups associated with Coastal Water (CW) and South Atlantic Central Water (SACW). The upper-slope group (376–501 m) was found exclusively under the influence of SACW. The mid- and lower-slope group (978–2030 m) had two subgroups associated with the presence of Antarctic Intermediate Water and North Atlantic Deep Water. The 39 typifying species contributed 90% to the global similarity. Teleosts and squids greatly contributed to the within-group similarity over the shelf, while decapods, echinoids and galatheids contributed to the upper-slope assemblage. Deep-sea isopods and decapods mostly contributed to the mid- and lower-slope assemblages.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2014

Deep-sea bigscales, pricklefishes, gibberfishes and whalefishes (Teleostei: Stephanoberycoidei) off Brazil: new records, range extensions for the south-western Atlantic Ocean and remarks on the taxonomy of Poromitra.

Michael Maia Mincarone; F. Di Dario; Paulo Alberto Silva da Costa

The Stephanoberycoidei includes 23 genera and c. 94 species of deep-sea teleosts commonly known as bigscales, pricklefishes, gibberfishes and whalefishes. Stephanoberycoidei is one of the least known groups of deep-sea fishes, in spite of their apparent relative abundance in meso and bathypelagic depths. Nine species of the Stephanoberycoidei are reported here for the first time in Brazilian waters, and most of them represent new range extensions for the south-western Atlantic Ocean. Those species are Melamphaes polylepis, Melamphaes typhlops, Poromitra sp. and Scopeloberyx robustus (Melamphaidae), Acanthochaenus luetkenii and Stephanoberyx monae (Stephanoberycidae), Rondeletia bicolor and Rondeletia loricata (Rondeletiidae) and Gyrinomimus sp. (Cetomimidae). Occurrences of the pricklefish Scopelogadus mizolepis (Melamphaidae), the gibberfish Gibberichthys pumilus (Gibberichthyidae) and the velvet whalefish Barbourisia rufa (Barbourisiidae) are confirmed in the Brazilian exclusive economic zone, but previously published records of Poromitra capito and Melamphaes simus (Melamphaidae) in the region most likely represent misidentifications. Validities of the recently described Poromitra kukuevi and Poromitra indooceanica are discussed in light of new specimens of the genus collected in the south-western Atlantic Ocean. An identification key for the 13 species of Stephanoberycoidei reported off Brazil is also provided.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2010

A new species of hagfish (Myxinidae: Eptatretus) from Papua New Guinea.

Bo Fernholm; Michael Maia Mincarone

A new species of seven-gilled hagfish Eptatretus astrolabium (Myxinidae) is described from a 400 mm total length female trapped 1 km east from Planet Rock, Astrolabe Bay, Papua New Guinea, at c. 500 m depth. This is the first hagfish species reported from the waters around New Guinea. It can be distinguished from other hagfishes by a combination of characters including seven pairs of gill apertures, three-cusp multicusps on the anterior and posterior rows of cusps, 10 posterior unicusps, 52 total cusps, 18-19 prebranchial pores, five branchial pores, 48-49 trunk pores, 83-84 total pores and no nasal-sinus papillae.


Neotropical Ichthyology | 2015

A new deep-sea species of Barathronus Goode & Bean from Brazil, with notes on Barathronus bicolor Goode & Bean (Ophidiiformes: Aphyonidae)

Jørgen G. Nielsen; Michael Maia Mincarone; Fabio Di Dario

A new species of Barathronus (Ophidiiformes: Aphyonidae) is described from a single, mature male specimen (101 mm SL) bottom trawled on the continental slope of Rio Grande do Norte, northeastern Brazil, between 1,964 and 2,045 m depth. The new species is diagnosed among congeners by the following combination of characters: peritoneum transparent, deep-set eyes not visible, eight fangs on vomer, anal fin rays 69, predorsal length 42.0% SL, preanal length 49.5% SL, penis long, slender, and lacking a pair of lobes at its base, and presence of a ventral flexure of the anterior 2-3 vertebrae. Additionally, morphological data of three specimens of Barathronus bicolor collected in Brazilian waters are presented and compared with those from 51 specimens from the western Central Atlantic.


Check List | 2014

Fish composition (Teleostei) of the estuarine region of the Macaé River, southeastern Brazil

Paula Araújo Catelani; Ana Cristina Petry; Fabio Di Dario; Vagner Leonardo Macedo dos Santos; Michael Maia Mincarone

The first checklist of fishes of the estuary of the Macae River (Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil) and its adjacent freshwater section is presented. A total of 24,157 specimens belonging to 110 species in 44 families and 21 orders of the Teleostei were collected based on quarterly samplings, between June 2011 and March 2012. The Sciaenidae was the most representative family in species number, whereas the Ariidae, Pristigasteridae, and the invasive Clariidae predominated numerically and/or in terms of biomass. One hundred fifty-seven species of the Teleostei are now recorded in the Macae River, including 68 species previously reported from its upper and middle portions. More than 100 of them permanently or temporarily inhabit the lower 16 km of the river, suggesting that the estuary is relevant to the maintenance of the fish diversity of the region in spite of several human activities that have significantly altered its natural features.


Marine Biology Research | 2017

Marine fishes (Elasmobranchii and Teleostei) from the Santana Archipelago, a Marine Protected Area in the southwestern Atlantic

Arthur de Barros Bauer; Luciano Gomes Fischer; Fabio Di Dario; Michael Maia Mincarone

ABSTRACT The Santana Archipelago (22°23′S, 41°42′W) is located at the northern limit of the South Brazil Bight in Southeastern Brazil, a major topographic feature of the South American continental shelf relevant in terms of fisheries, biogeography and conservation. Herein, the first inventory of the ichthyofauna of the Santana Archipelago is presented, with information on the distribution and conservation status of 147 species of the Teleostei and Elasmobranchii. Sampling was performed during 15 field expeditions between March 2013 and November 2015. A total of 6931 specimens were collected using bottom trawl, beach seine, hand net and scuba diving. Records of 28 species were based on photographs, and five species were recorded through underwater sighting. The Elasmobranchii was represented by nine species in eight families and six orders, and the Teleostei by 138 species in 54 families and 26 orders. Previous records of fishes from the Archipelago consist of 18 species deposited in fish collections; therefore, 129 species are reported herein for the first time. Most (114, 77.5%) species have large geographic distributions (western Atlantic: 81 species, 55.1%; eastern and western Atlantic: 33 species, 22.4%), but seven recorded species (4.8%) are endemic to the Brazilian Province. At the Global (IUCN) level, 12 species (8.1%) are threatened with extinction. Thirteen (8.8%) species are also considered as threatened at the Regional (Brazilian) level. These results highlight the relevance of the Santana Archipelago in the Brazilian conservationist context. Possible threats to the ichtyofauna of the Archipelago are discussed, and effective measures of conservation are presented.

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Paulo Alberto Silva da Costa

Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro

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Fabio Di Dario

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Adriana da Costa Braga

Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro

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Agnaldo Silva Martins

Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

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Manuel Haimovici

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Ana Cristina Petry

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Arthur de Barros Bauer

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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F. Di Dario

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Luciano Gomes Fischer

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Roberto E. Reis

Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul

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