Miodeli Nogueira Júnior
Federal University of Paraíba
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Publication
Featured researches published by Miodeli Nogueira Júnior.
Zootaxa | 2014
Renato Mitsuo Nagata; Miodeli Nogueira Júnior; Maria A. Haddad
This study is the first faunistic inventory of hydromedusae from the inner continental shelf of Paraná State. We describe the composition of hydromedusae species, collected with bottom-trawl and Hensen nets, in campaigns carried out from 1997 to 2006. We analyzed 17,797 specimens from 578 samples, and provide descriptions, photographs, and information about the biology of the 22 species found. All species had previous records from the Brazilian coast; however, this is the first record of Bougainvillia frondosa, Ectopleura dumortieri, Cirrholovenia tetranema, Eucheilota maculata, Gossea brachymera, Solmaris corona, and Amphogona apsteini for the coast of Paraná. Most species are typical of tropical and subtropical coastal waters from the South Brazilian Bight. However, Turritopsis nutricula, Niobia dendrotentaculata, Solmaris corona, and Aglaura hemistoma are abundant in oceanic waters, and Olindias sambaquiensis and Solmaris corona are associated with colder waters (<20°C). The current number of species known for the state is 26. Additional collection effort is needed in regions not sampled in this work, such as bays and offshore waters.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Miodeli Nogueira Júnior; Frederico Pereira Brandini; Juan Carlos Ugaz Codina
The diel vertical dynamics of gelatinous zooplankton in physically stratified conditions over the 100-m isobath (~110 km offshore) in the South Brazilian Bight (26°45’S; 47°33’W) and the relationship to hydrography and food availability were analyzed by sampling every six hours over two consecutive days. Zooplankton samples were taken in three depth strata, following the vertical structure of the water column, with cold waters between 17 and 13.1°C, influenced by the South Atlantic Central Water (SACW) in the lower layer (>70 m); warm (>20°C) Tropical Water in the upper 40 m; and an intermediate thermocline with a deep chlorophyll-a maximum layer (0.3–0.6 mg m-3). Two distinct general patterns were observed, emphasizing the role of (i) physical and (ii) biological processes: (i) a strong influence of the vertical stratification, with most zooplankton absent or little abundant in the lower layer. The influence of the cold SACW on the bottom layer apparently restricted the vertical occupation of most species, which typically inhabit epipelagic warm waters. Even among migratory species, only a few (Aglaura hemistoma, Abylopsis tetragona eudoxids, Beroe sp., Thalia democratica, Salpa fusiformis) crossed the thermocline and reached the bottom layer. (ii) A general tendency of partial migrations, with variable intensity depending on the different species and developmental stages; populations tended to be more widely distributed through the water column during daylight, and to become more aggregated in the upper layer during the night, which can be explained based on the idea of the “hunger-satiation hypothesis”, maximizing feeding and minimizing the chances of being predated.
Marine Biodiversity | 2016
Miodeli Nogueira Júnior; Frederico Pereira Brandini; Maria A. Haddad
Three Aequorea macrodactyla (Brandt 1835) medusae were found along the São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro coasts. The specimens clearly match the diagnosis of the species, as they have tentacular bulbs with a large abaxial keel and a prominent excretory pore and papilla. The number of tentacles is approximately three times smaller than the number of radial canals. In the southwestern Atlantic, this species was previously known from Patagonian waters and this is the first record from the non-temperate southwestern Atlantic. Additionally, a thorough review of meristic data is provided for this hydrozoan species.
Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2015
Ana Caroline Cabral; Miodeli Nogueira Júnior; Renato Mitsuo Nagata; Frederico Pereira Brandini
We analysed 267 zooplankton samples collected in the South Brazilian Bight (SBB; 23–27°S) to determine whether hydroids, typically benthic, are common components of the pelagic SBB. Two species, Clytia arborescens , recorded for the first time in the Atlantic Ocean, and Clytia sp. were identified. While these planktonic hydroids were frequent or relatively so in shallow shelf waters (~23% of the samples 100 m), abundances were low (up to 61 hydranths m −3 ) suggesting a low trophic impact. Such colonies are probably fragments of benthic colonies detached by storms and/or tides. Given the good condition of the coenosarc, existence of gastric content, and presence of reproductive structures, development of these species appears to be normal in the pelagic environment. Existence in the plankton may increase their capacity for dispersion.
Zootaxa | 2018
Allana Stéphanie Tavares Cutrim; Emanuelle Fernandes Praseres; Jhully Mickaelly Vermont Silva Conceição; Zafira da Silva de Almeida; Miodeli Nogueira Júnior; Verônica Maria de Oliveira
Eulepethidae is one of the least diverse families of scale polychaetes, with only 23 species described thus far. In this study we describe an additional species of Grubeulepis from unconsolidated substrata from Maranhão, tropical Brazil (ca. 2°S). Grubeulepis serrata sp. nov. differs from other species of the family due to the presence of one pair of eyes, 14 pairs of branchiae, posterior lamellae beginning in the 27th segment, with hooked upper notochaetae and serrated outer edge acicular neurochaeta in the 3rd segment. The diagnosis of the genus formerly included species with 10-13 pairs of branchiae, and thus is modified to accommodate the 14 pairs of branchiae from the new species described here. Grubeulepis serrata sp. nov. shares with Grubeulepis mexicana (Berkeley Berkeley 1939) the number of lateral processes of the 12th elytra, the segment of the foliaceous lamellae and the presence of acicular neurochaeta in the 3rd segment, but they differ in the number of branchiae pairs, eyes and the notochaetae shape. Grubeulepis serrata sp. nov. shares with Grubeulepis geayi (Fauvel 1918) the spiny notochaetae with spoon-shaped distal end, but differ in the hooked upper notochaetae, amount of lateral processes, and elytra articulation.
Papéis Avulsos de Zoologia | 2018
Everton Giachini Tosetto; Sigrid Neumann-Leitão; Miodeli Nogueira Júnior
Specimens of Pegantha laevis H.B. Bigelow, 1909 and Pegantha triloba Haeckel, 1879 were found in oceanic waters off the northern Brazilian coast. The former species is clearly distinct due to the thickness and shape of peripheral channels, while the latter is recognized mainly due to the exumbrellar furrows and long otoporpae. This study represents the first actual record of P. laevis inside the Brazilian Economic Exclusive zone, since previous reports were far away from the coast, and clarifies the presence of P. triloba off Brazil. Key-Words. Jellyfish; Cnidaria; Hydrozoa; Taxonomy; Biodiversity; South Atlantic.
Zootaxa | 2016
Otto M. P. Oliveira; Thaís P. Miranda; Enilma M. Araujo; Patricia Ayón; Cristina Maria Cedeño-Posso; Amancay A. Cepeda-Mercado; Pablo Córdova; Amanda Ferreira Cunha; Gabriel Genzano; Maria A. Haddad; Hermes Mianzan; Alvaro Esteves Migotto; Lucília S. Miranda; André C. Morandini; Renato Mitsuo Nagata; Karine B. Nascimento; Miodeli Nogueira Júnior; Sergio Palma; Javier Quiñones; Carolina S. Rodriguez; Fabrizio Scarabino; Agustín Schiariti; Sérgio N. Stampar; Valquiria B. Tronolone; Antonio C. Marques
Zootaxa | 2012
Miodeli Nogueira Júnior
Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2014
Renato Mitsuo Nagata; Miodeli Nogueira Júnior; Frederico Pereira Brandini; Maria A. Haddad
Marine Biology | 2015
Miodeli Nogueira Júnior; Luciana Mabel Diaz Briz; Maria A. Haddad