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Dive into the research topics where Patrícia Nunes-Silva is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrícia Nunes-Silva.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Absence of Leishmaniinae and Nosematidae in stingless bees.

Patrícia Nunes-Silva; Niels Piot; Ivan Meeus; Betina Blochtein; Guy Smagghe

Bee pollination is an indispensable component of global food production and plays a crucial role in sustainable agriculture. The worldwide decline of bee populations, including wild pollinators, poses a threat to this system. However, most studies to date are situated in temperate regions where Apini and Bombini are very abundant pollinators. Tropical and subtropical regions where stingless bees (Apidae: Meliponini) are generally very common, are often overlooked. These bees also face pressure due to deforestation and agricultural intensification as well as the growing use and spread of exotic pollinators as Apis mellifera and Bombus species. The loss or decline of this important bee tribe would have a large impact on their provided ecosystem services, in both wild and agricultural landscapes. The importance of pollinator diseases, which can contribute to decline, has not been investigated so far in this bee tribe. Here we report on the first large pathogen screening of Meliponini species in southern Brazil. Remarkably we observed that there was an absence of Leishmaniinae and Nosematidae, and a very low occurrence of Apicystis bombi. Our data on disease prevalence in both understudied areas and species, can greatly improve our knowledge on the distribution of pathogens among bee species.


Annals of The Entomological Society of America | 2016

Temperature Rise and Its Influence on the Cessation of Diapause in Plebeia droryana, a Eusocial Bee (Hymenoptera: Apidae)

Charles Fernando dos Santos; Patrícia Nunes-Silva; Betina Blochtein

Abstract Climate warming in the coming decades may affect diapause in insect species which use it to survive unfavorable winter conditions. Plebeia droryana (Friese) (Hymenoptera: Apidae: Meliponini) is a highly eusocial bee species that exhibits reproductive diapause and inhabits southern South America where winter temperatures may fall below 10°C, or even below 0°C in extreme years. In this paper, we evaluate whether P. droryana might terminate diapause during winter under laboratory conditions. We initially kept colonies of P. droryana at 8°C in a biochemical oxygen demand chamber, and then raised the temperature by 2°C every 3 d until the cessation of diapause was detected, as indicated by the onset of brood cell building and subsequent egg-laying by queens. We found that the termination of diapause in P. droryana could be achieved at temperatures between 16°C and 22°C, resulting in typical postdiapause brood cell building and egg-laying rates. Our binomial generalized linear mixed model indicated that only temperature, but no time or temperature–time interaction, explained the probability of termination of diapause in P. droryana. Again, only temperature, but no time or temperature–time interaction, significantly affected amount of brood cell built postdiapause in this species. These data suggest that the levels of predicted climate warming in the geographic range of P. droryana over the coming decades will probably result in these populations abandoning diapause behavior. These results have important implications regarding the ecological service of crop and wild plant pollination provided by this species.


Journal of Economic Entomology | 2015

Stingless Bees as Alternative Pollinators of Canola

Sidia Witter; Patrícia Nunes-Silva; Bruno Brito Lisboa; Flávia Pereira Tirelli; Aroni Sattler; Betina Blochtein

ABSTRACT Alternative pollinators can ensure pollination services if the availability of the managed or most common pollinator is compromised. In this study, the behavior and pollination efficiency of Apis mellifera L. and two species of stingless bees, Plebeia emerina Friese and Tetragonisca fiebrigi Schwarz, were evaluated and compared in flowers of Brassica napus L. ‘Hyola 61’. A. mellifera was an efficient pollinator when collecting nectar because it effectively touched the reproductive organs of the flower. In contrast, stingless bees were efficient pollinators only when collecting pollen. The number of pollen grains deposited on the stigma after a single visit by worker bees of the three species was greater than the number of grains resulting from pollination without the bee visits. On average, the three species deposited enough pollen grains to fertilize all of the flower ovules. A. mellifera and P. emerina had similar pollination efficiency because no significant differences were observed in the characteristics of the siliques produced. Although T. fiebrigi is also an effective pollinator, the seed mass produced by their pollination was lower. Native bees promoted similar rates of fruit set compared with A. mellifera. Thus, P. emerina has potential to be used for pollination in canola crops.


Environmental Entomology | 2015

Climate Warming May Threaten Reproductive Diapause of a Highly Eusocial Bee

Charles Fernando dos Santos; André L. Acosta; Patrícia Nunes-Silva; Antonio Mauro Saraiva; Betina Blochtein

ABSTRACT Climate changes are predicted to affect the diapause of many insect species around the world adversely. In this context, bees are of interest due to their pollination services. In southern Brazil, the highly eusocial bee species Plebeia droryana (Friese) (Hymenoptera: Apidae: Meliponini) exhibits reproductive diapause in response to the regions rigorous winters. That diapause is characterized by a temporary interruption in brood cell construction by nurse bees and egg-laying by the queen, regardless of other internal tasks underway in the nests. In this study, we evaluated whether P. droryana enter diapause under experimental conditions. P. droryana colonies were kept in a germination chamber, and the temperature was progressively reduced from 20°C over a period of a few weeks until diapause was detected. Additionally, we also estimated the environmental conditions in the actual geographic range occupied by P. droryana and modeled it for predicted changes in climate up to the year 2080. Our findings indicate that P. droryana enter diapause between 10 and 8°C. We also found that the current minimum winter temperature (10.1°C, median) in the distributional range of P. droryana will probably rise (13.4°C, median). Thus, if our experimental data are somewhat accurate, ∼36% of the southern Brazilian P. droryana population may be active during the expected milder winter months in 2080. In this scenario, there may be a larger demand for pollen and nectar for that bee species. Greater conservation efforts will be required to preserve P. droryana populations and keep them viable in the coming decades.


Brazilian Journal of Biology | 2014

Comparative study of the floral biology and of the response of productivity to insect visitation in two rapeseed cultivars (Brassica napus L.) in Rio Grande do Sul

Betina Blochtein; Patrícia Nunes-Silva; Rosana Halinski; La Lopes; S Witter

Planning the artificial pollination of agricultural crops requires knowledge of the floral biology and reproductive system of the crop in question. Many studies have shown that rapeseed (Brassica napus Linnaeus) is self-compatible and self-pollinated, but its productivity may be increased by insect visitation. In the present study, the floral biology and the response of productivity to insect visitation of two rapeseed cultivars (Hyola 420 and Hyola 61) were analyzed and compared in three regions of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. The rapeseed flowers presented three stages during anthesis, with the time periods varying between the cultivars. Both cultivars are self-compatible, but free visitation of insects increased productivity by 17% in the Hyola 420 cultivar and by approximately 30% in the Hyola 61 cultivar. Therefore, it is concluded that the cultivar Hyola 61 is more dependent on insect pollination than Hyola 420.


Apidologie | 2018

Temporal changes in genetic variability in three bumblebee species from Rio Grande do Sul, South Brazil

Kevin Maebe; Laura Golsteyn; Patrícia Nunes-Silva; Betina Blochtein; Guy Smagghe

In order to protect biodiversity, conservation genetics are of great importance. Until now, a few population genetic studies of Neotropical bumblebees are available but studies of temporal stability in genetic diversity are lacking. Here, genetic variability of three South Brazilian species Bombus bellicosus, B. pauloensis, and B. morio was investigated over time. Hereto, museum collection specimens of 1946 until 2012, from eight locations in Rio Grande do Sul, were genotyped at 16 microsatellite loci. During an additional sampling in the foraging season of 2015, no bumblebees could be collected possibly due to the super El Niño of 2015–2016. Our results on the collection specimens demonstrated a significantly higher genetic diversity in B. morio than in B. pauloensis. Genetic variability in B. pauloensis gradually and significantly decreased over time from 1946 until 2012; while in B. morio, genetic variability remained stable until the last time period (2010–2012). For B. bellicosus, not enough data was available. Although the studied populations became more vulnerable over time, for the conservation of Neotropical bumblebees, still more information is needed and could include more frequent monitoring of bumblebees. Adding B. bellicosus to the Brazilian list of threatened species is suggested.


International Journal of Biometeorology | 2018

Short communication: thermal regimes in hollow stems of herbaceous plants—concepts and models

Peter G. Kevan; Patrícia Nunes-Silva; Rangarajan Sudarsan

Although there have been studies of the temperature regimes within flowers, micrometeorology within stems seems to have been overlooked. We present ideas, hypotheses, and a diagrammatic model on the biophysical and thermodynamic processes that interact in complex ways to result in elevated temperature regimes within hollow stems of herbaceous plants. We consider the effects of the ambient air around the stems, the possible importance of insolation, and greenhouse effects as influenced by stems’ orientation and optical properties, i.e., reflection, absorption, emissivity, translucence, pigmentation, and thermal conductivity. We propose that greenhouse effects contribute significantly to and are influenced by the above phenomena as well as by the gross anatomy (volume:surface ratio; wall thickness), evapotranspiration, and the thermal properties of the gas mixture in the lumen. We provide examples of those elevated temperatures that can be several degrees Celsius above the temperature of the surrounding atmosphere.


Sociobiology | 2014

Diapause in Stingless Bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae)

Charles Fernando dos Santos; Patrícia Nunes-Silva; Rosana Halinski; Betina Blochtein


Journal of pollination ecology | 2013

THE BEHAVIOUR OF BOMBUS IMPATIENS (A PIDAE , BOMBINI ) ON TOMATO (LYCOPERSICON ESCULENTUM MILL ., SOLANACEAE ) FLOWERS : POLLINATION AND REWARD PERCEPTION

Patrícia Nunes-Silva; Michael Hnrcir; Les Shipp; Vera Lucia Imperatriz-Fonseca; Peter G. Kevan; Agri-Food Canada


Journal of pollination ecology | 2014

The bee community and its relationship to canola productivity in homogenous agricultural areas

Sidia Witter; Betina Blochtein; Patrícia Nunes-Silva; Flávia Pereira Tirelli; Bruno Brito Lisboa; Carolina Bremm; Rosane Lanzer

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Betina Blochtein

Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul

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Charles Fernando dos Santos

Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul

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Flávia Pereira Tirelli

Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul

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Rosana Halinski

Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul

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