Paulo Inácio Prado
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Paulo Inácio Prado.
Science | 2007
Carlos Guilherme Becker; Carlos Fonseca; Célio F. B. Haddad; Rômulo Fernandes Batista; Paulo Inácio Prado
The worldwide decline in amphibians has been attributed to several causes, especially habitat loss and disease. We identified a further factor, namely “habitat split”—defined as human-induced disconnection between habitats used by different life history stages of a species—which forces forest-associated amphibians with aquatic larvae to make risky breeding migrations between suitable aquatic and terrestrial habitats. In the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, we found that habitat split negatively affects the richness of species with aquatic larvae but not the richness of species with terrestrial development (the latter can complete their life cycle inside forest remnants). This mechanism helps to explain why species with aquatic larvae have the highest incidence of population decline. These findings reinforce the need for the conservation and restoration of riparian vegetation.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Renata Pardini; Adriana de Arruda Bueno; Toby A. Gardner; Paulo Inácio Prado; Jean Paul Metzger
Ecological systems are vulnerable to irreversible change when key system properties are pushed over thresholds, resulting in the loss of resilience and the precipitation of a regime shift. Perhaps the most important of such properties in human-modified landscapes is the total amount of remnant native vegetation. In a seminal study Andrén proposed the existence of a fragmentation threshold in the total amount of remnant vegetation, below which landscape-scale connectivity is eroded and local species richness and abundance become dependent on patch size. Despite the fact that species patch-area effects have been a mainstay of conservation science there has yet to be a robust empirical evaluation of this hypothesis. Here we present and test a new conceptual model describing the mechanisms and consequences of biodiversity change in fragmented landscapes, identifying the fragmentation threshold as a first step in a positive feedback mechanism that has the capacity to impair ecological resilience, and drive a regime shift in biodiversity. The model considers that local extinction risk is defined by patch size, and immigration rates by landscape vegetation cover, and that the recovery from local species losses depends upon the landscape species pool. Using a unique dataset on the distribution of non-volant small mammals across replicate landscapes in the Atlantic forest of Brazil, we found strong evidence for our model predictions - that patch-area effects are evident only at intermediate levels of total forest cover, where landscape diversity is still high and opportunities for enhancing biodiversity through local management are greatest. Furthermore, high levels of forest loss can push native biota through an extinction filter, and result in the abrupt, landscape-wide loss of forest-specialist taxa, ecological resilience and management effectiveness. The proposed model links hitherto distinct theoretical approaches within a single framework, providing a powerful tool for analysing the potential effectiveness of management interventions.
Conservation Biology | 2012
Alexandre Camargo Martensen; Milton Cezar Ribeiro; Cristina Banks-Leite; Paulo Inácio Prado; Jean Paul Metzger
Theoretical and empirical studies demonstrate that the total amount of forest and the size and connectivity of fragments have nonlinear effects on species survival. We tested how habitat amount and configuration affect understory bird species richness and abundance. We used mist nets (almost 34,000 net hours) to sample birds in 53 Atlantic Forest fragments in southeastern Brazil. Fragments were distributed among 3 10,800-ha landscapes. The remaining forest in these landscapes was below (10% forest cover), similar to (30%), and above (50%) the theoretical fragmentation threshold (approximately 30%) below which the effects of fragmentation should be intensified. Species-richness estimates were significantly higher (F= 3715, p = 0.00) where 50% of the forest remained, which suggests a species occurrence threshold of 30-50% forest, which is higher than usually occurs (<30%). Relations between forest cover and species richness differed depending on species sensitivity to forest conversion and fragmentation. For less sensitive species, species richness decreased as forest cover increased, whereas for highly sensitive species the opposite occurred. For sensitive species, species richness and the amount of forest cover were positively related, particularly when forest cover was 30-50%. Fragment size and connectivity were related to species richness and abundance in all landscapes, not just below the 30% threshold. Where 10% of the forest remained, fragment size was more related to species richness and abundance than connectivity. However, the relation between connectivity and species richness and abundance was stronger where 30% of the landscape was forested. Where 50% of the landscape was forested, fragment size and connectivity were both related to species richness and abundance. Our results demonstrated a rapid loss of species at relatively high levels of forest cover (30-50%). Highly sensitive species were 3-4 times more common above the 30-50% threshold than below it; however, our results do not support a unique fragmentation threshold.
Conservation Biology | 2010
C. Guilherme Becker; Carlos Fonseca; Célio F. B. Haddad; Paulo Inácio Prado
Most amphibian species have biphasic life histories and undergo an ontogenetic shift from aquatic to terrestrial habitats. In deforested landscapes, streams and forest fragments are frequently disjunct, jeopardizing the life cycle of forest-associated amphibians with aquatic larvae. We tested the impact of habitat split--defined as human-induced disconnection between habitats used by different life-history stages of a species--on four forest-associated amphibian species in a severely fragmented landscape of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. We surveyed amphibians in forest fragments with and without streams (referred to as wet and dry fragments, respectively), including the adjacent grass-field matrix. Our comparison of capture rates in dry fragments and nearby streams in the matrix allowed us to evaluate the number of individuals that engaged in high-risk migrations through nonforested habitats. Adult amphibians moved from dry fragments to matrix streams at the beginning of the rainy season, reproduced, and returned at the end of the breeding period. Juveniles of the year moved to dry fragments along with adults. These risky reproductive migrations through nonforested habitats that expose individuals to dehydration, predation, and other hazards may cause population declines in dry fragments. Indeed, capture rates were significantly lower in dry fragments compared with wet fragments. Declining amphibians would strongly benefit from investments in the conservation and restoration of riparian vegetation and corridors linking breeding and nonbreeding areas.
Ecological Entomology | 2005
Carlos Roberto Fonseca; Paulo Inácio Prado; Mário Almeida-Neto; Umberto Kubota; Thomas M. Lewinsohn
Abstract. 1. The ways in which a soil fertility gradient affects three trophic level food webs defined by plants of the family Asteraceae, flower‐head herbivores, and their parasitoids was investigated. It was tested how the fertility gradient alters: (i) the abundance and richness of plants, herbivores, and their parasitoids, (ii) the herbivore–plant ratio, and (iii) the connectance of the plant–herbivore community matrix.
Plant Systematics and Evolution | 2001
Flavia Fuchs de Jesus; Vera Nisaka Solferini; João Semir; Paulo Inácio Prado
Abstract. Proteopsis argentea (Asteraceae, Vernonieae) is a perennial herb endemic to the “campos rupestres” of the Espinhaço Range in Minas Gerais, Brazil, with fragmented populational distribution. Eleven populations were sampled, throughout the entire distribution of the species, and assayed for isozyme variation. Low intra-population genetic diversity was found (P = 19.2; A = 1.30; He = 0.058) whereas species level diversity was higher (P = 55.5, A = 2.0, He = 0.093). The most geographically isolated population showed exclusive alleles at two loci, whereas two populations less than 2 km apart from each other showed inverted frequencies for two alleles. Mean genetic identity was high (I = 0.974), but the large Fst (0.30) indicates that the species could lose an important part of its genetic variation with the extinction of a single population. Our findings indicate that geographic isolation alone cannot explain population differentiation: localized pollinator behaviour and selection, for example, may be contributing to the patterns observed.
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2013
Gabriel Zorello Laporta; Paulo Inácio Prado; Roberto André Kraenkel; Renato M. Coutinho; Maria Anice Mureb Sallum
Background Plasmodium vivax is a widely distributed, neglected parasite that can cause malaria and death in tropical areas. It is associated with an estimated 80–300 million cases of malaria worldwide. Brazilian tropical rain forests encompass host- and vector-rich communities, in which two hypothetical mechanisms could play a role in the dynamics of malaria transmission. The first mechanism is the dilution effect caused by presence of wild warm-blooded animals, which can act as dead-end hosts to Plasmodium parasites. The second is diffuse mosquito vector competition, in which vector and non-vector mosquito species compete for blood feeding upon a defensive host. Considering that the World Health Organization Malaria Eradication Research Agenda calls for novel strategies to eliminate malaria transmission locally, we used mathematical modeling to assess those two mechanisms in a pristine tropical rain forest, where the primary vector is present but malaria is absent. Methodology/Principal Findings The Ross–Macdonald model and a biodiversity-oriented model were parameterized using newly collected data and data from the literature. The basic reproduction number () estimated employing Ross–Macdonald model indicated that malaria cases occur in the study location. However, no malaria cases have been reported since 1980. In contrast, the biodiversity-oriented model corroborated the absence of malaria transmission. In addition, the diffuse competition mechanism was negatively correlated with the risk of malaria transmission, which suggests a protective effect provided by the forest ecosystem. There is a non-linear, unimodal correlation between the mechanism of dead-end transmission of parasites and the risk of malaria transmission, suggesting a protective effect only under certain circumstances (e.g., a high abundance of wild warm-blooded animals). Conclusions/Significance To achieve biological conservation and to eliminate Plasmodium parasites in human populations, the World Health Organization Malaria Eradication Research Agenda should take biodiversity issues into consideration.
Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology | 2004
Fernanda Francischetti Piza; Paulo Inácio Prado; Gilson Paulo Manfio
Phylogenetic and statistical analyses of 16S rRNA gene libraries were used for the investigation of actinobacterial communities present in two tropical estuarine sediments (Santos-São Vicente estuary, Brazil). The libraries were constructed from samples collected at the brackish end of the estuary, highly hydrocarbon-contaminated, and at the marine end, uncontaminated. Clones from the marine end of the estuary were all related to sequences from non-cultured Actinobacteria and unidentified bacteria recovered from a wide range of environmental samples, whereas clones from the brackish end were mainly related to sequences from cultured Actinobacteria. Statistical analyses showed that the community recovered from the hydrocarbon-contaminated sediment sample, at the brackish end, was less diverse than the uncontaminated one, at the marine end, and that the communities from the two libraries were differently structured, suggesting that these may have not originated from the same community. The recognition of the spatial pattern of actinobacterial distribution in a natural environment is a first step towards understanding the way these communities are organized, providing valuable data for further investigations of their taxonomic and functional diversity.Phylogenetic and statistical analyses of 16S rRNA gene libraries were used for the investigation of actinobacterial communities present in two tropical estuarine sediments (Santos-São Vicente estuary, Brazil). The libraries were constructed from samples collected at the brackish end of the estuary, highly hydrocarbon-contaminated, and at the marine end, uncontaminated. Clones from the marine end of the estuary were all related to sequences from non-cultured Actinobacteria and unidentified bacteria recovered from a wide range of environmental samples, whereas clones from the brackish end were mainly related to sequences from cultured Actinobacteria. Statistical analyses showed that the community recovered from the hydrocarbon-contaminated sediment sample, at the brackish end, was less diverse than the uncontaminated one, at the marine end, and that the communities from the two libraries were differently structured, suggesting that these may have not originated from the same community. The recognition of the spatial pattern of actinobacterial distribution in a natural environment is a first step towards understanding the way these communities are organized, providing valuable data for further investigations of their taxonomic and functional diversity.
Biota Neotropica | 2005
Adriana M. Almeida; Carlos Roberto Fonseca; Paulo Inácio Prado; Mário Almeida-Neto; Soraia Diniz; Umberto Kubota; Marina Reiter Braun; Rafael L. G. Raimundo; Luciano A. Anjos; Tehra Gomes Mendonça; Silvia M. Futada; Thomas M. Lewinsohn
De abril a maio de 2000 a 2002 oito localidades com remanescentes de cerrados sensu stricto no estado de Sao Paulo foram amostradas para o levantamento das especies de asteraceas, uma das familias mais representativas da flora herbaceo-arbustiva nestas formacoes. Foram feitas 23 amostragens e cada area de estudo foi amostrada em media uma vez por ano durante o pico de floracao das plantas. Ao todo foram obtidas 399 amostras, nas quais foram reconhecidas 89 morfoespecies (74 foram identificadas como especies conhecidas). Quarenta por cento das especies foram registradas uma unica vez (unicatas), indicando um grande numero de especies raras. Apenas 10% das especies que ocorreram em mais de uma amostra foram obtidas de uma mesma area (sobreposicao espacial) ou de um mesmo ano de estudo (sobreposicao temporal). A riqueza de especies em cada area foi estimada por meio de transecoes e depois comparada a riqueza total observada em cada area de estudo, sendo esta na maioria das vezes mais alta que a estimada com base nas transecoes. A lista de especies obtida para os cerrados amostrados foi comparada a outras 24 listas publicadas para cerrados no Brasil. Embora a maioria das especies mais comuns tenha coincidido, oito especies (11% das especies identificadas) nao constam das listas publicadas. Concluimos que as areas de cerrado sensu stricto estudadas no estado de Sao Paulo encontram-se isoladas, com uma grande parte da flora herbaceo-arbustiva composta por varias especies raras e exclusivas. Diante deste quadro, sugerimos que a manutencao da biodiversidade de Asteraceae depende da conservacao de todo o conjunto de remanescentes de cerrado do estado de Sao Paulo.
Neotropical Entomology | 2006
Adriana M. Almeida; Carlos Roberto Fonseca; Paulo Inácio Prado; Mário Almeida-Neto; Soraia Diniz; Umberto Kubota; Marina Reiter Braun; Rafael L. G. Raimundo; Luciano A. Anjos; Tehra Gomes Mendonça; Silvia M. Futada; Thomas M. Lewinsohn
A survey of the endophagous insects fauna associated to Asteraceae capitula was carried out from 2000 to 2002 in eight cerrado sensu stricto sites located in the Brazilian state of Sdo Paulo. Sixty-four endophagous species of Diptera and Lepidoptera were recorded from 49 asteracean host plants. Approximately half of the species were obtained from a single locality, with a large proportion emerging from a single sample (unicates). Thirty percent of the species were singletons (i.e. only one individual was recorded). The large proportion of rare species suggests a high species turnover among localities. Lepidopteran species were recorded on more host species than dipterans, confirming their more polyphagous food habit, also observed in other Brazilian biomes and in Europe. We conclude that the studied cerrado localities, all within São Paulo State, are isolated with its invertebrate fauna composed of many rare and exclusive species. We suggest that the maintenance of Asteraceae biodiversity and their endophagous insects depend on the conservation of all cerrado remnants in the state.