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Dive into the research topics where Raimundo Cosme de Oliveira is active.

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Featured researches published by Raimundo Cosme de Oliveira.


Nature | 2016

Anthropogenic disturbance in tropical forests can double biodiversity loss from deforestation

Jos Barlow; Gareth D. Lennox; Joice Ferreira; Erika Berenguer; Alexander C. Lees; Ralph Mac Nally; James R. Thomson; Silvio Frosini de Barros Ferraz; Julio Louzada; Victor Hugo Fonseca Oliveira; Luke Parry; Ricardo R. C. Solar; Ima Célia Guimarães Vieira; Luiz E. O. C. Aragão; Rodrigo Anzolin Begotti; Rodrigo Fagundes Braga; Thiago Moreira Cardoso; Raimundo Cosme de Oliveira; Carlos Souza; Nárgila G. Moura; Sâmia Nunes; João Victor Siqueira; Renata Pardini; Juliana M. Silveira; Fernando Z. Vaz-de-Mello; Ruan Carlo Stülpen Veiga; Adriano Venturieri; Toby A. Gardner

Concerted political attention has focused on reducing deforestation, and this remains the cornerstone of most biodiversity conservation strategies. However, maintaining forest cover may not reduce anthropogenic forest disturbances, which are rarely considered in conservation programmes. These disturbances occur both within forests, including selective logging and wildfires, and at the landscape level, through edge, area and isolation effects. Until now, the combined effect of anthropogenic disturbance on the conservation value of remnant primary forests has remained unknown, making it impossible to assess the relative importance of forest disturbance and forest loss. Here we address these knowledge gaps using a large data set of plants, birds and dung beetles (1,538, 460 and 156 species, respectively) sampled in 36 catchments in the Brazilian state of Pará. Catchments retaining more than 69–80% forest cover lost more conservation value from disturbance than from forest loss. For example, a 20% loss of primary forest, the maximum level of deforestation allowed on Amazonian properties under Brazil’s Forest Code, resulted in a 39–54% loss of conservation value: 96–171% more than expected without considering disturbance effects. We extrapolated the disturbance-mediated loss of conservation value throughout Pará, which covers 25% of the Brazilian Amazon. Although disturbed forests retained considerable conservation value compared with deforested areas, the toll of disturbance outside Pará’s strictly protected areas is equivalent to the loss of 92,000–139,000 km2 of primary forest. Even this lowest estimate is greater than the area deforested across the entire Brazilian Amazon between 2006 and 2015 (ref. 10). Species distribution models showed that both landscape and within-forest disturbances contributed to biodiversity loss, with the greatest negative effects on species of high conservation and functional value. These results demonstrate an urgent need for policy interventions that go beyond the maintenance of forest cover to safeguard the hyper-diversity of tropical forest ecosystems.


Ecosystems | 2004

The Effect of Phosphorus Availability on Decomposition Dynamics in a Seasonal Lowland Amazonian Forest

Megan McGroddy; Whendee L. Silver; Raimundo Cosme de Oliveira

Once the weathering of parent material ceases to supply significant inputs of phosphorus (P), vegetation depends largely on the decomposition of litter and soil organic matter and the associated mineralization of organic P forms to provide an adequate supply of this essential nutrient. At the same time, the decomposition of litter is often characterized by the immobilization of nutrients, suggesting that nutrient availability is a limiting factor for this process. Immobilization temporally decouples nutrient mineralization from decomposition and may play an important role in nutrient retention in low-nutrient ecosystems. In this study, we used a common substrate to study the effects of native soil P availability as well as artificially elevated P availability on litter decomposition rates in a lowland Amazonian rain forest on highly weathered soils. Although both available and total soil P pools varied almost three fold across treatments, there was no significant difference in decomposition rates among treatments. Decomposition was rapid in all treatments, with approximately 50% of the mass lost over the 11-month study period. Carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) remaining and C:N ratios were the most effective predictors of amount of mass remaining at each time point in all treatments. Fertilized treatments showed significant amounts of P immobilization (P < 0.001). By the final collection point, the remaining litter contained a quantity equivalent to two-thirds of the initial P and N, even though only half of the original mass remained. In these soils, immobilization of nutrients in the microbial biomass, late in the decomposition process, effectively prevents the loss of essential nutrients through leaching or occlusion in the mineral soil.


Ecology Letters | 2015

Linking canopy leaf area and light environments with tree size distributions to explain Amazon forest demography

Scott C. Stark; Brian J. Enquist; Scott R. Saleska; Veronika Leitold; Juliana Schietti; Marcos Longo; Luciana F. Alves; Plínio B. Camargo; Raimundo Cosme de Oliveira

Forest biophysical structure - the arrangement and frequency of leaves and stems - emerges from growth, mortality and space filling dynamics, and may also influence those dynamics by structuring light environments. To investigate this interaction, we developed models that could use LiDAR remote sensing to link leaf area profiles with tree size distributions, comparing models which did not (metabolic scaling theory) and did allow light to influence this link. We found that a light environment-to-structure link was necessary to accurately simulate tree size distributions and canopy structure in two contrasting Amazon forests. Partitioning leaf area profiles into size-class components, we found that demographic rates were related to variation in light absorption, with mortality increasing relative to growth in higher light, consistent with a light environment feedback to size distributions. Combining LiDAR with models linking forest structure and demography offers a high-throughput approach to advance theory and investigate climate-relevant tropical forest change.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Structural Dynamics of Tropical Moist Forest Gaps.

M. O. Hunter; Michael Keller; Douglas C. Morton; Bruce D. Cook; Michael A. Lefsky; Mark J. Ducey; Scott R. Saleska; Raimundo Cosme de Oliveira; Juliana Schietti

Gap phase dynamics are the dominant mode of forest turnover in tropical forests. However, gap processes are infrequently studied at the landscape scale. Airborne lidar data offer detailed information on three-dimensional forest structure, providing a means to characterize fine-scale (1 m) processes in tropical forests over large areas. Lidar-based estimates of forest structure (top down) differ from traditional field measurements (bottom up), and necessitate clear-cut definitions unencumbered by the wisdom of a field observer. We offer a new definition of a forest gap that is driven by forest dynamics and consistent with precise ranging measurements from airborne lidar data and tall, multi-layered tropical forest structure. We used 1000 ha of multi-temporal lidar data (2008, 2012) at two sites, the Tapajos National Forest and Ducke Reserve, to study gap dynamics in the Brazilian Amazon. Here, we identified dynamic gaps as contiguous areas of significant growth, that correspond to areas > 10 m2, with height <10 m. Applying the dynamic definition at both sites, we found over twice as much area in gap at Tapajos National Forest (4.8 %) as compared to Ducke Reserve (2.0 %). On average, gaps were smaller at Ducke Reserve and closed slightly more rapidly, with estimated height gains of 1.2 m y-1 versus 1.1 m y-1 at Tapajos. At the Tapajos site, height growth in gap centers was greater than the average height gain in gaps (1.3 m y-1 versus 1.1 m y-1). Rates of height growth between lidar acquisitions reflect the interplay between gap edge mortality, horizontal ingrowth and gap size at the two sites. We estimated that approximately 10 % of gap area closed via horizontal ingrowth at Ducke Reserve as opposed to 6 % at Tapajos National Forest. Height loss (interpreted as repeat damage and/or mortality) and horizontal ingrowth accounted for similar proportions of gap area at Ducke Reserve (13 % and 10 %, respectively). At Tapajos, height loss had a much stronger signal (23 % versus 6 %) within gaps. Both sites demonstrate limited gap contagiousness defined by an increase in the likelihood of mortality in the immediate vicinity (~6 m) of existing gaps.


Revista Brasileira De Ciencia Do Solo | 2009

The effect of plantation silviculture on soil organic matter and particle-size fractions in Amazonia

Troy Patrick Beldini; Kenneth L. McNabb; B. Graeme Lockaby; Felipe G. Sanchez; Osvaldo Navegantes-Câncio; Raimundo Cosme de Oliveira

Eucalyptus grandis and other clonal plantations cover about 3.5 million ha in Brazil. The impacts of intensively-managed short-rotation forestry on soil aggregate structure and Carbon (C) dynamics are largely undocumented in tropical ecosystems. Long-term sustainability of these systems is probably in part linked to maintenance of soil organic matter and good soil structure and aggregation, especially in areas with low-fertility soils. This study investigated soil aggregate dynamics on a clay soil and a sandy soil, each with a Eucalyptus plantation and an adjacent primary forest. Silvicultural management did not reduce total C stocks, and did not change soil bulk density. Aggregates of the managed soils did not decrease in mass as hypothesized, which indicates that soil cultivation in 6 year cycles did not cause large decreases in soil aggregation in either soil texture. Silt, clay, and C of the sandy plantation soil shifted to greater aggregate protection, which may represent a decrease in C availability. The organic matter in the clay plantation soil increased in the fractions considered less protected while this shift from C to structural forms considered more protected was not observed.


Global Change Biology | 2014

A large-scale field assessment of carbon stocks in human-modified tropical forests

Erika Berenguer; Joice Ferreira; Toby A. Gardner; Luiz Eduardo Oliveira Cruz Aragão; Plínio Barbosa de Camargo; Carlos Eduardo Pellegrino Cerri; Mariana Durigan; Raimundo Cosme de Oliveira; Ima Célia Guimarães Vieira; Jos Barlow


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2003

Influence of soil texture on carbon dynamics and storage potential in tropical forest soils of Amazonia

Everaldo de Carvalho Conceição Telles; Plínio Barbosa de Camargo; Luiz A. Martinelli; Susan E. Trumbore; Enir Salazar da Costa; Joaquim dos Santos; Niro Higuchi; Raimundo Cosme de Oliveira


Ecology Letters | 2012

Amazon forest carbon dynamics predicted by profiles of canopy leaf area and light environment

Scott C. Stark; Veronika Leitold; Jin L. Wu; M. O. Hunter; Carolina V. Castilho; Flávia R. C. Costa; Sean M. McMahon; Geoffrey G. Parker; Mônica Takako Shimabukuro; Michael A. Lefsky; Michael Keller; Luciana F. Alves; Juliana Schietti; Yosio Edemir Shimabukuro; Diego O. Brandão; Tara K. Woodcock; Niro Higuchi; Plínio Barbosa de Camargo; Raimundo Cosme de Oliveira; Scott R. Saleska


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Spatial and temporal rainfall variability near the Amazon‐Tapajós confluence

David R. Fitzjarrald; Ricardo K. Sakai; Osvaldo L. L. Moraes; Raimundo Cosme de Oliveira; Otávio Costa Acevedo; Matthew J. Czikowsky; Troy Patrick Beldini


Water Resources Research | 2012

Root niche separation can explain avoidance of seasonal drought stress and vulnerability of overstory trees to extended drought in a mature Amazonian forest

Valeriy Y. Ivanov; Lucy R. Hutyra; Steven C. Wofsy; J. William Munger; Scott R. Saleska; Raimundo Cosme de Oliveira; Plínio Barbosa de Camargo

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Patrick M. Crill

University of New Hampshire

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M. O. Hunter

University of New Hampshire

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Michael Palace

University of New Hampshire

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