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Dive into the research topics where Rosa Mara Borges da Silveira is active.

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Featured researches published by Rosa Mara Borges da Silveira.


Rodriguésia | 2015

Diversity of Brazilian Fungi

Leonor Costa Maia; Aníbal A. de Carvalho Júnior; Laise de Holanda Cavalcanti; Adriana de Mello Gugliotta; Elisandro Ricardo Drechsler-Santos; André L.M. de A. Santiago; Marcela Eugenia da Silva Cáceres; Tatiana Baptista Gibertoni; André Aptroot; Admir José Giachini; Adriene Mayra Soares; Allyne C.G. Silva; Altielys Casale Magnago; Bruno Tomio Goto; Carla Rejane Sousa de Lira; Carlos A.S. Montoya; Carmen L.A. Pires-Zottarelli; Danielle Karla Alves da Silva; Dartanhã J. Soares; Diogo H.C. Rezende; Edna Dora Martins Newman Luz; Emerson Luiz Gumboski; Felipe Wartchow; Fernanda Karstedt; Fernando M. Freire; Flavia Paiva Coutinho; Georgea S. N. de Melo; Helen Maria Pontes Sotão; Iuri Goulart Baseia; Jadergudson Pereira

Ate 2010, o conhecimento sobre a diversidade de fungos do Brasil estava registrado em publicacoes esparsas de taxonomia e ecologia e em algumas poucas listas de especies. Com a publicacao do Catalogo de Plantas e Fungos do Brasil, e a disponibilizacao da lista online, tem sido possivel agregar o conhecimento disperso. A versao ora apresentada acrescenta 2.111 nomes de especies aos 3.608 listados em 2010. Sao citadas 5.719 especies de fungos distribuidas em 1.246 generos, 102 ordens e 13 divisoes, consistindo em consideravel aumento em relacao a 2010, quando estavam registrados 924 generos e 78 ordens. Predominam os Basidiomycota (2.741 especies, em 22 ordens) e Ascomycota (1.881 especies, em 41 ordens). A Mata Atlântica possui a maior quantidade de registros, com 3.017 especies, seguido pela Amazonia (1.050), Caatinga (999), Cerrado (638) e Pampa e Pantanal com 84 e 35 especies, respectivamente. A regiao Nordeste tem a maior riqueza (2.617 especies), seguida pelo Sudeste (2.252), Sul (1.995), Norte (1.301) e Centro Oeste (488 especies). Em relacao aos Estados da Federacao, Sao Paulo (1.846 especies), Pernambuco (1.611) e Rio Grande do Sul (1.377) sao os mais diversos.


Florida Entomologist | 2011

Host Fungi and Feeding Habits of Ciidae (Coleoptera) in a Subtropical Rainforest in Southern Brazil, with an Overview of Host Fungi of Neotropical Ciids

Letícia V. Graf-Peters; Cristiano Lopes-Andrade; Rosa Mara Borges da Silveira; Luciano de A. Moura; Mateus A. Reck; Flávia Nogueira de Sá

ABSTRACT Ciids or minute tree-fungus beetles (Coleoptera: Ciidae) are amongst the most abundant and speciose fungivorous beetles. They spend most of their lives in or around polypore basidiomes, which are used as a food resource and shelter by larvae and adults. The study of Neotropical ciids is incipient and there is no comprehensive work on their host fungi. The present work provides a descriptive analysis of the Ciidae fauna, its feeding habits and polypore hosts at a subtropical rainforest in São Francisco de Paula, southern Brazil. A discussion on the current knowledge of host fungi of Neotropical Ciidae is also provided. Polypore basidiomes were collected in field trips carried out monthly from Aug 2006 to Mar 2007 and kept in the laboratory for up to 3 mo, while adult beetles were continuously captured from them. Basidiomes of 376 individual fungi were collected, comprising a total of 40 species. Among these, 152 individual fungi of 33 species had ciid beetles. Twenty-one species of ciids were recognized among 233 emergent adults. Only 1 ciid species was considered monophagous, 6 were considered oligophagous, and 6 polyphagous. Eight ciid species had less than 5 occurrences, and thus could not be included in any category. There is empirical evidence, from data provided or compiled herein, indicating that some morphologically similar Ciidae species, usually comprising a species group, frequently use the same or closely related species of fungi as the host. This is the first faunistic study on Ciidae and their host fungi in the Neotropical region.


Hoehnea | 2010

Polypores from Morro Santana, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

Mauro C. Westphalen; Mateus Arduvino Reck; Rosa Mara Borges da Silveira

In the survey of polypores from Morro Santana, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, accomplished from March 2007 to March 2009, 44 species were identified. Identification keys and remarks about all the species are given. Full descriptions and illustrations of Datronia caperata, Junghuhnia polycystidifera, Oxyporus obducens, Phellinus umbrinellus, Phylloporia frutica and Tinctoporellus epimiltinus are presented. Tinctoporellus epimiltinus is a new records from Rio Grande do Sul.


Mycotaxon | 2009

Gasteroid mycobiota of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil: Tulostomataceae

Vagner Gularte Cortez; Iuri Goulart Baseia; Rosa Mara Borges da Silveira

The diversity of Tulostomataceae has been investigated in Rio Grande do Sul State in southern Brazil. Eight species belonging to two genera were recognized: Battarrea, represented by B. phalloides, and Tulostoma, represented by T. brasiliense, T. cyclophorum, T. dumeticola, T. exasperatum, T. pygmaeum, T. rickii, and T. striatum. All species are described and illustrated by line drawings and photos, including scanning electron micrographs of the basidiospores. Illustrations of the peridium structure are furnished for most taxa.


Hoehnea | 2008

Polypores from a Brazilian pine forest in Southern Brazil: pileate species

Rosa Mara Borges da Silveira; Mateus Arduvino Reck; Letícia V. Graf; Flávia Nogueira de Sá

A fungal survey in the National Forest of Sao Francisco de Paula, in southern Brazil, displayed 38 pileate polypores species (eight Hymenochaetales and 30 Polyporales). Amauroderma coltricioides T.W. Henkel, Aime & Ryvarden and Inonotus fulvomelleus Murrill are recorded for the fist time from Brazil, whereas Antrodiella multipileata Log.-Leite & J.E. Wright and Junghuhnia minuta I. Lindblad & Ryvarden are new records to Rio Grande do Sul State. Keys to species and remarks on the taxa are presented.


Mycological Progress | 2014

Fomitiporia neotropica, a new species from South America evidenced by multilocus phylogenetic analyses

Marisa de Campos Santana; Mario Amalfi; Gerardo Robledo; Rosa Mara Borges da Silveira; Cony Decock

During the revision of the Neotropical Fomitiporia species with resupinate basidiomata, several collections from southern Brazil, central Argentina, and French Guiana were found to represent an undescribed species, on the basis of molecular (DNA sequence) and additional morphological and distributional data. This taxon is described and illustrated as Fomitiporia neotropica sp. nov. The species belongs to the Fomitiporia langloisii lineage, the lineage type within Fomitiporia that so far contains only species with resupinate basidiomata spanning exclusively over the Neotropics. Fomitiporia neotropica is morphologically variable regarding the presence/absence of hymenial setae, and secondarily, regarding the pore size. It also inhabits distinct ecosystems characterized by variable moisture regimes. The range of divergent positions in the DNA sequences used in this study (ITS, 28S, partial tef1-α, and rpb2), between specimens from distant origins, are of the same magnitude as those between specimens of other related species, such as F. langloisii, F. dryophila, F. maxonii, or F. mediterranea. A key to the species from the F. langloisii lineage is given.


Kew Bulletin | 2012

Gasteroid mycobiota of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil: Calvatia, Gastropila and Langermannia (Lycoperdaceae)

Vagner G. Cortez; Iuri Goulart Baseia; Rosa Mara Borges da Silveira

SummaryThe diversity of the lycoperdaceous genera Calvatia, Gastropila and Langermannia in the mycobiota of the state of Rio Grande do Sul (southern Brazil) was investigated. These genera are considered distinct, based on the structure of the gleba and subgleba, and basidiospore characters. The following taxa were identified in the area: Calvatia cyathiformis, C. cyathiformis var. chilensis, C. fragilis, C. rugosa, Gastropila fragilis, Langermannia bicolor and L. bicolor var. cirrifera comb. et stat. nov. The generic and specific taxonomic limits are discussed, as well as their distribution and ecological data. Macroscopic photographs, line drawings of microstructures and SEM micrographs of the basidiospores are presented.


Hoehnea | 2013

Pileate polypores from Araucaria Forests in Southern Brazil

Mauro C. Westphalen; Rosa Mara Borges da Silveira

During a survey of polypores in the municipality of Sao Francisco de Paula, Rio Grande do Sul State, Brazil, 20 pileate species previously unregistered for the area were found and identified. Antrodia malicola, Coltricia aff. duportii, and Microporellus brasiliensis are new records for Rio Grande do Sul State. Comments on the 20 newly recorded species and an identification key for the studied area are presented.


Cryptogamie Mycologie | 2015

Diversity of the poroid Hymenochaetaceae (Basidiomycota) from the Atlantic Forest and Pampa in Southern Brazil

Marisa de Campos-Santana; Gerardo Robledo; Cony Decock; Rosa Mara Borges da Silveira

Abstract A synopsis of the current knowledge about the poroid Hymenochaetaceae from Southern Brazil (States Paraná, Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul) is presented. Fortytwo species belonging to nine genera are reported from the areas surveyed. An annotated, partly illustrated, checklist and identification keys are provided. The new combinations Fomitiporia bambusarum and Fulvifomes rhytiphloeus are also proposed. Atlantic Forest / Hymenochaetales / Neotropics / Taxonomy


Mycologia | 2014

Multigene phylogeny of the Phallales (Phallomycetidae, Agaricomycetes) focusing on some previously unrepresented genera

Larissa Trierveiler-Pereira; Rosa Mara Borges da Silveira; Kentaro Hosaka

Phylogenetic relationships within the Phallales were estimated via combined sequences: nuclear ribosomal large subunit (LSU), second largest subunit of RNA polymerase (rpb2), and mitochondrial ATPase subunit 6 (atp6). The ingroup is represented by 62 taxa comprising 18 genera and 44 species, including members of the Clathraceae, Claustulaceae, Gastrosporiaceae, Lysuraceae, Phallaceae and Protophallaceae. Sixty-one new sequences were generated, including tropical and subtropical taxa. This is one of the first studies discussing the phylogenetic placement of Abrachium, Aseroë, Blumenavia, Gastrosporium, Jansia and Xylophallus. Gastrosporiaceae was demonstrated to be sister to Phallaceae and an emended description of the order is presented. Aseroë was demonstrated to be polyphyletic and as a result, A. arachnoidea is transferred to Lysurus.

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Dive into the Rosa Mara Borges da Silveira's collaboration.

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Larissa Trierveiler-Pereira

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Vagner Gularte Cortez

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Mauro C. Westphalen

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Juliano M. Baltazar

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Mateus Arduvino Reck

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Iuri Goulart Baseia

Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte

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Altielys Casale Magnago

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Mario Rajchenberg

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Vagner G. Cortez

Federal University of Paraná

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Gilberto Coelho

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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