Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Rosana Gentile is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Rosana Gentile.


Mammalia | 1993

A five-year population study of an assemblage of small mammals in Southeastern Brazil

Rui Cerqueira; Rosana Gentile; F.A.S. Fernandez; P.S. D’Andrea

Une etude par capture-marquage et recapture de petits mammiferes a ete realisee pendant cinq and dans une vegetation arbustive cotiere bresilienne (restinga). Cinq especes de petits mammiferes, rongeurs et marsupiaux, ont ete capturees et caracterisees par rapport a leur dynamique de population. Akodon cursor et Philander opossum ont presente les plus grandes densites de population, qui sont correlees avec le recrutement. Ils ont aussi presente un recrutement irregulier, des fluctuations de populations frequentes avec des coefficients de variation eleves, des taux de survie bas la plupart du temps et des durees de residence courtes


Mammalia | 2004

Population dynamics of four marsupials and its relation to resource production in the Atlantic forest in southeastern Brazil

Rosana Gentile; Ricardo Finotti; Vitor Rademaker; Rui Cerqueira

Variations in mammal population sizes can be related to the availability and abundance of their resources. This study reports the population dynamics of four didelphid marsupials (Didelphis aurita, Philander frenatus, Marmosops incanus and Metachirus nudicaudatus) and its relation to litter fall, used as a measure of resource production. A capture-mark-recapture study (CMR) was carried out in a disturbed area of the Atlantic forest in Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil, in three grids in the locality of Garrafão from April 1997 to February 1999, every other month. Litter was collected every month using 15 squared litter traps of 0.25 m2 in the grids (5 in each grid). Leaves, twigs, reproductive structures and total litter fall rates were calculated as tons ha–1month–1. Population densities, survivorship and recruitment rates were estimated. For D. aurita and P. frenata, population densities were correlated positively only with litter production. For M. incanus, population density was correlated positively with survivorship, litter production and negatively with rainfall. M. nudicaudatus population density was correlated only with recruitment and twigs abundance. The availability of fruits and arthropods had a large influence in the proximal causes on the variation of small mammal populations. In forests where there is an adequate rate of decomposition of the litter, we may understand how resources influence population variation, and litter becomes the base of resources for such marsupials in the Atlantic forest.


Brazilian Journal of Biology | 2005

Relation between small-mammal species composition and anthropic variables in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest

N. Olifiers; Rosana Gentile; J. T. Fiszon

Anthropic activities are frequently related in many ways to forest fragmentation and alteration of natural communities. In this study, we correlate the presence of hunting, tourism activity, agriculture/pasturing, and the distance of the study sites to the nearest human residences with the species composition of small Atlantic forest mammals. To do this, we utilize a multiple regression analysis of similarity matrices. The presence of both agriculture/pasturing and human residences near the study sites proved to be determinant factors in species composition of small mammals of the studied areas. Working with socioeconomic variables related directly with the study site could be a reliable and a direct way to predict the influence of human presence and entailed activity on small mammal communities.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2006

An ecological field study of the water-rat Nectomys squamipes as a wild reservoir indicator of Schistosoma mansoni transmission in an endemic area

Rosana Gentile; Sócrates F. Costa-Neto; Margareth Maria Lessa Gonçalves; Simone T. Bonecker; Fabiano Araújo Fernandes; Juberlan Silva Garcia; Marisa da Silveira Soares; Paulo S. D'Andrea; José Mauro Peralta; Luis Rey

Small mammals are found naturally infected by Schistosoma mansoni, becoming a confounding factor for control programs of schistosomiasis in endemic areas. The aims of this study were: to investigate the infection rates by S. mansoni on the water-rat Nectomys squamipes during four years in endemic areas of Sumidouro, state of Rio de Janeiro, using mark-recapture technique; to compare two diagnostic methods for schistosomiasis; and to evaluate the effects of the chemotherapy in the human infected population on the rodent infection rates. The rodent infection rates of S. mansoni increased when rodent population sizes were lower. Coprology and serology results presented the same trends along time and were correlated. Serology could detect recent infection, including the false negatives in the coprology. The chemotherapy in the humans could not interrupt the rodent infection. Rodents can increase the schistosomiaisis transmission where it already exists, they probably maintain the transmission cycle in the nature and can be considered as biological indicators of the transmission sites of this parasite since they are highly susceptible to infection. The water-rats may present different levels of importance in the transmission dynamics of S. mansoni infection cycle for each area, and can be considered important wild-reservoirs of this human disease.


Brazilian Journal of Biology | 2007

Small mammal populations of an agroecosystem in the Atlantic Forest domain, southeastern Brazil.

Paulo S. D'Andrea; Rosana Gentile; Luana S. Maroja; Fabiano Araújo Fernandes; Coura R; Rui Cerqueira

This study reports 2 years of the population dynamics and reproduction of a small mammal community using the removal method. The study was conducted in a rural area of the Atlantic Forest, in Sumidouro, Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil. The population sizes, age structure and reproduction were studied for the four most common species in the study area. The overall diversity was 1.67 and ranged between 0.8 to 1.67. The species richness was 13 considering the whole study. The most abundant species were the rodents Nectomys squamipes (n = 133), Akodon cursor (n = 74), Oligoryzomys nigripes (n = 25) and the marsupials Didelphis aurita (n = 58) and Philander frenatus (n = 50). Seven other rodents were captured once: Necromys lasiurus, Akodon montensis, Sooretamys angouya, Oecomys catherine, Oxymycterus judex, Euryzygomatomys spinosus and Trinomys iheringi. There were higher peaks for diversity and species richness during the winter (dry) months, probably due to higher food availability. The marsupials had a seasonal reproduction with highest population sizes at the end of the rainy seasons. Nectomys squamipes reproduced mostly during rainy periods. Akodon cursor reproduced predominantly in the winter with the highest population peaks occurring during this season. The analysis of the population dynamics of the rodent species indicated that no species behaved as an agricultural pest, probably due to the heterogeneous landscape of high rotativity of vegetable cultivation. Rodent populations were more susceptible to the removal procedure than marsupial ones.


Journal of Helminthology | 2006

Helminth communities of Nectomys squamipes naturally infected by the exotic trematode Schistosoma mansoni in southeastern Brazil

A. Maldonado Júnior; Rosana Gentile; C.C. Fernandes-Moraes; P.S. D'Andrea; Reinalda Marisa Lanfredi; Luis Rey

The water rat Nectomys squamipes is endemic in Brazil and found naturally infected with Schistosoma mansoni. Helminth communities, their prevalences, intensity of infection and abundance in N. squamipes in an endemic area of schistosomiasis in the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil were studied. Four species of nematodes (Physaloptera bispiculata, Syphacia venteli, Hassalstrongylus epsilon and Litomosoides chagasfilhoi) were recovered in 85.3%, two trematodes (Schistosoma mansoni and Echinostoma paraensei) in 38.8% and one cestode species (Raillietina sp.) in 1.7% of rats examined. Rats were infected with up to five helminth species each, and these were highly aggregated in distribution. For H. epsilon and S. venteli, intensities and abundances were higher in adult male and subadult female hosts, respectively. Hassaltrongylus epsilon, P. bispiculata, S. venteli and S. mansoni were classified as dominant species, L. chagasfilhoi and E. paraensei as co-dominant and Raillietina sp. as subordinated. No significant correlation was found in the intensity of infecton between each pair of helminth species. Schistosoma mansoni was not related to any other helminth species according to their infection rates, althougth S. mansoni was well established in the natural helminth comunity of the water rat.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2014

Population Ecology of Hantavirus Rodent Hosts in Southern Brazil

Bernardo R. Teixeira; Nathalie Loureiro; Liana Strecht; Rosana Gentile; Renata Carvalho de Oliveira; Alexandro Guterres; Jorlan Fernandes; Luciana H. B. V. Mattos; Sonia Mara Raboni; Giselia Rubio; Cibele R. Bonvicino; Claudia Nunes Duarte dos Santos; Elba Regina Sampaio de Lemos; Paulo S. D'Andrea

In this study we analyze population dynamics of hantavirus rodent hosts and prevalence of infection over a 2-year period in Southern Brazil, a region with a high incidence of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome. The 14 small mammal species captured were composed of 10 rodents and four marsupials, the six most abundant species being Akodon serrensis, Oxymycterus judex, Akodon montensis, Akodon paranaensis, Oligoryzomys nigripes, and Thaptomys nigrita. These species displayed a similar pattern with increasing population sizes in fall/winter caused by recruitment and both, increase in reproductive activity and higher hantavirus prevalence in spring/summer. Specific associations between A. montensis/Jaborá Virus (JABV) and O. nigripes/Juquitiba-like Virus (JUQV-like) and spillover infections between A. paranaensis/JABV, A. serrensis/JABV, and A. paranaensis/JUQV-like were observed. Spillover infection in secondary hosts seems to play an important role in maintaining JABV and JUQV-like in the hantavirus sylvatic cycle mainly during periods of low prevalence in primary hosts.


Journal of Helminthology | 2010

Variation in the helminth community structure of Thrichomys pachyurus (Rodentia: Echimyidae) in two sub-regions of the Brazilian Pantanal: the effects of land use and seasonality.

R.O. Simões; Rosana Gentile; V. Rademaker; P. D'Andrea; H. Herrera; T. Freitas; R.M. Lanfredi; Arnaldo Maldonado

The Pantanal is a large ecosystem located in South America. This preserved area is seasonally flooded due to abundant rainfall during the summer and the subsequent overflow of the Paraguai River. In this paper, we examine the helminth community structure in the wild rodent Thrichomys pachyurus during the wet and dry seasons in two locations of the preserved and cattle ranching areas in the Southern Pantanal. We identified 12 species of helminth, and, although we did not find any differences in species richness between locations within the Pantanal, we found that richness was higher during the wet season. Helminth species were largely aggregated in both farm locations and during seasons. The most common helminth species were more abundant during the dry season than during the wet season, which may have been due to the increased habitat availability and rodent population increase. The intensity of the infection also followed the same pattern for most helminths. The trichostrongylids (Heligmostrongylus crucifer, H. almeidai and Pudica cercomysi) were dominant at both farm locations. The land use of each area was not correlated with helminth diversity. However, species composition of the helminth community of T. pachyurus differed between locations and may be correlated with environmental differences between the habitats. The seasonality of the Pantanal was highly correlated with helminth parasitism in T. pachyurus.


Acta Tropica | 2008

Brazilian studies on the genetics of Schistosoma mansoni.

Rosana Gentile; Guilherme Oliveira

The parasite Schistosoma is known to exhibit variations among species, strains and genera, such as, the levels of infectivity, pathogenicity and immunogenicity. These factors may differ among parasite populations according to the local epidemiological conditions. Diversity observed in Schistosoma mansoni from different geographical regions or within individuals of the same region can be determined by differences in the genotype of each parasite strain. However, until recently, finding adequate genetic markers to investigate infectivity or other epidemiological characteristics of a transmission area proved difficult. Several studies have been conducted to evaluate the genetic variability of S. mansoni, using different techniques. Intraspecific variability was observed in morphological characters, isoenzyme studies, mtDNA, ribosomal gene probes, random amplification of polymorphic DNA (RAPD) and microsatellites. The sequencing of the S. mansoni genome was the most important achievement concerning genetic approaches to the study of this parasite and may improve the development of drugs, vaccines and diagnostics of schistosomiasis. The knowledge of the genetic structure of schistosome populations in relation to epidemiological data and host variability is essential for the understanding of the epidemiology of the disease and the design of control strategies.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2015

Angiostrongylus cantonensis infection in molluscs in the municipality of São Gonçalo, a metropolitan area of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: role of the invasive species Achatina fulica in parasite transmission dynamics

Ana Pm Oliveira; Rosana Gentile; Arnaldo Maldonado Júnior; Eduardo José Lopes Torres; Silvana Carvalho Thiengo

The aim of this study was to analyse the infection dynamics ofAngiostrongylus cantonensis in its possible intermediate hosts over two years in an urban area in the state of Rio de Janeiro where the presence ofA. cantonensis had been previously recorded in molluscs. Four of the seven mollusc species found in the study were exotic.Bradybaena similaris was the most abundant, followed byAchatina fulica, Streptaxis sp., Subulina octona, Bulimulus tenuissimus, Sarasinula linguaeformis and Leptinaria unilamellata. Only A. fulica and B. similaris were parasitised by A. cantonensis and both presented co-infection with other helminths. The prevalence of A. cantonensisin A. fulica was more than 50% throughout the study. There was an inverse correlation between the population size ofA. fulica and the prevalence of A. cantonensis and abundance of the latter was negatively related to rainfall. The overall prevalence of A. cantonensis in B. similariswas 24.6%. A. fulica was the most important intermediary host of A. cantonensis in the studied area andB. similaris was secondary in importance for A. cantonensis transmission dynamics.

Collaboration


Dive into the Rosana Gentile's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rui Cerqueira

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Maja Kajin

Rio de Janeiro State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marcus Vinícius Vieira

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jairo Pinheiro

Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marilene de Farias Brito

Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge