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Dive into the research topics where Sérgio Henriques is active.

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Featured researches published by Sérgio Henriques.


Insect Conservation and Diversity | 2008

Rapid biodiversity assessment of spiders (Araneae) using semi-quantitative sampling: a case study in a Mediterranean forest

Pedro Cardoso; Nikolaj Scharff; Clara Gaspar; Sérgio Henriques; Rui Carvalho; Pedro Humberto Castro; Jesper B. Schmidt; Israel de Faria e Silva; Tamás Szüts; Alberto Castro; Luís Carlos Crespo

Abstract.u2003 1 A thorough inventory of a Mediterranean oak forest spider fauna carried out during 2 weeks is presented. It used a semi‐quantitative sampling protocol to collect comparable data in a rigorous, rapid and efficient way. Four hundred and eighty samples of one person‐hour of work each were collected, mostly inside a delimited 1‐ha plot. 2 Sampling yielded 10 808 adult spiders representing 204 species. The number of species present at the site was estimated using five different richness estimators (Chao1, Chao2, Jackknife1, Jackknife2 and Michaelis–Menten). The estimates ranged from 232 to 260. The most reliable estimates were provided by the Chao estimators and the least reliable was obtained with the Michaelis–Menten. However, the behavior of the Michaelis–Menten accumulation curves supports the use of this estimator as a stopping or reliability rule. 3 Nineteen per cent of the species were represented by a single specimen (singletons) and 12% by just two specimens (doubletons). The presence of locally rare species in this exhaustive inventory is discussed. 4 The effects of day, time of day, collector experience and sampling method on the number of adults, number of species and taxonomic composition of the samples are assessed. Sampling method is the single most important factor influencing the results and all methods generate unique species. Time of day is also important, in such way that each combination of method and time of day may be considered as a different method in itself. There are insignificant differences between the collectors in terms of species and number of adult spiders collected. Despite the high collecting effort, the species richness and abundance of spiders remained constant throughout the sampling period.


Journal of Insect Conservation | 2009

Species richness and composition assessment of spiders in a Mediterranean scrubland

Pedro Cardoso; Sérgio Henriques; Clara Gaspar; Luís Carlos Crespo; Rui Carvalho; Jesper B. Schmidt; Pedro Sousa; Tamás Szűts

Intensive fieldwork has been undertaken in Portugal in order to develop a standardized and optimized sampling protocol for Mediterranean spiders. The present study had the objectives of testing the use of semi-quantitative sampling for obtaining an exhaustive species richness assessment of spiders and testing the effects of day, time of day, collector and sampling method on the collected species richness and composition of a Mediterranean scrubland. The collecting summed 224 samples corresponding to one person-hour of effective fieldwork each. In total, 115 species were captured, of which 110 were recorded inside a delimited one-hectare plot, corresponding to more than 70% of the about 160 estimated species. Although no estimator reached the asymptote, the Michaelis-Menten curve behaviour indicates that the estimated richness should be accurate. Most different sampling approaches (day, time of day, collector and sampling method) were found to influence richness, abundance or composition of the samples to some extent, although sampling method had the strongest influence whereas “collector” showed no effect at all. The results support the idea that the only variables that need to be controlled in similar protocols are the sampling methods and the time of day when each method is executed. We conclude that populations in structurally simple habitats present narrower peaks of adult abundance, which implies higher percentages of juveniles in samples. Finally, results also indicate that habitats with a relatively simple structure like scrublands may require as much sampling effort, in order to reach similar proportions of captured species in relation to the estimated richness, as habitats that are much more complex.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Arachnids Secrete a Fluid over Their Adhesive Pads

Anne M. Peattie; Jan-Henning Dirks; Sérgio Henriques; Walter Federle

Background Many arachnids possess adhesive pads on their feet that help them climb smooth surfaces and capture prey. Spider and gecko adhesives have converged on a branched, hairy structure, which theoretically allows them to adhere solely by dry (solid-solid) intermolecular interactions. Indeed, the consensus in the literature is that spiders and their smooth-padded relatives, the solifugids, adhere without the aid of a secretion. Methodology and Principal Findings We investigated the adhesive contact zone of living spiders, solifugids and mites using interference reflection microscopy, which allows the detection of thin liquid films. Like insects, all the arachnids we studied left behind hydrophobic fluid footprints on glass (mean refractive index: 1.48–1.50; contact angle: 3.7–11.2°). Fluid was not always secreted continuously, suggesting that pads can function in both wet and dry modes. We measured the attachment forces of single adhesive setae from tarantulas (Grammostola rosea) by attaching them to a bending beam with a known spring constant and filming the resulting deflection. Individual spider setae showed a lower static friction at rest (26%±2.8 SE of the peak friction) than single gecko setae (Thecadactylus rapicauda; 96%±1.7 SE). This may be explained by the fact that spider setae continued to release fluid after isolation from the animal, lubricating the contact zone. Significance This finding implies that tarsal secretions occur within all major groups of terrestrial arthropods with adhesive pads. The presence of liquid in an adhesive contact zone has important consequences for attachment performance, improving adhesion to rough surfaces and introducing rate-dependent effects. Our results leave geckos and anoles as the only known representatives of truly dry adhesive pads in nature. Engineers seeking biological inspiration for synthetic adhesives should consider whether model species with fluid secretions are appropriate to their design goals.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2011

Biogeographic patterns of spiders in coastal dunes along a gradient of mediterraneity

José Carvalho; Pedro Cardoso; Luís Carlos Crespo; Sérgio Henriques; Rui Carvalho; Pedro Gomes

The Iberian Peninsula is recognized for its high levels of species richness, rarity and endemicity. Our main aim was to study biogeographic patterns of spiders in coastal dunes along a gradient of mediterraneity. Distance-decay of similarity, nestedness and co-occurrence metrics were used to explore spider’ distribution patterns. A similarity analysis was performed in order to obtain a hierarchical classification of sites. Indicator species analysis was conducted to identify indicator species for the various clustering levels of the site typology. The differentiation among assemblages was further explored by non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) and analysis of similarities (ANOSIM). Assemblages’ similarity among sites decreased with climatic/geographic distance. The observed values of nestedness metrics (T and NODF) were not significant, while the co-occurrence metrics (C-score and Checkerboard units) were higher than expected by chance. Cluster analysis showed that spider’ assemblages were structured along a gradient from North to South, forming four geographically distinct clusters. ANOSIM tests and NMDS supported the biogeographic patterns identified by cluster analysis. Several indicator species were found for the different levels of the hierarchic site typology. Spider assemblages revealed a high degree of biogeographical structure along the Atlantic coast of the Iberian Peninsula. The coast is a “biogeographic crossroad”, encompassing faunistic elements of different origins. The hierarchic typology of sites is generally consistent with the major biogeographic regions and the thermoclimatic belts recognized for the region. Our results indicate that the climatic gradient and historic factors played a key role in the current spiders’ biogeographic patterns.


Insect Conservation and Diversity | 2012

Determinants of spider species richness in coastal dunes along a gradient of mediterraneity

José Carvalho; Pedro Cardoso; Luís Carlos Crespo; Sérgio Henriques; Rui Carvalho; Pedro Gomes

Abstract.u2002 1.u2002The Iberian Peninsula is one of the most relevant areas in terms of species richness, rarity and endemism in the Mediterranean Basin. Using spiders as a model, we studied the relative importance of environmental and non‐environmental spatial variation along a gradient of mediterraneity on the western coast of the Iberian Peninsula.


Biodiversity Data Journal | 2014

Sphodromantis viridis (Forskal, 1775): New for Portugal and new records of the rare and small mantids Apteromantis aptera (Fuente, 1894) and Perlamantis allibertii Guérin-Méneville, 1843 in the country (Mantodea: Mantidae and Amorphoscelidae)

Eduardo Marabuto; Ivo Rodrigues; Sérgio Henriques

Abstract Several new records are presented on some of the least known mantis species in the Iberian Peninsula. From data collected in Portugal, their analysis has proven to represent an important advancement in the knowledge of this group of insects for the country and the Western Mediterranean area. Twenty new citations provide a better understanding on the distribution of the crepuscular species Perlamantis allibertii, the IUCN red listed Apteromantis aptera and the first Portuguese records of Sphodromantis viridis, extending their western limits of occurrence in Europe. The data thus gathered emphasizes the need to invest in biodiversity assessment for increased knowledge on species distribution and phenology but also for monitoring over time, essential to better ascertaining ecosystem services, the effects of climate change and habitat conservation.


Biodiversity Data Journal | 2018

Species conservation profiles of a random sample of world spiders I: Agelenidae to Filistatidae

Sini Seppälä; Sérgio Henriques; Michael Draney; Stefan Foord; Alastair Gibbons; Luz Gomez; Sarah Kariko; Jagoba Malumbres-Olarte; Marc Milne; Cor Vink; Pedro Cardoso

Abstract Background The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species is the most widely used information source on the extinction risk of species. One of the uses of the Red List is to evaluate and monitor the state of biodiversity and a possible approach for this purpose is the Red List Index (RLI). For many taxa, mainly hyperdiverse groups, it is not possible within available resources to assess all known species. In such cases, a random sample of species might be selected for assessment and the results derived from it extrapolated for the entire group - the Sampled Red List Index (SRLI). With the current contribution and the three following papers, we intend to create the first point in time of a future spider SRLI encompassing 200 species distributed across the world. New information A sample of 200 species of spiders were randomly selected from the World Spider Catalogue, an updated global database containing all recognised species names for the group. The 200 selected species where divided taxonomically at the family level and the familes were ordered alphabetically. In this publication, we present the conservation profiles of 46 species belonging to the famillies alphabetically arranged between Agelenidae and Filistatidae, which encompassed Agelenidae, Amaurobiidae, Anyphaenidae, Araneidae, Archaeidae, Barychelidae, Clubionidae, Corinnidae, Ctenidae, Ctenizidae, Cyatholipidae, Dictynidae, Dysderidae, Eresidae and Filistatidae.


Acta Oecologica-international Journal of Ecology | 2008

Assessing spider species richness and composition in Mediterranean cork oak forests

Pedro Cardoso; Clara Gaspar; Luis C. Pereira; Israel de Faria e Silva; Sérgio Henriques; Ricardo R. da Silva; Pedro Sousa


Diversity and Distributions | 2011

Determinants of beta diversity of spiders in coastal dunes along a gradient of mediterraneity

José Carvalho; Pedro Cardoso; Luís Carlos Crespo; Sérgio Henriques; Rui Carvalho; Pedro Gomes


Diversity | 2009

Ad-Hoc vs. Standardized and Optimized Arthropod Diversity Sampling

Pedro Cardoso; Luís Carlos Crespo; Rui Carvalho; Ana C. Rufino; Sérgio Henriques

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Pedro Cardoso

American Museum of Natural History

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Jagoba Malumbres-Olarte

Lincoln University (Pennsylvania)

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Clara Gaspar

University of Sheffield

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Pedro Cardoso

American Museum of Natural History

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