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Dive into the research topics where Thaís P. Miranda is active.

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Featured researches published by Thaís P. Miranda.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Towards a phylogenetic classification of Leptothecata (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa)

Maximiliano M. Maronna; Thaís P. Miranda; Álvaro L. Peña Cantero; Marcos S. Barbeitos; Antonio C. Marques

Leptothecata are hydrozoans whose hydranths are covered by perisarc and gonophores and whose medusae bear gonads on their radial canals. They develop complex polypoid colonies and exhibit considerable morphological variation among species with respect to growth, defensive structures and mode of development. For instance, several lineages within this order have lost the medusa stage. Depending on the author, traditional taxonomy in hydrozoans may be either polyp- or medusa-oriented. Therefore, the absence of the latter stage in some lineages may lead to very different classification schemes. Molecular data have proved useful in elucidating this taxonomic challenge. We analyzed a super matrix of new and published rRNA gene sequences (16S, 18S and 28S), employing newly proposed methods to measure branch support and improve phylogenetic signal. Our analysis recovered new clades not recognized by traditional taxonomy and corroborated some recently proposed taxa. We offer a thorough taxonomic revision of the Leptothecata, erecting new orders, suborders, infraorders and families. We also discuss the origination and diversification dynamics of the group from a macroevolutionary perspective.


Zootaxa | 2015

Areas of endemism in the Southwestern Atlantic Ocean based on the distribution of benthic hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa).

Thaís P. Miranda; Gabriel Genzano; Antonio C. Marques

Geographic distributions of 130 species of benthic hydroids were used to infer areas of endemism in the Southwestern Atlantic Ocean (SWAO, between 22°S and 55°S). Endemicity Analysis (EA) was carried out with the software NDM VNDM, using a 2° x 2° grid with different values of F (F = 0.5 and F = 1.0) for inferred presence. Hypothesized areas of endemism (16 with F = 0.5 and 13 with F = 1.0) formed three generalized patterns: (1) Tropical, (2) Subtropical, and (3) disjunctions along Tropical and Subtropical areas. Areas of endemism estimated here were compared with provinces, ecoregions and areas of endemism previously defined (but not based on algorithmic analysis) in the literature. Ecological and historical aspects that are potentially relevant for the SWAO realm were contrasted, related and discussed to areas of endemism. This is the first study to apply NDM VNDM to the marine realm and one of the few that focuses on the SWAO.


Zootaxa | 2012

The genus Hybocodon (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) in the southwestern Atlantic Ocean, with a revision of the species recorded from the area

Carolina S. Rodriguez; Thaís P. Miranda; Antonio C. Marques; Hermes Mianzan; Gabriel Genzano

The genus Hybocodon includes seven species, two of which (H. prolifer and H. unicus) have been recorded in the southwestern Atlantic. These reports were based on the medusa stage and only a few diagnostic characters were described, rendering some of these records rather doubtful. Additionally, H. prolifer has a boreal distribution, suggesting that the reports of this species from the southern hemisphere could correspond to other Hybocodon species. Recently, we sampled benthic and planktonic specimens of Hybocodon in the southwestern Atlantic and two species were identified: polyps and medusae of Hybocodon chilensis Hartlaub, 1905, and medusae of Hybocodon unicus (Browne, 1902). These samples allowed us to review and discuss the geographical distribution and validity of previous records of Hybocodon species for this area. We conclude that H. chilensis and H. unicus are the only Hybocodon species presently known for the southwestern Atlantic Ocean.


Biota Neotropica | 2011

Fauna de hidroides (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) da região de Bombinhas, Santa Catarina, Brasil

Thaís P. Miranda; Maria A. Haddad; Vanessa Shimabukuro; Janete Dubiaski‐Silva; Antonio C. Marques

The benthic hydroid fauna from shallow subtidal zone of six localities in the municipality of Bombinhas (state of Santa Catarina, Brazil) was surveyed and its morphology analysed. Cnidome was also examined when it was necessary for species identification. Twenty five morphospecies were found, from which five (20%) were recorded for the first time in Santa Catarina State and three (12%) were recorded for the first time in the south region of Brazil. There was a 12% and 5.5% increase in the records of benthic hydroid species for Santa Catarina and southern Brazilian coast, respectively.


Systematics and Biodiversity | 2017

Comparison between Parsimony Analysis of Endemicity (PAE), Endemicity Analysis (EA), and an alternative coding of Three-Distribution Statements based on hypothetical distributions

Adriana Morales-Guerrero; Thaís P. Miranda; Antonio C. Marques

Areas of endemism are identified by a variety of methods, none of which is universally accepted. Performance of each method depends upon the variables chosen. Here, we compare Parsimony Analysis of Endemicity (PAE), Endemicity Analysis (EA), and a new coding method that we propose, Three-Distribution Statements (3DS). We rate performance based on the ability to identify hypothetical predefined patterns that represent non-conflicting, nested, and overlapping areas of endemism. Additionally, we also compared properties commonly used in analyses, such as shape and size of the area and the number of taxa involved. We found that 3DS has the best performance in retrieving predefined areas. EA is the only method that resolved a completely overlapping pattern, but it also found spurious patterns. Resolution with PAE always had intermediate precision and efficiency and so is not the best option for analysis of endemism. We recommend the use of 3DS together with EA as the best available option for hypothesizing areas of endemism.


Journal of Natural History | 2017

Species of Antarctoscyphus Peña Cantero, García Carrascosa and Vervoort, 1997 (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa: Symplectoscyphidae) collected by US Antarctic expeditions: biogeographic implications

Álvaro L. Peña Cantero; Estela Roig Ferrer; Thaís P. Miranda

ABSTRACT Antarctoscyphus is one of the most characteristic genera of Antarctic benthic hydroids, with nine of the 10 known species considered to be endemic to the Antarctic; only Antarctoscyphus elongatus is also present in the sub-Antarctic region of Kerguelen. Accordingly, the genus was considered to have an Antarctic–Kerguelen distribution. Here we present the results of the study of the species of Antarctoscyphus collected from different Antarctic areas and from the Magellan region, during several expeditions under the United States Antarctic Research Program between 1958 and 1986. A scanning electron microscopy survey of all known species of the genus was carried out. Eight of the 10 known species of Antarctoscyphus were found in the collection, with A. spiralis and A. elongatus being the most frequently found species, whereas A. biformis, A. fragilis and A. gruzovi were found only once. The type material of A. biformis was reviewed and re-described. This study represents the second records for A. biformis and A. fragilis. The new records allow updating of the biogeographic knowledge on the distribution of several species: A. mawsoni, so far considered endemic to East Antarctica, and A. asymmetricus, considered endemic to West Antarctica, are here considered to have a Circum-Antarctic distribution. Additionally, A. fragilis, previously considered endemic to the Weddell Sea, is now considered to have a West Antarctic–Patagonian distribution, as it was recorded off the Pacific Magellan region. The records gathered here allow us to change the distribution pattern of the genus from Antarctic–Kerguelen to Pan-Antarctic. The study has allowed us to increase the known bathymetric range for some species, some reaching much deeper waters than previously known. Hence, A. fragilis, A. grandis and A. mawsoni, hitherto considered shelf species, are reported from bathyal bottoms of the continental slope. A general discussion on the bathymetric and geographic distribution of all known species is included. www.zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1C7ED3F2-3FF1-4C5C-85BB-FAAF557AC2ED


Zootaxa | 2016

Status of the names of some hydroid species (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa), described from the Atlantic coast of Patagonia

Thaís P. Miranda; Amanda Ferreira Cunha; Antonio C. Marques

Thirty new species of benthic leptothecate hydroids were described and named from Patagonia in a 1991 PhD dissertation by Mohamed El Beshbeeshy. Although constituting nomina nuda under provisions of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN), the names of some species were used in several scientific publications between 1991 and 2011. In 2011, the dissertation of El Beshbeeshy was published in accordance with Article 8 of the ICZN. Several species-group names appearing in that work nevertheless fail to fully comply with certain articles of the code. The goal of this contribution is to review the nomenclatural availability of the names of those 30 new taxa, and to clearly establish the current status of El Beshbeeshys material. Two of them were made available in 1999 as part of studies other than those of El Beshbeeshy, and correct authorship and date is here noted. Twenty-one of the nomina nuda were made available in a work published by El Beshbeeshy in 2011, although some constitute junior synonyms. Six of the new species-group names appearing in both the 1991 and 2011 works, established following a literature review of Patagonian species, were proposed without re-description, or designation of name-bearing types, or locations of such types. Most of them do not meet criteria of availability and remain nomina nuda. The status of each is discussed to avoid additional nomenclatural errors and continued taxonomic confusion.


Latin American Journal of Aquatic Research | 2013

Rapid assessment survey for exotic benthic species in the São Sebastião Channel, Brazil

Antonio C. Marques; Aline Dos Santos Klôh; Alvaro E. Migotto; Ana Caroline Cabral; Ana Paula R Rigo; Ariane Lima Bettim; Emanuel Razzolini; Helena Matthews Cascon; Juliana Bardi; Laura P. Kremer; Leandro Manzoni Vieira; Luis Ernesto Arruda Bezerra; Maria A. Haddad; Ronaldo Ruy de Oliveira Filho; Silvia M. M. Gutierre; Thaís P. Miranda; Wilson Franklin Jr; Rosana Moreira da Rocha


Zootaxa | 2016

Census of Cnidaria (Medusozoa) and Ctenophora from South American marine waters

Otto M. P. Oliveira; Thaís P. Miranda; Enilma M. Araujo; Patricia Ayón; Cristina Maria Cedeño-Posso; Amancay A. Cepeda-Mercado; Pablo Córdova; Amanda Ferreira Cunha; Gabriel Genzano; Maria A. Haddad; Hermes Mianzan; Alvaro Esteves Migotto; Lucília S. Miranda; André C. Morandini; Renato Mitsuo Nagata; Karine B. Nascimento; Miodeli Nogueira Júnior; Sergio Palma; Javier Quiñones; Carolina S. Rodriguez; Fabrizio Scarabino; Agustín Schiariti; Sérgio N. Stampar; Valquiria B. Tronolone; Antonio C. Marques


Latin American Journal of Aquatic Research | 2013

Southern Ocean areas of endemism: a reanalysis using benthic hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa)

Thaís P. Miranda; Álvaro L. Peña Cantero; Antonio C. Marques

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Maria A. Haddad

Federal University of Paraná

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Gabriel Genzano

Spanish National Research Council

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Carolina S. Rodriguez

Spanish National Research Council

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Hermes Mianzan

Spanish National Research Council

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