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Dive into the research topics where Vinícius Bonato is active.

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Featured researches published by Vinícius Bonato.


Evolution & Development | 2005

Evolutionary integration and morphological diversification in complex morphological structures: mandible shape divergence in spiny rats (Rodentia, Echimyidae)

Leandro R. Monteiro; Vinícius Bonato; Sérgio F. dos Reis

Summary The rodent mandible has become a paradigm for studies on the development and evolution of complex morphological structures. We use a combination of geometric and multivariate morphometric methods in order to assess the correspondence between integration patterns and a priori biological models in the context of evolutionary shape divergence in the mandible of rodents of the family Echimyidae. The correlation of shape distances among operational taxonomic units (individuals, species, genera) in separate morphogenetic components allowed the construction of integration matrices among mandible components for data sets corresponding to varying levels of genetic divergence (intergeneric, interspecific, and intrapopulational). The integration matrices were associated with a priori biological (developmental, genetical, modular) models, and the maximum integration axes (singular warps) were compared with realized axes of maximum interspecific variation (relative warps). The integration pattern and intensity were not stable in data sets with different levels of genetic divergence, and the varying functional demands during the ecological radiation in the family were probably responsible for the differences in observed integration patterns. Developmental and genetic models were significantly associated with the interspecific integration patterns observed, suggesting a role for neutral evolution during the evolutionary divergence of mandible shape. However, directional and stabilizing selection were not discarded as processes responsible for the generation of interspecific integration. The choreography of the morphogenetic components in the mandible is highly flexible and the integrated groups of components can be reorganized depending on functional demands during evolutionary shape changes.


Journal of Tropical Ecology | 2006

Seasonality in reproduction, age structure and density of the gracile mouse opossum Gracilinanus microtarsus (Marsupialia: Didelphidae) in a Brazilian cerrado

Eduardo G. Martins; Vinícius Bonato; Cibele Q. da-Silva; Sérgio F. dos Reis

The temporal pattern of reproduction and its consequences for age structure and density were investigated in a population of the gracile mouse opossum Gracilinanus microtarsus in south-eastern Brazil. Individuals of G. microtarsus were monitored through capture-mark-recapture methods from August 2000 to February 2003 in a remnant of cerradao, a forest-like physiognomy of the highly seasonal cerrado biome. The temporal pattern of reproduction of the population studied was highly seasonal with rearing of the offspring occurring in the first half of the warm-wet season, when the abundance of food resources primarily insects in the cerrado is high. Shortly after reproduction, the density of adults decreased sharply, possibly because of high post-mating mortality, leading to a gradual replacement of adults by their offspring in the following months and little overlap of generations. Our data suggest that climatic and environmental factors affect the onset of reproduction and interact with endogenous factors that decrease post-mating survival to produce the observed pattern of seasonal variation in age structure and density. It is suggested that the dynamics of populations of G. microtarsus may be driven primarily by food limitation and that long-term studies are needed to understand its feedback structure.


Journal of Mammalogy | 2006

PARTIAL SEMELPARITY IN THE NEOTROPICAL DIDELPHID MARSUPIAL GRACILINANUS MICROTARSUS

Eduardo G. Martins; Vinícius Bonato; Cibele Q. da-Silva; Sérgio F. dos Reis

Abstract Semelparity has been demonstrated in males of several species of Australian dasyurid marsupials. Although semelparity also has been reported in some species of neotropical didelphid marsupials, no study has conclusively demonstrated its occurrence based on survival rate estimates from field studies of marked individuals. In this study, we demonstrate that the survival rates of males of a Neotropical didelphid marsupial, the Brazilian gracile mouse opossum (Gracilinanus microtarsus), decrease sharply after the beginning of the breeding season in a cerrado remnant. However, mortality of the males after mating is not complete and a small percentage of them may survive to breed again in a 2nd breeding season. Examination of the demographic data presented here conclusively demonstrates that G. microtarsus is best described as partially semelparous.


Journal of Mammalogy | 2004

Food Habits Of Bats Of Subfamily Vampyrinae in Brazil

Vinícius Bonato; Kátia Gomes Facure; Wilson Uieda

Abstract We describe and compare diets of 3 species of vampyrine bats based on analysis of food remains found in gastrointestinal tracts of preserved museum specimens. We also examined possible ontogenetic, intersexual, geographic, and seasonal variations in feeding habits of each species. Trachops cirrhosus fed mainly on insects (79% of prey items), whereas Chrotopterus auritus and Vampyrum spectrum primarily ate small vertebrates (61–73% of prey items for both species). Vertebrate prey most frequently eaten by C. auritus were murid rodents whereas V. spectrum consumed primarily passerine birds. The frequency of occurrence of food items did not differ significantly with age or sex, at least for T. cirrhosus and C. auritus. Significant seasonal variations in diet were observed only for C. auritus, which consumed more insects during the wet season. Our findings confirm the importance of insects in the diet of T. cirrhosus and present new information on a diversified diet for V. spectrum and opportunistic feeding for C. auritus.


Journal of Natural History | 2004

Description and ecology of a new species of sun spider (Arachnida: Solifugae) from the Brazilian Cerrado

Eduardo G. Martins; Vinícius Bonato; Glauco Machado; Ricardo Pinto-da-Rocha; Lincoln S. Rocha

A new species of solifuge from São Paulo State, south-eastern Brazil, is described, together with its phenology, habitat use, activity pattern and the effect of fire on the population. Mummucia coaraciandu n. sp. differs from other Mummuciidae in cheliceral dentition and pleurite coloration. Over a one-year period, 649 individuals of M. coaraciandu were captured in 72 pitfall traps distributed in three Cerrado physiognomies: borders of gallery forest (N=53), campo sujo (N=561) and campo cerrado (N=35). The species is diurnal and showed two peaks of surface activity during the year: the highest peak occurred in the cold–dry season (June to July) and the smaller peak in the middle of the warm–wet season (December to February). The number of individuals per trap was negatively correlated with the mean monthly temperature, but showed no correlation with the monthly precipitation. The sex ratio was male-biased (7:1) and the number of males trapped was positively correlated with the number of reproductive females. More individuals were trapped in burned areas when compared with unburned areas 1 month after the fire. This difference between the two areas was not observed 1 month before and 3–4 months after the passage of the fire (when the vegetation had recovered). Mummucia coaraciandu is the second solifuge described from the Brazilian Cerrado and its ecology is very similar to that of Mummucia mauryi from Caatinga vegetation.


Journal of Mammalogy | 2008

Ecology of the Armadillos Cabassous unicinctus and Euphractus sexcinctus (Cingulata: Dasypodidae) in a Brazilian Cerrado

Vinícius Bonato; Eduardo G. Martins; Glauco Machado; Cibele Q. da-Silva; Sérgio F. dos Reis

Abstract We report on aspects of the ecology and natural history of 2 species of armadillos commonly found in a cerrado remnant in southeastern Brazil—the naked-tailed armadillo (Cabassous unicinctus) and the 6-banded armadillo (Euphractus sexcinctus). Armadillos were captured in pitfall traps or by hand, double-marked, and the habitat (campo sujo, campo cerrado, and gallery forests), season, and time of capture were recorded. We also recorded the sex and age of all armadillos, and reproductive condition of females. Population densities were estimated as 0.27 and 0.14 individuals/ha for C. unicinctus and E. sexcinctus, respectively. E. sexcinctus did not preferentially use any of the habitats included in the study area, whereas C. unicinctus preferentially used habitats with a more complex vegetation structure, such as gallery forests. C. unicinctus was diurnal and E. sexcinctus was mainly nocturnal. Neither species changed its activity pattern with season, but C. unicinctus was more active in months with decreased abundance of arthropods—the main food resource consumed by this species. Both species of armadillos appeared to reproduce year-round. Differences in habitat use and daily activity between C. unicinctus and E. sexcinctus suggest spatial and temporal displacement between these species.


Journal of Herpetology | 2008

Geographic Variation in Cranial Shape in the Pumpkin Toadlet (Brachycephalus ephippium): A Geometric Analysis

Rute B. G. Clemente-Carvalho; Leandro R. Monteiro; Vinícius Bonato; Henrique S. Rocha; Gabriela Ribeiro Pereira; D.F. Oliveira; R.T. Lopes; Célio F. B. Haddad; Eduardo G. Martins; S. F. dos Reis

Abstract The description of patterns of variation in any character system within well-defined species is fundamental for understanding lineage diversification and the identification of geographic units that represent opportunities for sustained evolutionary divergence. In this paper, we analyze intraspecific variation in cranial shape in the Pumpkin Toadlet, Brachycephalus ephippium–a miniaturized species composed of isolated populations on the slopes of the mountain ranges of southeastern Brazil. Shape variables were derived using geometric-statistical methods that describe shape change as localized deformations in a spatial framework defined by anatomical landmarks in the cranium of B. ephippium. By statistically weighting differences between landmarks that are not close together (changes at larger geometric scale), cranial variation among geographic samples of B. ephippium appears continuous with no obvious gaps. This pattern of variation is caused by a confounding effect between within-sample allometry and among-sample shape differences. In contrast, by statistically weighting differences between landmarks that are at close spacing (changes at smaller geometric scale), differences in shape within- and among-sample variation are not confounded, and a marked geographic differentiation among population samples of B. ephippium emerges. The observed pattern of geographic differentiation in cranial shape apparently cannot be explained as isolation-by-distance. This study provides the first evidence that the detection of morphological variation or lack thereof, that is, morphological conservatism, may be conditional on the scale of measurement of variation in shape within the methodological formalism of geometric morphometrics.


Real-time Imaging | 2004

Morphometrical data analysis using wavelets

C. M. Takemura; Roberto M. Cesar; R. A. T. Arantes; L. da F. Costa; E. Hingst-Zaher; Vinícius Bonato; S. F. Dos Reis

In this paper, we present a new shape analysis approach using the well-known wavelet transform and exploring shape representation by landmarks. First, we describe the approach adopted to represent the landmarks data as parametric signals. Then, we show the relation of the derivatives of Gaussian wavelet transform applied to the signal-to-differential properties of the shape that it represents. We present experimental results using real data to show how it is possible to characterize shapes through multiscale and differential signal-processing techniques in order to relate morphological variables with phylogenetic signal, environmental factors and sexual dimorphism. The goal of this research is to develop an effective wavelet transform-based method to represent and classify multiple classes of shapes given by landmarks.


Communications in Statistics - Simulation and Computation | 2008

Bayesian Capture-Recapture Analysis : An Application in Modeling Semelparity of a Neotropical Didelphid Marsupial

Cibele Q. da-Silva; Eduardo G. Martins; Vinícius Bonato; Sérgio F. dos Reis

We develop a series of Bayesian statistical models for estimating survival of a neotropic didelphid marsupial, the Brazilian gracile mouse opossum (Gracilinanus microtarsus). These models are based on the Cormack–Jolly–Seber model (Cormack, 1964; Jolly 1965; Seber 1965) with both survival and recapture rates expressed as a function of covariates using a logit link. The proposed models allow taking into account heterogeneity in capture probability caused by the existence of different groups of individuals in the population. The models were applied to two cohorts (Cohort, 2000, 2001) with the first one including 14 and the second one 15 sampling occasions. The best models for each of the cohorts indicate that G. microtarsus is best described as partially semelparous, a condition in which mortality after the first mating is high but graded over time, with a fraction of males surviving for a second breeding season (Boonstra, 2005).


Revista Brasileira De Zoologia | 2007

Fruits as unusual food items of the carnivorous bat Chrotopterus auritus (Mammalia, Phyllostomidae) from southeastern Brazil

Wilson Uieda; Therys M. Sato; Maria C. de Carvalho; Vinícius Bonato

We record here the occurrence of seeds of several plant species in feces found inside the day roost of Chrotoperus auritus, at the Estacao Experimental de Itirapina, State of Sao Paulo, Southeastern Brazil, in July 2001. The roost was used by only one adult female, non pregnant, during about a month. In the feces, fur of rodent (Muridae), bone fragments, fragments of Scarabaeidae and other beetles and insects, leaves (not determined) and many seeds of Piperaceae (Piper sp.), Urticaceae (Cecropia sp.) and Solanaceae (Solanum spp. and Cestrum sp.) were found. In the gut content, insect fragments, fur of rodent (Muridae) and plant remains were found. It was discussed why this carnivorous bat would be consuming plant items.

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Eduardo G. Martins

University of British Columbia

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Sérgio F. dos Reis

State University of Campinas

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Glauco Machado

University of São Paulo

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S. F. Dos Reis

State University of Campinas

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Therys M. Sato

Federal University of Paraná

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Aluísio Pinheiro

State University of Campinas

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C. M. Takemura

University of São Paulo

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