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Featured researches published by Waltécio de Oliveira Almeida.


BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 2009

Animal-based folk remedies sold in public markets in Crato and Juazeiro do Norte, Ceará, Brazil.

Felipe Silva Ferreira; Samuel V. Brito; Samuel Cardozo Ribeiro; Antônio Af Saraiva; Waltécio de Oliveira Almeida; Rômulo Rn Alves

BackgroundHuman communities consistently develop a detailed knowledge of the therapeutical and medicinal properties of the local flora and fauna, and these folk remedies often substitute medicines produced by the pharmaceutical industry. Animals (and their derived products) are essential ingredients in the preparation of many traditional remedies. The present work prepared an inventory of the animals sold in public markets in the cities of Crato and Juazeiro do Norte, Ceará State, Brazil.MethodsInformation was obtained through the use of semi-structured questionnaires in interviews held with 27 merchants of medicinal animals (18 in the municipality of Juazeiro do Norte [11 men and 7 women] and 9 people in the municipality of Crato [6 men and 3 women]). We calculated the Informant Consensus Factor (ICF) to determine the consensus over which species are effective for particular ailments, as well as the species Use Value (UV) to determine the extent of utilization of each species.ResultsA total of 31 animal species, distributed among 21 families were identified as being used medicinally. The taxa most represented were: insects (8 species), mammals (7), fish (5), reptiles (5) and birds (4). The animals sold in these markets are used to treat a total of 24 ailments, with rheumatism, asthma, and inflammations having the largest numbers of citations. Three species not previously reported as having medicinal use were encountered: Leporinus steindachneri (utilized for treating cholesterol problems), Gryllus assimilis (utilized in treating urinary infections), and Phrynops tuberosus (used to treat asthma, rheumatism and bruises).ConclusionThe composition of the local fauna, the popular culture, and commercial considerations are factors that maintain and drive the market for therapeutic animal products – and the lack of monitoring and regulation of this commerce is worrisome from a conservationist perspective. A detailed knowledge of the fauna utilized in alternative medicine is fundamental to the conservation and rational use of the Brazilian fauna.


Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine | 2009

Zootherapeutics utilized by residents of the community Poço Dantas, Crato-CE, Brazil.

Felipe Silva Ferreira; Samuel V. Brito; Samuel Cardozo Ribeiro; Waltécio de Oliveira Almeida; Rômulo Rn Alves

BackgroundAnimals have been used as a source of medicine in Brazil since ancient times, and have played a significant role in healing practices. Specifically in Northeast Brazil, zootherapy is a very common practice, and together with medicinal plants, it plays an important role as a therapeutic alternative. In the state of Ceara, no works have been carried out on rural communities with regard to use of zootherapeutics, even though the practice of zootherapy is common in this region. Therefore, the aim of this study was to analyze the use of medicinal animals in a rural community (Poco Dantas) in the municipality of Crato, Ceara, Brazil.MethodsThe field survey was carried out from October 2008 to January 2009 by conducting interviews using structured questionnaires with 72 people (33 men and 39 women), who provided information on animal species used as remedies, body parts used to prepare the remedies, and ailments for which the remedies were prescribed. We calculated the informant consensus factor (ICF) to determine the consensus over which species are effective for particular ailments, as well as the species use value (UV) to determine the extent of utilization of each species.ResultsA total of 29 species, distributed in 17 families were categorized as having some medicinal property. The taxa most represented were: mammals (9), insects (7), reptiles and birds (4). Progne chalybea, a species not previously recorded as being of medicinal use, was cited in the present work, where it is utilized in the treatment of alcoholism. The animals are used in the treatment of 34 diseases or symptoms, where sore throat, inflammations and cough are the ailments with the greatest number of citations.ConclusionThe data show that zootherapy represents an important therapeutic alternative for the inhabitants of the community. New studies on medicinal fauna should be conducted with the aim of determining the exploitation level of the species utilized, promoting sustainable development of medicinal species that are eventually threatened, and preserving and disseminating the knowledge developed by traditional individuals of the community.


Applied Herpetology | 2009

Reptiles used for medicinal and magic religious purposes in Brazil

Rômulo Romeu Nóbrega Alves; Nivaldo A. Léo Neto; Gindomar Gomes Santana; Washington Luiz Silva Vieira; Waltécio de Oliveira Almeida

This is an overview of the use of reptiles for medicinal and magic religious purposes in Brazil and discusses their implications for conservation. All available references or reports on the reptiles species being used for medicinal or magic/religious purposes were examined. A total of 44 species of reptiles (35 genera and 17 families) are used. These 42 species are used for medicinal purposes, two for magical religious purposes and 11 for both. The largest numbers of species used were snakes (15 species), turtles and tortoises (14), lizards (10), and crocodilians (5). Therapeutic products from 42 reptile species are used to treat 100 different illnesses and at least 13 reptile species were recorded as having magic religious uses. They are commonly sold in Brazilian cities in outdoor markets and stores that sell religious articles. Of the reptiles recorded, 52.3% are endangered species, demonstrating the importance of understanding such uses in the context of reptile conservation as well as of the cultural, social, and traditional role of these reptiles for establishing management plans directed towards sustainable use.


Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 2012

The Trade in Medicinal Animals in Northeastern Brazil

Felipe Silva Ferreira; Ulysses Paulino Albuquerque; Henrique Douglas Melo Coutinho; Waltécio de Oliveira Almeida; Rômulo Romeu Nóbrega Alves

Over the centuries, a significant part of the Brazilian fauna is widely sold, more specifically in retail stores or street markets. The objective was to characterize the sale of medicinal animals in five large northeast cities. Information about the sale of zootherapeutic items was obtained in the cities of Aracaju-SE, Fortaleza-CE, Maceio-AL, Recife-PE, and Salvador-BA. A total of 68 animal species were sold for medicinal purposes in the cities studied; these are the first results on the use and sale of zootherapeutics in the markets of Aracaju, Fortaleza, and Salvador and first recorded on the medicinal use of the Achatina fulica, Trachycardium muricatum, Philodryas olfersii, Desmodus rotundus, and Leptodactylus vastus. Knowledge of the fauna utilized popular medicine is indispensable for conservation, demonstrating that research on this subject is necessary to determine appropriate practices for the management of the fauna.


Journal of Parasitology | 1999

A CLADISTIC APPROACH TO RELATIONSHIPS IN PENTASTOMIDA

Waltécio de Oliveira Almeida; Martin Lindsey Christoffersen

The positioning of the Pentastomida among the Metazoa has provoked many debates up to the present. On the other hand, the internal relationships among the pentastomid subgroups have received much less attention in the past. We provide the first phylogenetic analyses under Hennigian principles. Thirty-two morphological characters were selected from the primary literature, analyzed manually, and then with the program Hennig86. Four most parsimonious trees were obtained; these were analyzed by successive weighting and reduced to 1 consensus cladogram 380 steps long, with a consistency index of 0.98 and a retention index of 0.99. Characters were also analyzed as unordered, producing results that were congruent with the previous analyses. The internal groups were ordered according to the following system: (Heymnonsicambria + Haffnericambria + Backlericambria (Cephalobaenida (Railietiellida nov. (Reighardiida nov. (Porocephalida (Linguatuloidea (Linguatulidae + Subtriquetridae) + Porocephaloidea (Sebekidae + Porocephalidae))))))). This phylogenetic system is largely congruent with the first modern taxonomic arrangement proposed for the Pentastomida.


Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2012

A review on human attitudes towards reptiles in Brazil

Rômulo Romeu Nóbrega Alves; Kleber Silva Vieira; Gindomar Gomes Santana; Washington Luiz Silva Vieira; Waltécio de Oliveira Almeida; Wedson Medeiros Silva Souto; Paulo Fernando Guedes Pereira Montenegro; Juarez Carlos Brito Pezzuti

For many millennia humans and reptiles have interacted, but the attitude of humans towards these animals has depended on culture, environment, and personal experience. At least 719 reptile species are known to occur in Brazil and about 11% of this fauna has been exploited for many different purposes, including bushmeat, leather, ornamental and magic/religious uses, and as folk medicines. Brazil can therefore serve as an interesting case study for better understanding reptile use by human societies, and the present paper catalogues some of the reptile species being used in Brazil and discusses implications for their conservation. A literature review indicated that 81 reptile species are culturally important in this country, with 47 (58%) species having multiple uses, 54 being used for medicinal purposes, 38 as food, 28 for ornamental or decorative purposes, 20 used in magic/religious practices, 18 as pets, and 40 are commonly killed when they come into contact with humans. Regarding their conservation status, 30 (37.5%) are included on States Red List, Brazilian Red List or the IUCN Red List. There are many forms of interaction between reptiles and humans in Brazil—although most of them are quite negative in terms of wildlife conservation—which reinforces the importance of understanding such uses and interactions in the context of protecting reptiles in Brazil. A better understanding of the cultural, social, and traditional roles of these reptiles is fundamental to establishing management plans for their sustainable use.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2009

Is the body fat of the lizard Tupinambis merianae effective against bacterial infections

Felipe Silva Ferreira; Samuel V. Brito; José Galberto Martins da Costa; Rômulo Romeu Nóbrega Alves; Henrique Douglas Melo Coutinho; Waltécio de Oliveira Almeida

AIM OF THE STUDY Tupinambis merianae is one of the animals that is most frequently used for medicinal purposes in Brazil as its body fat has many therapeutic indications in local folk medicine. This work presents the chemical compositions of the body fat of Tupinambis merianae and evaluates the antibacterial activity of the body fat as well as the ecological implications of its use in traditional medicine. MATERIALS AND METHODS Oil (OTM) was extracted from body fat located in the ventral region of Tupinambis merianae using hexane as a solvent. Fatty acids were determined indirectly using their corresponding methyl esters. The antibacterial activity of OTM was tested against standard as well as multi-resistant lines of Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus, either alone or in combination with antibiotics and UV-A light. RESULTS Body fat of Tupinambis merianae presents 57% and 43% of unsaturated and saturated fatty acids respectively. Our results indicated that OTM did not demonstrate relevant antibacterial activity against any of the lines of Escherichia coli or Staphylococcus aureus, nor when combined with antibiotics or with UV-A light. CONCLUSIONS In light of these results, we recommend (i) development of management plans for a sustainable and rational use of Tupinambis merianae reducing the possible pressure on this species; and (ii) more studies be focused on the use of OTM and other natural products derived from animals that are used to treat other illnesses.


Revista Brasileira De Zoologia | 2003

Polychaeta, Annelida, and Articulata are not monophyletic: articulating the Metameria (Metazoa, Coelomata)

Waltécio de Oliveira Almeida; Martin Lindsey Christoffersen; Dalton De Souza Amorim; André R. S. Garraffoni; Gustavo Sene Silva

Polychaetes are metameric worms recognized for having parapodia, chaetae, and nuchal organs. Some authors have extended the Annelida to include Pogonophora, Echiura, and Clitellata. These suggestions are insufficient to generate a monophyletic group. They do not take into account two very large and important clades that in a cladistic analysis at a higher level are shown to be nested within the Annelida: the Ecdysozoa (arthropods and related taxa) and Enterocoela (deuterostomes and related taxa). Evolutionary histories of most characters across metazoan phyla are still very poorly known. Metameres and coeloms have been considered homoplastic in the literature, and yet the homeobox genes responsible for the expression of metamerism and of paired appendages, at least, are very largely distributed among the Metazoa. A phylogenetic analysis was performed for the ingroups of Polychaeta, including Clitellata, Enterocoela, and Ecdysozoa as terminal taxa. The remaining non-metameric phyla Platyhelminthes, Nemertea, Mollusca, and Sipuncula were included to root the tree within the Bilateria. Empirical data was obtained from the literature and run with the software Hennig86 with two comparative interpretations of a priori hypotheses of primary homology: one with negative characters (coding losses) and another considering only positive characters (without assumptions about losses). The most relevant conclusions are: (1) Annelida and Polychaeta are non-monophyletic, even when including Echiura, Clitellata, and Pogonophora; (2) Articulata, as traditionally circumscribed for Annelida and Arthropoda, is also not monophyletic; (3) Metameria becomes monophyletic only when Ecdysozoa and Enterocoela are included in addition to the traditional annelid taxa; (4) Ecdysozoa are the sister group of Aphrodita; (5) Clitellata are related to deposit-feeding sedentary polychaetes (scolecids), and Questidae represent their sister group; (6) Owenia plus Enterocoela form a monophyletic group related to the tubicolous polychaetes.


Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine | 2012

A zoological catalogue of hunted reptiles in the semiarid region of Brazil

Rômulo Romeu Nóbrega Alves; Gentil Alves Pereira Filho; Kleber Silva Vieira; Wedson Medeiros Silva Souto; Lívia Emanuelle Tavares Mendonça; Paulo Fernando Guedes Pereira Montenegro; Waltécio de Oliveira Almeida; Washington Luiz Silva Vieira

The variety of interactions between human cultures and herpetofauna is the subject matter of Ethnoherpetology, a subdivision of Ethnozoology. In the semi-arid region of Brazil, many reptiles interact with human communities because of their utility or because of the risks they represent. These interactions have obvious implications for the conservation of reptiles from this region.In this context, ethnoherpetology studies are crucial because they serve as subsidies for guiding strategies for the handling and conservation of reptiles. This paper presents ethnozoological and taxonomic informations of hunted reptiles in the semiarid region of Brazil and analyse the implications on conservation that are related to the interactions between people and reptiles in this region. Taxonomic keys to identifying recorded reptiles are provided. Records of humans interacting with 38 reptile species that belong to 31 genuses and 16 families have been found. The groups with the largest numbers of recorded species were snakes (18 species), and this group was followed in number by lizards (13), chelonians (4), and crocodilians (3). The reptiles that were recorded may be used for the following purposes: medicinal purposes (24 species), food (13 species), ornamental or decorative purposes (11 species), in magical/religious practices (10 species), and as pets (10 species). Some species (n = 16) may have multiple uses. Furthermore, more than half of the species (n = 19) are commonly killed because they are considered potentially dangerous. Strategies for conserving the reptiles of the Brazilian semi-arid region must reconcile and integrate human and conservation needs.


Brazilian Journal of Biology | 2006

First record of Cephalobaena tetrapoda (Pentastomida: Cephalobaenidae) as a parasite on Liophis lineatus (Ophidia: Colubridae) in Northeast Brazil

Waltécio de Oliveira Almeida; Samuel V. Brito; Felipe Silva Ferreira; M. L. Christoffersen

Cephalobaenidae constitutes one of the main pentastomid groups infecting the respiratory tract of snakes. Six specimens of Liophis lineatus, a colubrid, were collected by active capture and pitfalls installed on the banks of the Batateiras river, close to its source, in the APA - Area de Proteção Ambiental (a protected environmental area of the IBAMA - Brazilian Institute for the Environment and Natural Resources), and in a remnant of the humid tropical forest FLONA - Floresta Nacional do Araripe, both in the municipality of Crato, state of Ceará, Northeast Brazil. Out of the six specimens of L. lineatus examined, only one had its lung infected by the pentastomid Cephalobaena tetrapoda. This represents the first record of C. tetrapoda as a parasite of a snake in Northeast Brazil, as well as the first record of a colubrid, L. lineatus, as a new host for the pentastomid in Brazil.

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Samuel Cardozo Ribeiro

Federal University of Paraíba

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Felipe Silva Ferreira

Federal University of Paraíba

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Samuel V. Brito

Federal University of Paraíba

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Diêgo Alves Teles

Federal University of Paraíba

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Alexandre Vasconcellos

Federal University of Paraíba

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Débora Lima Sales

Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco

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