Wander R. Ferreira
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
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Publication
Featured researches published by Wander R. Ferreira.
Brazilian Journal of Biology | 2011
Wander R. Ferreira; Paiva Lt; Marcos Callisto
Biotic indices are important tools for evaluating water quality in Biomonitoring Programmes of river basins. The objective of this study was to develop a Benthic Multimetric Index (BMI) to evaluate the water quality in a neotropical catchment in southeastern Brazil. Thirty metrics were evaluated and six were selected to calculate the BMI: family richness, % Oligochaeta, % Chironomidae + Oligochaeta (% CHOL), % EPT (Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera and Trichoptera), % Collector-gatherers, and BMWP-CETEC biotic index. Sampling was carried in triplicate at 21 sampling sites (8 in the river channel and 13 in the tributaries) during 4 annual collecting trips from June 2004 to November 2007, making a total of 945 samples. Scores (5, 3 or 1) were attributed to each chosen metric and were added up to establish the water quality criteria (a score of 6-12 - poor; 13-18 - intermediate; 19-24 - good; and 25-30 - very good water quality). Our results indicated that 48% of the sampling sites analysed in the catchment basin presented very good water quality, 14% good quality, 19% regular, and 19% poor water quality. This methodology proved to be an efficient tool for evaluating water quality in the Biomonitoring Programme of the Velhas River basin, and that it may serve to evaluate water quality in other river basins in South America.
Hydrobiologia | 2009
Pablo Moreno; Juliana Silva França; Wander R. Ferreira; Aline Paz; I. M. Monteiro; Marcos Callisto
The use of predictive models in Neotropical basins is relatively new, and applying these models in large basins is hindered by the lack of ecological, geographical, and social-environmental knowledge. Despite these difficulties, we used data from the das Velhas River basin to apply the BEAST (Benthic Assessment of SedimenT) methodology to evaluate and classify the level of environmental degradation. Our two main objectives were to modify and implement the BEAST methodology for use in biomonitoring programs of Brazilian basins, and to test the hypothesis that a gradient of environmental degradation determines a gradient in the structure and composition of benthic macroinvertebrate assemblages. We evaluated 37 sites: 8 in the main river, 15 in the main tributaries with different impact levels, and 14 in tributaries with minimally disturbed conditions (MDC). The BEAST model allowed us to classify 16 test sites: two as natural, four as altered, three as highly altered, and seven as degraded. Our results indicated degradation of the das Velhas River basin near its urban areas. The BEAST model indicated that the pollution gradient found among the sites generated a gradient of the macroinvertebrate assemblages, corroborating the hypothesis.
Freshwater Science | 2014
Wander R. Ferreira; Raphael Ligeiro; Diego Rodrigues Macedo; Robert M. Hughes; Philip R. Kaufmann; Leandro Gonçalves Oliveira; Marcos Callisto
Abstract: An understanding of the interactions among local environmental factors (e.g., physical habitat and water quality) and aquatic assemblages is essential to conserve biodiversity in tropical and subtropical headwater streams. We evaluated the relative importance of multiple physical and chemical habitat variables that influence the richness of Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, and Trichoptera (EPT) assemblages in wadeable Brazilian Cerrado (savanna) streams. We sampled macroinvertebrate assemblages and quantified physical and chemical habitat in 79 randomly selected sites in 2 Cerrado basins in southeastern Brazil. The environmental variables selected by multiple regression models (MLRs) via corrected Akaike Information Criteria (AICc) contributed significantly to variation in EPT taxon richness. The variance explained by physical-habitat variables was slightly greater in the Upper São Francisco Basin (adjusted R 2 = 0.53) than in the Upper Araguari Basin (adjusted R 2 = 0.46), and both were greater than the variance explained by a combined basin model (adjusted R 2 = 0.39). Physical-habitat variables were more important than water-quality variables in structuring EPT genera in streams with catchments dominated by agriculture or pasture land uses. Regional models can be improved by incorporating basin-specific information to refine biological assessments and to provide better understanding of the interactions that maintain biodiversity in stream networks.
Brazilian Journal of Biology | 2005
Marcos Callisto; Pablo Moreno; J. F. Jr. Gonçalves; Wander R. Ferreira; C. L. Z. Gomes
The objective of this study was to perform a malacological assessment at the Ibirité reservoir watershed in the metropolitan region of Belo Horizonte (Minas Gerais) and to evaluate the natural infestation rate of Biomphalaria straminea (Gastropoda: Planorbidae) by Schistosoma mansoni (Platyhelminthes: Trematoda) and Chaetogaster limnaei (Oligochaeta: Naididae). The samples were collected from July to August 2002. The B. straminea individuals collected were kept in the laboratory; the natural infestation rate by S. mansoni and C. limnaei was assessed weekly. The malacological assessment identified five mollusk species present in the Ibirité reservoir watershed: B. straminea, Physa marmorata, Lymnea sp., Melanoides tuberculatus, and Pomacea austrum. Laboratory observations showed that the B. straminea individuals were infected by C. limnaei rather than S. mansoni. Although there was no infection of B. straminea by S. mansoni, presence of B. straminea in itself merits close attention due to possible risk of human schistosomiasis by the local population.
Neotropical Biology and Conservation | 2010
Pablo Moreno; Juliana Silva França; Wander R. Ferreira; Aline Paz; Ivan M. Monteiro; Marcos Callisto
We used the das Velhas River basin in southeastern Brazil as a study unit to evaluate the role of various physical and chemical variables and the state of conservation in determining the structure and distribution of benthic macroinvertebrate communities. The habitats were characterized through the use of a rapid evaluation protocol, the examination of the granulometric composition of the sediments, and the precipitation in the sub-basins of the segments studied. The taxonomic structure was determined, Shannon-Wiener and Simpson diversity indexes, taxonomic richness, % EPT and % Chironomidae for the benthic assemblages. The results corroborated the importance of habitats in spatial structuring, the importance of the hydrological regime in temporal structuring, and the state of conservation as the main structuring agents of benthic macroinvertebrate assemblages.
Ecological Indicators | 2013
Raphael Ligeiro; Robert M. Hughes; Philip R. Kaufmann; Diego Rodrigues Macedo; Kele R. Firmiano; Wander R. Ferreira; Déborah Oliveira; Adriano S. Melo; Marcos Callisto
Landscape Ecology | 2014
Diego Rodrigues Macedo; Robert M. Hughes; Raphael Ligeiro; Wander R. Ferreira; Míriam Aparecida de Castro; Nara Tadini Junqueira; Déborah Oliveira; Kele R. Firmiano; Philip R. Kaufmann; Paulo Santos Pompeu; Marcos Callisto
Ecological Indicators | 2016
Diego Rodrigues Macedo; Robert M. Hughes; Wander R. Ferreira; Kele R. Firmiano; Déborah R.O. Silva; Raphael Ligeiro; Philip R. Kaufmann; Marcos Callisto
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2013
Raphael Ligeiro; Wander R. Ferreira; Robert M. Hughes; Marcos Callisto
River Research and Applications | 2015
Maria João Feio; Wander R. Ferreira; D. R. Macedo; A. P. Eller; Carlos Bernardo Mascarenhas Alves; Juliana Silva França; Marcos Callisto