32 results on '"Quimbayo, Juan P."'
Search Results
2. Broken expectations: Population decline of a key grouper species within a 30-year-old no-take MPA in the Southwestern Atlantic
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Boelter, Jéssica P., Silva, Fernanda C., Quimbayo, Juan P., and Floeter, Sergio R.
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- 2024
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3. Congruence among taxonomic, functional, and phylogenetic diversity of mangrove crabs in the Southwestern Atlantic
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Teles, Jeniffer Natalia, Peres, Pedro Augusto, Jimenez, Laís Coutinho Zayas, Mantelatto, Fernando Luis, and Quimbayo, Juan Pablo
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- 2024
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4. Plastic pollution on the world’s coral reefs
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Pinheiro, Hudson T., MacDonald, Chancey, Santos, Robson G., Ali, Ramadhoine, Bobat, Ayesha, Cresswell, Benjamin J., Francini-Filho, Ronaldo, Freitas, Rui, Galbraith, Gemma F., Musembi, Peter, Phelps, Tyler A., Quimbayo, Juan P., Quiros, T. E. Angela L., Shepherd, Bart, Stefanoudis, Paris V., Talma, Sheena, Teixeira, João B., Woodall, Lucy C., and Rocha, Luiz A.
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- 2023
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5. The aesthetic value of Brazilian reefs: from species to seascape
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Waechter, Luiza S., Luza, André L., Eggertsen, Linda, Quimbayo, Juan P., Hanazaki, Natalia, Pinheiro, Hudson T., Giglio, Vinicius J., Cordeiro, Cesar A.M.M., Mendes, Thiago C., Luiz, Osmar J., Dambros, Cristian, Longo, Guilherme O., Almeida-Neto, Mário, and Bender, Mariana G.
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- 2024
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6. Low functional vulnerability of fish assemblages to coral loss in Southwestern Atlantic marginal reefs
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Luza, André L., Quimbayo, Juan P., Ferreira, Carlos E. L., Floeter, Sergio R., Francini-Filho, Ronaldo B., Bender, Mariana G., and Longo, Guilherme O.
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- 2022
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7. Coping with collapse: Functional robustness of coral‐reef fish network to simulated cascade extinction.
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Luza, André L., Bender, Mariana G., Ferreira, Carlos E. L., Floeter, Sergio R., Francini‐Filho, Ronaldo B., Longo, Guilherme O., Pinheiro, Hudson T., Quimbayo, Juan P., and Bastazini, Vinicius A. G.
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BIOLOGICAL extinction ,FISH communities ,REEF fishes ,CASCADE connections ,FISHING villages ,CORAL bleaching ,CORALS - Abstract
Human activities and climate change have accelerated species losses and degradation of ecosystems to unprecedented levels. Both theoretical and empirical evidence suggest that extinction cascades contribute substantially to global species loss. The effects of extinction cascades can ripple across levels of ecological organization, causing not only the secondary loss of taxonomic diversity but also functional diversity erosion. Here, we take a step forward in coextinction analysis by estimating the functional robustness of reef fish communities to species loss. We built a tripartite network with nodes and links based on a model output predicting reef fish occupancy (113 species) as a function of coral and turf algae cover in Southwestern Atlantic reefs. This network comprised coral species, coral‐associated fish (site occupancy directly related to coral cover), and co‐occurring fish (occupancy indirectly related to coral cover). We used attack‐tolerance curves and estimated network robustness (R) to quantify the cascading loss of reef fish taxonomic and functional diversity along three scenarios of coral species loss: degree centrality (removing first corals with more coral‐associated fish), bleaching vulnerability and post‐bleaching mortality (most vulnerable removed first), and random removal. Degree centrality produced the greatest losses (lowest R) in comparison with other scenarios. In this scenario, while functional diversity was robust to the direct loss of coral‐associated fish (R = 0.85), the taxonomic diversity was not robust to coral loss (R = 0.54). Both taxonomic and functional diversity showed low robustness to indirect fish extinctions (R = 0.31 and R = 0.57, respectively). Projections of 100% coral species loss caused a reduction of 69% of the regional trait space area. The effects of coral loss in Southwestern Atlantic reefs went beyond the direct coral‐fish relationships. Ever‐growing human impacts on reef ecosystems can cause extinction cascades with detrimental consequences for fish assemblages that benefit from corals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Assessing captures of recreational spearfishing in Abrolhos reefs, Brazil, through social media
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Giglio, Vinicius J., Suhett, Ana C., Zapelini, Cleverson S., Ramiro, Aline S., and Quimbayo, Juan P.
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- 2020
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9. Potential changes in the connectivity of marine protected areas driven by extreme ocean warming
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Lima, Luciana Shigihara, Gherardi, Douglas Francisco Marcolino, Pezzi, Luciano Ponzi, Passos, Leilane Gonçalves dos, Endo, Clarissa Akemi Kajiya, and Quimbayo, Juan Pablo
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- 2021
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10. Mechanisms of dispersal and establishment drive a stepping stone community assembly on seamounts and oceanic islands
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Mazzei, Eric F., Pinheiro, Hudson T., Simon, Thiony, Moura, Rodrigo L., Macieira, Raphael M., Pimentel, Caio R., Teixeira, João Batista, Floeter, Sergio R., Ferreira, Carlos Eduardo L., Ghisolfi, Renato D., Francini-Filho, Ronaldo B., Quimbayo, Juan P., Rocha, Luiz A., Gasparini, João Luiz, and Joyeux, Jean-Christophe
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- 2021
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11. Functional reorganization of North American wintering avifauna.
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Quimbayo, Juan P., Murphy, Stephen J., and Jarzyna, Marta A.
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WINTERING of birds , *WINTER , *BIRD communities , *CLIMATE change , *BIRD banding , *BIRD population estimates - Abstract
Wintering birds serve as vital climate sentinels, yet they are often overlooked in studies of avian diversity change. Here, we provide a continental‐scale characterization of change in multifaceted wintering avifauna and examine the effects of climate change on these dynamics. We reveal a strong functional reorganization of wintering bird communities marked by a north–south gradient in functional diversity change, along with a superimposed mild east–west gradient in trait composition change. Assemblages in the northern United States saw contractions of the functional space and increases in functional evenness and originality, while the southern United States saw smaller contractions of the functional space and stasis in evenness and originality. Shifts in functional diversity were underlined by significant reshuffling in trait composition, particularly pronounced in the western and northern United States. Finally, we find strong contributions of climate change to this functional reorganization, underscoring the importance of wintering birds in tracking climate change impacts on biodiversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. South-western Atlantic reef fishes: Zoogeographical patterns and ecological drivers reveal a secondary biodiversity centre in the Atlantic Ocean
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Pinheiro, Hudson T., Rocha, Luiz A., Macieira, Raphael M., Carvalho-Filho, Alfredo, Anderson, Antônio B., Bender, Mariana G., Di Dario, Fabio, Ferreira, Carlos Eduardo L., Figueiredo-Filho, Jessé, Francini-Filho, Ronaldo, Gasparini, João L., Joyeux, Jean-Christophe, Luiz, Osmar J., Mincarone, Michael M., Moura, Rodrigo L., de Anchieta C. C. Nunes, José, Quimbayo, Juan P., Rosa, Ricardo S., Sampaio, Cláudio L. S., Sazima, Ivan, Simon, Thiony, Vila-Nova, Daniele A., and Floeter, Sergio R.
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- 2018
13. Going across taxa in functional ecology: Review and perspectives of an emerging field.
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Luza, André L., Barneche, Diego R., Cordeiro, Cesar A. M. M., Dambros, Cristian S., Ferreira, Carlos E. L., Floeter, Sergio R., Giglio, Vinicius J., Luiz, Osmar J., Mendes, Thiago C., Picolotto, Vitor A. P., Quimbayo, Juan P., Silva, Fernanda C., Waechter, Luiza, Longo, Guilherme O., and Bender, Mariana G.
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BIOTIC communities ,DATA extraction ,RESEARCH personnel ,TREE branches ,FUNCTIONAL groups ,SPECIES diversity - Abstract
The emergence of functional ecology has changed the focus of ecological research from investigating patterns of species diversity to understanding how species traits relate to specific ecological processes generating these patterns. Traits, ecological patterns and processes can be shared and driven by species from distantly related taxonomic groups.Crossing the boundaries among distantly related taxonomic groups is still a challenge and a critical knowledge frontier in functional ecology. A cross‐taxa approach, merging trait data across distantly related taxonomic groups, could fill this gap. In this context, functionally analogous traits, that is traits that may have distinct ontogenetic origins yet represent similar processes, comprise an important recent advance in functional ecology. However, which taxa and traits (be them analogous or not) have been used in research with multiple taxa, and whether (and how) these data have been combined, still needs to be elucidated.We reviewed articles published in the last 75 years to investigate the use of traits in functional research involving multiple taxa. Our search returned 1006 articles, and a subset of 96 was filtered for data extraction. Studies covered a total of 134 taxa and 491 different traits; they were predominantly observational, and focussed on community ecology and ecosystem monitoring.Our review showed that current knowledge in this field relies on a limited number of response variables, particularly taxonomic diversity (e.g. species richness and abundance within functional groups). Also, the field relies on a limited number of taxa (e.g. plants, birds and mammals) and trait types (diet, size, habitat and dispersal). Two‐thirds of the articles (n = 72) used functionally analogous traits, and one‐third of them (n = 32) employed a cross‐taxa approach.We mapped the limitations of current research in functional ecology involving multiple taxa, presented ecological questions to a functional cross‐taxa research and showed directions to pushing the limits of this research field. Our review aimed to encourage researchers in the field of functional ecology to move beyond single taxa and traits, and to integrate more branches and dimensions of the Tree of Life in their research. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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14. Unusual reef fish biomass and functional richness at Malpelo, a remote island in the Tropical Eastern Pacific
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Quimbayo, Juan P., Mendes, Thiago C., Kulbicki, Michel, Floeter, Sergio R., and Zapata, Fernando A.
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- 2017
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15. Complex phylogenetic origin and geographic isolation drive reef fishes response to environmental variability in oceanic islands of the southwestern Atlantic.
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Gomes, Lorena de M. J., Garcia, Gabriel S., Cordeiro, Cesar A. M. M., Gouveia, Nelson A., Ferreira, Carlos E. L., Bender, Mariana G., Longo, Guilherme O., Quimbayo, Juan P., and Gherardi, Douglas F. M.
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REEF fishes ,REEFS ,CORAL reefs & islands ,ISLANDS ,SPRING ,SPECIES pools ,BAYESIAN field theory ,FISH communities ,ENVIRONMENTAL history - Abstract
Abiotic and biotic factors are known drivers that modulate community assembly from a regional species pool. Recent evidence has highlighted the intrinsic role of phylogenetic history on communities' response to the environment. Understanding its exact role poses a challenge because community assembly is embedded in a spatio‐temporal context where dispersal capabilities and biotic interactions may also determine species niches, especially in isolated oceanic islands. We unravelled how reef fish abundances from four oceanic islands in the southwestern Atlantic responded to environmental variability through seven years considering their phylogenetic history, functional traits and species co‐occurrence patterns. Species response to environmental variation was assessed through a multivariate hierarchical generalized linear mixed model that allows the inclusion of spatio‐temporal random effects, fitted with Bayesian inference. We found a strong phylogenetic signal (0.98) and a relatively low variance in abundance explained by functional traits, from around 30% in spring to 33% in summer, based on a posterior probability > 0.9. The most important environmental factor was surface chlorophyll‐a concentration, a proxy for primary productivity, explaining up to 23% of abundance variance. The global spatial and temporal effects on abundance were also low, with a maximum of 18% for sampling sites in spring. Our study offers a synthesis of the influence of complex phylogenetic history and geographical isolation on reef fish species niches in isolated oceanic islands, gaining new insights into how assembly processes have shaped these isolated communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Functional diversity patterns of reef fish, corals and algae in the Brazilian biogeographical province.
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Luza, André L., Aued, Anaide W., Barneche, Diego R., Dias, Murilo S., Ferreira, Carlos E. L., Floeter, Sergio R., Francini‐Filho, Ronaldo B., Longo, Guilherme O., Quimbayo, Juan P., and Bender, Mariana G.
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CORALS ,REEF fishes ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,OCEAN temperature ,LATITUDE ,SPECIES diversity - Abstract
Aim: Functional diversity encapsulates whole‐community responses to environmental gradients mediated by species traits. Under trait convergence, similar responses may cause distantly related taxa to exhibit spatially correlated functional diversity. We investigated whether similar responses of reef fish, coral and algal functional richness and disparity to the environment produce spatially correlated functional diversity patterns. Location: Brazilian marine biogeographical province. Taxon: Reef fish, corals, algae. Methods: We analysed data from 40 coastal and oceanic sites distributed across 27 degrees of latitude in the Brazilian province. Using traits, we measured functional richness (FRic) and disparity (Rao's Q) and calculated Pearson's correlation (ρobs) between pairs of metrics and taxa. We used Bayesian multivariate linear models to model taxa functional richness and disparity relative to sea surface temperature (SST), turbidity, salinity, species richness and region, and to estimate the residual correlation (ρres) between metrics after accounting for these variables. Results: The best fitted model contained SST, species richness and region, and explained about 56% of the variation in FRic and Rao's Q across taxa. Yet, FRic and Rao's Q of fish, algae and corals responded differently to environmental variables. Functional diversity metrics were less correlated between algae and corals than compared to fish. Observed correlations of FRic and Rao's Q were low to intermediate across taxa (average ρobs = 0.14), and residual correlations were even lower (average ρres = 0.02). Main conclusions: SST, species richness and region had a widespread role in determining spatially congruent functional diversity offish, algae and corals across Brazilian reefs, despite their fundamentally different evolutionary histories. Low residual spatial correlations suggest that other mechanisms might also contribute to functional diversity patterns of reef taxa independently. Given the role of SST, species richness and region, the functional structure of these reefs might be compromised by climate change, pollution and overfishing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. Are cleaning interactions offered by large cleaners positive?
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Quimbayo, Juan P., Freitas, Rui, Rocha, Luiz A., and Pinheiro, Hudson T.
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MANDIBULAR joint , *MANDIBLE , *REEF fishes , *SPECIES diversity , *CLEANING - Abstract
Cleaning symbiosis is a cooperative interspecific interaction among reef fishes that helps to maintain healthy marine communities. Despite its importance, our knowledge on the cleaner role of many species, and on the costs and benefits of these interactions, is still scarce. Here, we report for the first time an adult Guinean angelfish Holacanthus africanus acting as cleaner of the smaller client blackbar soldierfish Myripristis jacobus in the remote Cabo Verde Archipelago, Eastern Atlantic. Adult angelfish cleaning behaviour is a rare juvenile trait retention, which based on our observations could have a negative effect on smaller clients. This negative effect can be associated with the fish's extra lower jaw joint, adapted to extract sessile invertebrates from the substrate, which can remove the client's tissues during the cleaning attempt. Thus, although cleaning interactions have been viewed as examples of marine mutualisms, the costs and benefits of cleaning for cleaners and clients require more studies. Our study also builds on the scarce information on cleaning behaviour of adult fishes and offers highlights on this symbiosis in isolated locations with low species richness and absence of dedicated cleaners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. A trait‐based approach to marine island biogeography.
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Ferrari, Débora S., Floeter, Sergio R., Leprieur, Fabien, and Quimbayo, Juan P.
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REEFS ,DATA libraries ,REEF fishes ,FISH diversity ,BIOGEOGRAPHY ,ISLANDS - Abstract
Aim: The Island Biogeography Theory (IBT) and its multiple extensions explain species diversity patterns in insular systems. However, how these theories can predict the functional diversity patterns in island systems remains challenging. Here, we evaluated the predictions of the IBT, the General Dynamic Theory of Oceanic Island Biogeography (GDM) and the Glacial‐sensitive model of Island Biogeography (GSM) considering the functional diversity of reef fishes on islands. Location: Tropical oceanic islands. Taxon: Actinopterygii. Method: We combined literature data and online repositories to gather occurrence data and traits of reef fish species for 72 tropical oceanic islands. We then calculated five functional diversity indices (functional richness 'FRic', functional evenness 'FEve', functional divergence 'FDiv', functional over‐redundancy 'FOR' and functional vulnerability 'FVul'). We used generalized additive mixed models to explore relationships among species richness and functional indices. Furthermore, we built Bayesian models to evaluate relationships between the functional diversity indices and several island features (isolation from the nearest reef, past and present reef area, and geological age) and two metrics that reflect the potential influence of Quaternary climatic changes (isolation from Quaternary refugia) and historical contingency (isolation from biodiversity centres). Results: We observed higher levels of FRic, FDiv and FOR on the Indo‐Pacific islands, whereas FEve and FVul showed higher values on the Atlantic and Eastern Pacific islands. We identified positive relationships between FRic, FDiv and FOR with species richness but negative relationships with FEve and FVul. We found that past and present reef areas best explained the variation in functional diversity among islands. Main Conclusions: The functional diversity of reef fishes on oceanic islands showed a longitudinal gradient, which can be explained by differences in the evolutionary history among marine regions. Furthermore, past and present reef areas were found to be the best predictors of reef fish functional diversity on oceanic islands, extending the IBT, GDM and GSM for marine organisms within a trait‐based framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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19. Global patterns and drivers of beta diversity facets of reef fish faunas.
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Maxwell, Melina F., Leprieur, Fabien, Quimbayo, Juan P., Floeter, Sergio R., and Bender, Mariana G.
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CLIMATE change ,CORAL reefs & islands ,REEF fishes ,REEFS - Abstract
Aim: Exploring the relationships between the different facets of beta diversity and both past and current environmental conditions can unveil the processes that have shaped spatial patterns of biodiversity. In the marine realm, large‐scale patterns and processes of beta diversity have been less investigated. Our study aimed to investigate the patterns and drivers of multiple facets of beta diversity and its components, contrasting pairs of reef fish assemblages among marine realms. Location: Tropical reefs. Taxon: Reef fishes. Methods: Based on trait data and phylogenetic relationships for 5182 tropical reef fish species, we calculated compositional differences between pairs of reef fish assemblages across the Atlantic, the Tropical Eastern Pacific (TEP) and the Indo‐Pacific realms. We also applied a partitioning approach to distinguish between the turnover and nestedness components. We then evaluated the relative importance of several variables related to historical and contemporary environmental conditions in shaping spatial patterns of beta diversity using Constrained Analysis of Principal coordinates (CAP) models. Results: Both the turnover and the nestedness components contributed to total phylogenetic and taxonomic beta diversity in the TEP and Indo‐Pacific realms, while the turnover component was found to be more important in the Atlantic realm. In contrast, total trait beta diversity displayed very low values and was primarily explained by the nestedness component. Taxonomic and phylogenetic differences in the composition of tropical reef fish assemblages were influenced by both historical and contemporary factors or solely by historical variables. Main conclusions Our results suggest that past climate changes and historical contingency left an imprint in the present‐day composition of tropical reef fish assemblages. The very low levels of trait beta diversity indicate that reef fish assemblages display similar trait composition even among geographically distant assemblages with contrasting evolutionary histories, which may result from environmental filtering or evolutionary convergence, or the combination of both processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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20. Patterns of taxonomic and functional diversity in the global cleaner reef fish fauna.
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Quimbayo, Juan P., Mendes, Thiago C., Barneche, Diego R., Dias, Murilo S., Grutter, Alexandra S., Furtado, Miguel, Leprieur, Fabien, Pellissier, Loïc, Mazzei, Renata, Narvaez, Pauline, Sasal, Pierre, Soares, Marta C., Parravicini, Valeriano, Sazima, Ivan, Kulbicki, Michel, and Floeter, Sergio R.
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REEF fishes , *SPECIES diversity , *SPECIES pools , *REEFS , *CORAL reefs & islands , *MARINE fishes , *ACTINOPTERYGII - Abstract
Aim: Several drivers explain the global distribution of all reef fish. However, whether these drivers also explain the distribution and traits of a functional subgroup involving cleaner fishes remain unclear. Here we examine the variation in traits of cleaner fishes and test whether historical, environmental, ecological and geographical drivers are correlated with cleaner species richness and abundance at global reefs. Location: Tropical and subtropical reefs. Taxon: Actinopterygii. Methods: We tested whether species traits and trait space vary between facultative (i.e. species that clean only during the juvenile stages or sporadically) and dedicated (i.e. species that clean during their whole lives) cleaner types. We compiled data from local checklists (relative richness) and belt transects (standardized richness and abundance). We built four models to test whether past and current isolation (i.e. distance from Quaternary refugia and biodiversity centres), sea temperature, primary productivity, local species pool and abundance of potential clients influenced the relative richness and abundance of cleaners. Results: Facultative cleaners had high trait variability that contributed disproportionally to the trait space, whereas dedicated cleaners exhibited low trait variability. Cleaner species richness was higher in the Indo‐Pacific and Caribbean provinces, but the relative richness and standardized abundance of cleaners were higher in the Atlantic (i.e. North Eastern and Southwestern) and Eastern Pacific. Isolation influenced the relative richness of facultative cleaners, whereas the distance to Quaternary refugia, sea temperature and isolation influenced the relative richness of dedicated cleaners. Local species richness and standardized abundance of cleaner fish exhibited a strong relationship with regional diversity. The standardized abundance of both facultative and dedicated cleaners was influenced by the abundance of potential clients and the local species pool. Main conclusions: The small trait space occupied by cleaner fishes may reflect their restricted origin among lineages of reef fishes. Differences in the relative richness and standardized abundance of cleaner fishes across marine realms suggest a strong influence on biogeographical history. Our results also indicate that cleaner fishes originated mostly in peripheral areas in high latitudes due to the absence of dedicated cleaners. Our results imply that cleaner fishes do not follow the pattern of main centres of origin described for reef fishes due to opportunistic cleaning behaviour that originated with higher frequency at locations with low species richness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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21. Severe coral bleaching of Siderastrea stellata at the only atoll in the South Atlantic driven by sequential Marine Heatwaves .
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Gaspar, Tainá L., Quimbayo, Juan P., Ozekoski, Renan, Nunes, Lucas T., Aued, Anaide W., Mendes, Thiago C., Garrido, Amana G., and Segal, Bárbara
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CORAL bleaching , *CORAL reefs & islands , *SOUTHERN oscillation , *CLIMATE extremes , *CORALS ,EL Nino - Abstract
Threatened by global warming and extreme climatic events, such as El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and Marine Heatwaves (MHW), coral reefs worldwide faced the worst bleaching and mortality event between 2014 and 2017, induced by the 2015/2016 ENSO. We evaluated the impacts of ENSO and MHW episodes on bleaching and mortality frequencies of Siderastrea stellata at Rocas Atoll, Southwestern Atlantic, using visual censuses conducted in 2016, 2017 and 2019. Bleaching rate varied significantly along the sampling period (11.71% in 2016, 1.52% in 2017, and 88% in 2019), but mortality was always less than 4%. Bleaching events in Atlantic reefs have been constantly associated with ENSO, until these recent events of the last two years. We suggest that MHW were probably the primary driver of the observed bleaching, especially in 2019, when much higher bleaching rates were observed than in ENSO periods. Although Southwestern Atlantic massive corals are considered more resistant to thermal stress than reefs corals worldwide, the strong events registered since 2019 highlight the need for continuous monitoring to better understand coral bleaching dynamics and improve predictions on the effects of global change in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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22. Historical distribution and current drivers of guppy occurrence in Brazil.
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Dias, Murilo S., Faria, Ian F., Guarido, Paula C. P., Teresa, Fabrício B., Aquino, Pedro de Podestà Uchôa, and Quimbayo, Juan P.
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GUPPIES ,CURRENT distribution ,FRESHWATER fishes ,INTRODUCED species ,VECTOR control - Abstract
Humans introduce non‐native species by means such as the deliberate release of fish into fresh waters and through commercial trade. The guppy Poecilia reticulata Peters, 1859, is commonly kept in aquaria and controls disease vectors, and now it occurs in many areas outside its natural distribution. Its initial habitat in Brazil was identified, and a study was performed to determine whether the density of guppies can be explained by the density of human population, per‐capita gross domestic product, level of human impact on the areas where guppies have been found and fish‐sampling effort. A total of 1402 guppy records were found; the southeastern region had the oldest records; and the southeastern, northeastern and central‐western regions had the maximum records. Low tolerance to the colder climate may be the reason for the lack of guppy records in the southernmost states. It was also observed that the occurrence of this fish is positively, yet weakly, related to the density of human population, indicating that improved regulations regarding its use in controlling disease vectors, the aquarium trade and education of aquarium hobbyists could help prevent the spread of this species and its potential impacts in Brazil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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23. Contrasting feeding and agonistic behaviour of two blenny species on a small and remote island in the equatorial Atlantic Ocean.
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Quimbayo, Juan P., Giglio, Vinicius J., Ferreira, Carlos E. L., Fraga, Alana, Nunes, José A. C. C., and Mendes, Thiago C.
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BODY size , *OCEAN , *ANIMAL feeding , *SPECIES , *ISLANDS , *BEHAVIOR - Abstract
We investigated the feeding rates, agonistic behaviour and diet of two blenny species, Entomacrodus vomerinus and Ophioblennius trinitatis, by direct observation and gut content analysis. Both species coexist in small and shallow tide pools in the St Peter and St Paul's Archipelago, equatorial North Atlantic Ocean. The feeding rate of O. trinitatis was c. 55% higher than E. vomerinus. On the other hand, agonistic rate of O. trinitatis was negatively related to body size, whereas in E. vomerinus was positively related. Both species showed a high diet overlap, in which detritus was the most important food item (86% in O. trinitatis and 80% in E. vomerinus). Feeding activity was more intense during the morning for O. trinitatis but afternoon for E. vomerinus. These behavioural observations support the importance of temporal feeding partitioning as the main strategy allowing species co‐existence in tide pools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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24. TimeFISH: Long‐term assessment of reef fish assemblages in a transition zone in the Southwestern Atlantic.
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Quimbayo, Juan P., Nunes, Lucas T., Silva, Fernanda C., Anderson, Antônio B., Barneche, Diego R., Canterle, Angela M., Cord, Isadora, Dalben, Andrea, Ferrari, Débora S., Fontoura, Luisa, Fiuza, Thiago M. J., Liedke, Ana M. R., Longo, Guilherme O., Morais, Renato A., Siqueira, Alexandre C., and Floeter, Sergio R.
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REEF fishes , *REEFS , *REGIONS of freshwater influence , *OCEAN zoning , *OCEAN temperature , *RECREATION - Abstract
The TimeFISH database provides the first public time‐series dataset on reef fish assemblages in the southwestern Atlantic (SWA), comprising 15 years of data (2007–2022) based on standardized Underwater Visual Censuses (UVCs). The rocky reefs covered by our dataset are influenced by pronounced seasonal cycles of ocean temperatures with warm tropical waters from the Brazil Current in the summer (~27°C) and colder waters from the La Plata River Plume discharge and upwelling from the South Atlantic Central Water in the winter (~18°C). These oceanographic conditions characterize this area as the southernmost tropical–subtropical climatic transition zone in the Atlantic Ocean. As a result, reef fish assemblages are comprised of both tropical and subtropical species. All records included in TimeFISH were collected using UVCs, a nondestructive method that allows the estimation of fish species richness, abundance, and body size distributions. UVCs were performed through 40 m2 belt transects by scuba diving in nine locations along the southern Brazilian coast (25–29°S). Four of these locations lie within the boundaries of the no‐entry Arvoredo Marine Biological Reserve, where fishing and recreational activities are forbidden, and the remaining locations are unprotected from these activities. During each belt transect, a diver swam at a constant depth above and parallel to the reef, identifying fish species, counting the number of individuals, and estimating the total body length (Lt in cm) of all detected individuals. All fish individuals in the water column (up to 2 m above the substratum) and at the bottom were targeted. In total, 202,965 individuals belonging to 163 reef fish species and 53 families were recorded across 1857 UVCs. All survey campaigns were funded by either public or mixed capital (private–public) sources, including seven grants from the Brazilian federal and Santa Catarina state governments. Part of the data has already been used in multiple MS.c. and Ph.D. theses and scientific articles. TimeFISH represents an important contribution for future studies aiming to examine temporal and spatial variations of reef fish assemblages in transition zones. No copyright restrictions apply to the use of this data set, other than citing this publication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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25. Reef fish antipredator behavior in remote islands does not reflect patterns seen in coastal areas.
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Nunes, José Anchieta C.C., Blumstein, Daniel T., Giglio, Vinicius J., Barros, Francisco, and Quimbayo, Juan P.
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ANTIPREDATOR behavior ,REEF fishes ,CORAL reefs & islands ,BODY size ,ISLANDS ,FISHES - Abstract
The reduction or loss of antipredator behavior is expected for animals isolated on islands, but most of studies have focused on terrestrial rather than aquatic species. Two different processes may modulate fish antipredator behavior in the waters off remote archipelagos. First, places with low human density may have reduced fishing pressure. Second, due to their remoteness and lack of other human impacts, these isolated places may have more intact fish assemblages. We investigated antipredator behavior off the smallest archipelago in the Equatorial Atlantic not subjected to regular spearfishing by quantifying flight initiation distance (FID) ― the distance a diver can approach a fish before it flees. Our goal was to identify natural patterns of risk assessment in reef fish. We focused on five common species and investigated how body size, group size and depth influence on the FID. In contrast to previous studies, we found that Caranx lugubris had significantly negative relationships between body size and FID, whereas Kyphosus sectatrix showed an opposite relationship. Finally, only a single species (Melichthys niger) had a significant relationship between depth and FID. Given we found small FID for all species studied, we suggest that much of our understanding of fish antipredator behavior studied using FID may reflect the somewhat ubiquitous impact of humans on species' risk assessments and not reflect patterns seen in areas with very low human density/disturbance. Our results suggest that fish antipredator behavior may be a metric of human impacts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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26. Systematic relationships of sympatric pipefishes (Syngnathus spp.): A mismatch between morphological and molecular variation.
- Author
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Garcia, Eric, Rice, Cristy A., Eernisse, Douglas J., Forsgren, Kristy L., Quimbayo, Juan P., and Rouse, Greg W.
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DNA analysis ,SYNONYMS ,PHENOTYPIC plasticity - Abstract
Analyses of mitochondrial DNA and morphological variation were performed on specimens of all five currently recognised Syngnathus pipefish species from the eastern Pacific Ocean with type localities currently considered to lie within the Californian marine biogeographic province: kelp pipefish Syngnathus californiensis, bay pipefish S. leptorhynchus, barred pipefish S. auliscus, barcheek pipefish S. exilis and chocolate pipefish S. euchrous. Results consistently differentiate S. auliscus from the other species and fail to distinguish all other specimens as distinct species, as indicated by extensive morphological overlap as well as incomplete lineage sorting and considerably low genetic divergence for 16s and coI genes(<1%). This study presents a taxonomic revision of eastern Pacific Syngnathus spp. and proposes the synonymy of S. leptorhynchus, S. euchrous and S. exilis, under the senior synonym, S. californiensis. There is still a need to study populations of Syngnathus spp. from north and south of the Californian province to assess whether these too are synonyms of the two‐species recognised here. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The omnivorous triggerfish Melichthys niger is a functional herbivore on an isolated Atlantic oceanic island.
- Author
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Mendes, Thiago C., Quimbayo, Juan P., Bouth, Helena F., Silva, Luana P.S., and Ferreira, Carlos E.L.
- Subjects
- *
HERBIVORES , *ISLANDS , *CAULERPA , *DETRITUS - Abstract
This study evaluated the functional role of the highly generalist omnivore Melichthys niger in the remote St. Peter and St Paul's Archipelago (SPSPA), Brazil, where grazing herbivorous fishes are very scarce. We analysed patterns of distribution from zero to 30 m deep during three time intervals during the day and sampled different aspects of their feeding behaviour, including diel feeding rate, feeding substrate and diet. The density of M. niger increased with depth (26–30 m) and decreased by the end of the day. Although M. niger did not present a typical herbivore diel feeding pattern, they targeted the epilithic algal matrix as their primary feeding substrate, ingesting predominantly algae and detritus. The characteristic Caulerpa racemosa var. peltata from SPSPA was ingested only as detached fronds. We suggest that in the isolated SPSPA, the single species M. niger may perform a unique role as a link between benthic primary production and higher levels. Further studies on the trophic ecology of omnivorous species are necessary to better understand their roles in a reef system, especially in impoverished areas where they are likely to play a crucial role. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Determinants of reef fish assemblages in tropical Oceanic islands.
- Author
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Quimbayo, Juan P., Dias, Murilo S., Kulbicki, Michel, Mendes, Thiago C., Lamb, Robert W., Johnson, Andrew F., Aburto‐Oropeza, Octavio, Alvarado, Juan J., Bocos, Arturo A., Ferreira, Carlos E. L., Garcia, Eric, Luiz, Osmar J., Mascareñas‐Osorio, Ismael, Pinheiro, Hudson T., Rodriguez‐Zaragoza, Fabian, Salas, Eva, Zapata, Fernando A., and Floeter, Sergio R.
- Subjects
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REEF fishes , *BIOGEOGRAPHY , *ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature , *SPECIES diversity , *BIOENERGETICS - Abstract
Diversity patterns are determined by biogeographic, energetic, and anthropogenic factors, yet few studies have combined them into a large‐scale framework in order to decouple and compare their relative effects on fish faunas. Using an empirical dataset derived from 1527 underwater visual censuses (UVC) at 18 oceanic islands (five different marine provinces), we determined the relative influence of such factors on reef fish species richness, functional dispersion, density and biomass estimated from each UVC unit. Species richness presented low variation but was high at large island sites. High functional dispersion, density, and biomass were found at islands with large local species pool and distance from nearest reef. Primary productivity positively affected fish richness, density and biomass confirming that more productive areas support larger populations, and higher biomass and richness on oceanic islands. Islands densely populated by humans had lower fish species richness and biomass reflecting anthropogenic effects. Species richness, functional dispersion, and biomass were positively related to distance from the mainland. Overall, species richness and fish density were mainly influenced by biogeographical and energetic factors, whereas functional dispersion and biomass were strongly influenced by anthropogenic factors. Our results extend previous hypotheses for different assemblage metrics estimated from empirical data and confirm the negative impact of humans on fish assemblages, highlighting the need for conservation of oceanic islands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Large and remote marine protected areas in the South Atlantic Ocean are flawed and raise concerns: Comments on Soares and Lucas (2018).
- Author
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Giglio, Vinicius J., Pinheiro, Hudson T., Bender, Mariana G., Bonaldo, Roberta M., Costa-Lotufo, Letícia V., Ferreira, Carlos E.L., Floeter, Sergio R., Freire, Andrea, Gasparini, João L., Joyeux, Jean-Christophe, Krajewski, João Paulo, Lindner, Alberto, Longo, Guilherme O., Lotufo, Tito M.C., Loyola, Rafael, Luiz, Osmar J., Macieira, Raphael M., Magris, Rafael A., Mello, Thayná J., and Quimbayo, Juan P.
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MARINE parks & reserves ,FISHING ,MARINE ecosystem management ,FISHERIES - Abstract
Abstract Here, we clarify the events described on a recent paper by Soares & Lucas in Marine Policy 93 (2018) that resulted in the establishment of large marine protected areas (MPAs) in Brazil. We describe crucial aspects of the planning process that were not addressed by the authors, particularly: (i) top-down changes on the original design that left the most diverse, unique and vulnerable ecosystems poorly protected; (ii) the permission of fishing activities within no-take areas; and (iii) shortfalls in using these MPAs for quantifying progress towards the Aichi Target 11. The spatial configuration of MPAs was modified by the government in a typical top-down scenario that received neither public nor scientific input. We call for a ban on fishing activities around the islands and on mining activities within all MPAs. We emphasize the need for reconciling qualitative aspects of Aichi Target 11 when establishing new MPAs as a strategy for enhancing conservation outcomes. The establishment of these large MPAs should not divert attention from actions needed for the protection of priority sites based on scientific evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Large-scale patterns of benthic marine communities in the Brazilian Province.
- Author
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Aued, Anaide W., Smith, Franz, Quimbayo, Juan P., Cândido, Davi V., Longo, Guilherme O., Ferreira, Carlos E. L., Witman, Jon D., Floeter, Sergio R., and Segal, Bárbara
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BENTHIC ecology ,MARINE ecology ,PROVINCES ,COMMUNITY organization ,BIOGEOGRAPHY - Abstract
As marine ecosystems are influenced by global and regional processes, standardized information on community structure has become crucial for assessing broad-scale responses to natural and anthropogenic disturbances. Extensive biogeographic provinces, such as the Brazilian Province in the southwest Atlantic, present numerous theoretical and methodological challenges for understanding community patterns on a macroecological scale. In particular, the Brazilian Province is composed of a complex system of heterogeneous reefs and a few offshore islands, with contrasting histories and geophysical-chemical environments. Despite the large extent of the Brazilian Province (almost 8,000 kilometers), most studies of shallow benthic communities are qualitative surveys and/or have been geographically restricted. We quantified community structure of shallow reef habitats from 0° to 27°S latitude using a standard photographic quadrat technique. Percent cover data indicated that benthic communities of Brazilian reefs were dominated by algal turfs and frondose macroalgae, with low percent cover of reef-building corals. Community composition differed significantly among localities, mostly because of their macroalgal abundance, despite reef type or geographic region, with no evident latitudinal pattern. Benthic diversity was lower in the tropics, contrary to the general latitudinal diversity gradient pattern. Richness peaked at mid-latitudes, between 20°S to 23°S, where it was ~3.5-fold higher than localities with the lowest richness. This study provides the first large-scale description of benthic communities along the southwestern Atlantic, providing a baseline for macroecological comparisons and evaluation of future impacts. Moreover, the new understanding of richness distribution along Brazilian reefs will contribute to conservation planning efforts, such as management strategies and the spatial prioritization for the creation of new marine protected areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The COVID-19 pandemic has altered illegal fishing activities inside and outside a marine protected area.
- Author
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Quimbayo, Juan P., Silva, Fernanda C., Barreto, Camila R., Pavone, Carla B., Lefcheck, Jonathan S., Leite, Kelen, Figueiroa, Apoena C., Correia, Edineia C., and Flores, Augusto A.V.
- Subjects
- *
MARINE parks & reserves , *COVID-19 pandemic , *FISHERIES , *SMALL-scale fisheries , *BOATS & boating , *FISH communities , *FISHING - Abstract
The global COVID-19 pandemic has presented a unique opportunity to explore the consequences of illegal exploitation on wildlife communities, as it continues to have wide-reaching impacts on multiple sectors, including local and national economies, international trade, and conservation enforcement 1. The ongoing reductions in monitoring and enforcement during the pandemic have allowed increased opportunities for illegal, unreported, and unregulated activities, particularly for small-scale fisheries 2. Even before the pandemic, policymakers and fisheries managers intent on controlling illegal fishing activities established marine protected areas (MPAs) that restrict or prohibit fishing 3. Unfortunately, non-compliance with MPAs is often the rule rather than the exception, and less than 10% of the world's MPAs have managed to effectively reduce infringement 4. The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated these management challenges: a recent review of MPAs worldwide has revealed a general decline in tourism revenue to operate park services during the pandemic, especially revenue needed for supporting personnel to monitor, patrol, and enforce restrictions 2. Here, we compile infraction records of illegal fishing activities by both professional (commercial) and amateur (recreational) boats inside and outside of the Tupinambás Ecological Station and the Alcatrazes Wildlife Refuge (Figure 1A), notable for its high reef-fish biomass and diversity in the Southwestern Atlantic 5. We show that illegal exploitation has shifted since the onset of the pandemic, targeting larger, higher-value species that contribute disproportionately to the structure and function of reef-fish communities in the region. Quimbayo et al. report on illegal fishing activities by both commercial and recreational boats inside a Marine Protected Area during the COVID-19 pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Estimating population parameters of longsnout seahorses, Hippocampus reidi (Teleostei: Syngnathidae) through mark-recapture.
- Author
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Siqueira, Alexandre C., Quimbayo, Juan P., Cantor, Mauricio, Silveira, Rosana B., and Daura-Jorge, Fábio G.
- Subjects
- *
SEA horses , *FISH populations , *FISH ecology , *FISH conservation , *POPULATION ecology - Abstract
Estimating population parameters is essential for understanding the ecology of species, which ultimately helps to assess their conservation status. The seahorse Hippocampus reidi is directly exposed to anthropogenic threats along the Brazilian coast, but the species still figures as Data Deficient (DD) at IUCN's Red List. To provide better information on the ecology of this species, we studied how population parameters vary over time in a natural subtropical environment. By combing mark-recapture models for open and closed populations, we estimated abundance, survival rate, emigration probability, and capture probability. We marked 111 individuals, which showed a 1:1 sex ratio, and an average size of 10.5 cm. The population showed high survival rate, low temporary emigration probability and variable capture probability and abundance. Our models considering relevant biological criteria illuminate the relatively poorly known population ecology and life history of seahorses. It is our hope that this study inspires the use of mark-recapture methods in other populations of H. reidi in a collective effort to properly assess their conservation status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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