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Antonio Ostrensky
Researcher at Federal University of Paraná
Publications - 103
Citations - 1639
Antonio Ostrensky is an academic researcher from Federal University of Paraná. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Mangrove crab. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 96 publications receiving 1419 citations.
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Implementation of aquaculture parks in Federal Government waters in Brazil
TL;DR: The application of this instrument for zoning the reservoirs will assist a more effective planning of investments and efforts, both by the government and by private initiative, in the aquaculture activity.
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Acute toxicity of ammonia to various life stages of the São Paulo shrimp, Penaeus paulensis Pérez-Farfante, 1967
TL;DR: An analysis of variance showed that there was no direct relationship between shrimp development and its tolerance to ammonia and that eggs, zoeae and postlarvae are very sensitive to ammonia:.
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Lethargic crab disease: multidisciplinary evidence supports a mycotic etiology
TL;DR: Phylogenetic analyses not only confirm the diagnosis of the LCD fungus in crab tissues as an ascomycete, but also suggest a close relationship with members of the subphylum Pezizomycotina.
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Postglacial north-south expansion of populations of Rhizophora mangle (Rhizophoraceae) along the Brazilian coast revealed by microsatellite analysis.
Maria W. Pil,Maria Regina Torres Boeger,Valeria Cunha Muschner,Marcio R. Pie,Antonio Ostrensky,Walter A. Boeger +5 more
TL;DR: The lowest variability observed in the southern populations of the red mangrove most likely reflects their recent age, associated with allelic reduction, resulting from the consecutive founder events that followed subsequent colonization of estuaries during the gradual warming by the end of the last glacial period.
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Black yeast-like fungi associated with Lethargic Crab Disease (LCD) in the mangrove-land crab, Ucides cordatus (Ocypodidae).
Vania A. Vicente,Raphael Orélis-Ribeiro,Mohammad Javad Najafzadeh,Jiufeng Sun,Raquel Schier Guerra,Stephanie Miesch,Antonio Ostrensky,Jacques F. Meis,Corné H. W. Klaassen,G.S. de Hoog,Walter A. Boeger +10 more
TL;DR: Fonsecaea brasiliensis proved to be closely related to the pathogenic species Cladophialophora devriesii which originally was isolated from a systemic infection in a human patient, and lower than that of E. cancerae, as established by artificial inoculation of mangrove crabs.