Institution
Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro
Education•Seropédica, Brazil•
About: Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro is a education organization based out in Seropédica, Brazil. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Species richness. The organization has 6405 authors who have published 9852 publications receiving 105911 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: It is revealed that the pattern of morphological differentiation that emerged from the canonical variate analysis does not agree with the one expected based solely on the phylogenetic relationships adopted for the canopy fruit-bats studied here, which is consistent with the hypothesis that morphological adaptations related to granivory have evolved in Chiroderma.
Abstract: Recent data have shown that owing to their seed-predator capacity Chiroderma doriae and Chiroderma villosum trophically depart from all previously studied species within the canopy fruit-bat ensemble. In this paper, the hypothesis that morphological adaptations related to granivory have evolved in these bats is investigated and discussed. A canonical variate analysis was used to search for possible divergent trends between the masticatory apparatus of Chiroderma and other stenodermatines currently recognized in the same ensemble. A total of 142 specimens representative of eight species was included in the analysis. Species of Chiroderma can be discriminated from all other species in the sample based on the increased development of masseter-related variables (height of the anterior zygomatic arch, masseter moment arm, and masseter volume), which, in conjunction with other morphological characteristics (dentition and gape angle) discussed herein, corroborates the evolution of durophagy in this group. A complementary analysis based on a Mantel test revealed that the pattern of morphological differentiation that emerged from the canonical variate analysis does not agree with the one expected based solely on the phylogenetic relationships adopted for the canopy fruit-bats studied here. This result is consistent with the hypothesis that morphological adaptations related to granivory have evolved in Chiroderma.
51 citations
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01 Jan 2009
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a survey of the state of the art in this area...........................................................................................................................................................................................232.0.232.5.0]...
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51 citations
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TL;DR: To evaluate the mycobiota and natural levels of aflatoxins, fumonisins and zearalenone present in compound feed and home‐corn grains intended for fattening pigs.
Abstract: Aims: To evaluate the mycobiota and natural levels of aflatoxins, fumonisins and zearalenone present in compound feed and home-corn grains intended for fattening pigs.
Methods and Results: Total fungi, Fusarium and Aspergillus species occurrence were examined. Aflatoxins and zearalenone were detected by thin-layer chromatography and fumonisins by high-pressure liquid chromatography. Fungal counts were generally higher than 1 × 105 colony forming units (CFU) ml−1. Aspergillus flavus, Aspergillus parasiticus and Fusarium verticillioides were the most prevalent species. FB1 and FB2 were detected in all feed and corn samples. Aflatoxin B1 was detected in 33·33% of initial and growing feed and in 44·44% of final feed samples. It was not detected in corn samples. All feed and corn samples were negative for AFB2, AFG1, AFG2 and ZEA presence during all growing stages tested.
Conclusions: Fungal counts at all growing periods exceeded the levels proposed as feed hygienic quality limits. Aflatoxin levels in all feeds and fumonisin levels in many samples were higher than the established regulations.
Significance and Impact of the Study: The presence of mycotoxins indicates the existence of contamination. This fact requires periodic monitoring to prevent the occurrence of mycotoxicosis in animal production, to reduce the economic losses and to minimize hazards to human health.
51 citations
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TL;DR: A 3',3'-di-(gamma,gamma-dimethylallyl)-2',4'-di-oxo-enolchalcone (tunicatachalcone) and five known C-prenylflavonoids were isolated and/or identified from the roots of Tephrosia tunicata.
51 citations
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TL;DR: This is the first compilation of the helminth parasites of threatened vertebrates in Brazil and in the Neotropics.
Abstract: Using available records, unpublished information retrieved from the Helminthological Collection of the Oswaldo Cruz Institute (CHIOC) and published reports, a checklist of the recorded helminth parasites of endangered vertebrates from Brazil was generated. A total of 772 records and 186 helminth species (6 Acanthocephala, 83 Nematoda, 23 Cestoda, 64 Trematoda, 10 Monogenea) in 76 host species (7 Actinopterygii, 8 Chondrichthyes, 1 Amphibia, 10 Reptilia, 22 Aves, 28 Mammalia) from Brazil were listed in the present work, including 39 undetermined helminth species and 10 new host records. This is the first compilation of the helminth parasites of threatened vertebrates in Brazil and in the Neotropics.
51 citations
Authors
Showing all 6461 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Johan Six | 107 | 447 | 49016 |
Sandra Amato | 100 | 1206 | 50094 |
Robert Poulin | 94 | 653 | 34633 |
C. Potterat | 90 | 751 | 37732 |
O.J. Ginther | 87 | 517 | 27914 |
David Murphy | 81 | 549 | 40441 |
Benedetta Mennucci | 75 | 349 | 48307 |
D. Galli | 68 | 541 | 19570 |
Erica Polycarpo | 51 | 286 | 13615 |
J. Peter W. Young | 51 | 117 | 9839 |
Miriam Dupas Hubinger | 47 | 203 | 8227 |
Albert Bursche | 47 | 213 | 9595 |
M. Gandelman | 46 | 128 | 11022 |
Jose Lopes | 42 | 139 | 9214 |
Murilo Rangel | 38 | 80 | 6038 |