brazilian amazonia
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Breviora ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 572 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Paulo Roberto Melo-Sampaio ◽  
Miquéias Ferrão ◽  
Leandro João Carneiro de Lima Moraes

Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5076 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-38
Author(s):  
JEANE MARCELLE CAVALCANTE DO NASCIMENTO ◽  
LUCIANA CAMURÇA CASTELACI ◽  
NEUSA HAMADA

Three new species of Thraulodes Ulmer (Ephemeroptera: Leptophlebiidae) from Brazilian Amazonia are described: Thraulodes yara n. sp., Thraulodes yaciara n. sp. and Thraulodes ykamiaba n. sp., all based on imagoes. All three new species can be easily recognized by general color pattern and genitalia morphology. Thraulodes alboniger Kluge, 2020, known only from Peru, is recorded in Brazil. A remarkable gynandromorph case is presented for T. yara n. sp.  


Author(s):  
Antonio Moraes-da-Silva ◽  
Suellen Walterman ◽  
Nathalie Citeli ◽  
Pedro M. Sales Nunes ◽  
Felipe Franco Curcio
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
pp. 181-194
Author(s):  
Corinna Casi ◽  
Hanna Ellen Guttorm ◽  
Pirjo Kristiina Virtanen

This chapter argues that the concept of Traditional Ecological Knowlegde means more than the accumulated environmental knowledge and comprehension of natural phenomena. Rather, it is constituted by a set of evolving beliefs and practices that understands its own dynamic relationship with other beings in the environment. The examples of Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) illustrated in this chapter include Apurinã and Manchineri communities in Brazilian Amazonia, and Sámi communities in the Arctic.


2021 ◽  
Vol 38 ◽  
pp. 102220
Author(s):  
Jaime Paiva Lopes Aguiar ◽  
Edson Pablo da Silva ◽  
Aline Priscilla Gomes da Silva ◽  
William Gustavo Sganzerla ◽  
Jianbo Xiao ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-22
Author(s):  
Thiago Borges Fernandes Semedo ◽  
Maria Nazareth Ferreira Da Silva ◽  
Ana Paula Carmignotto ◽  
Rogério Vieira Rossi

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos D'Apolito ◽  
Carlos Jaramillo ◽  
Guy Harrington

During the Miocene, Andean tectonism caused the development of a vast wetland across western Amazonia. Palynological studies have been the main source of chronological and paleobotanical information for this region, including several boreholes in the Solimões Formation in western Brazilian Amazonia. Here, a palynological study of well core 1-AS-105-AM drilled in Tabatinga (Amazonas, Brazil) is presented: 91 new taxa are erected (25 spores and 66 pollen, including one new genus), 16 new combinations are proposed, and a list of botanical/ecological affinities is updated. We recorded 23,880 palynomorphs distributed in 401 different types. Among pollen and spores, 62 extant families and 99 extant genera were identified, which accounts for 39% and 30% of known botanical affinities to the family and genus level, respectively. Individual samples have pollen/spore counts with approximately 25% to 95% of known affinities to the family level. Pollen associations are sourced primarily from the wetland environments and to a minor extent from nonflooded forests. Palynological diversity analyses indicate an increase from the early to the middle/early late Miocene in core 1-AS-105-AM. Probable scenarios to explain this diversity increase include a higher degree of environmental complexity from the middle Miocene onwards, that is, a more heterogeneous riverscape, including broader extensions of nonflooded forests, as opposed to the swamp-dominated early Miocene. Additionally, the positive effects of the Miocene Climatic Optimum on plant richness could explain the increase in pollen richness. We posit hypotheses of forest diversification that can be tested as more botanical affinities are established along with a longer Miocene record.


Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5047 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-341
Author(s):  
DANIELA CORREIA GRANGEIRO ◽  
LEILA APARECIDA SOUZA ◽  
MARTIN LINDSEY CHRISTOFFERSEN

Three new species of Androdeloscia Leistikow, 1999 from the Brazilian Amazonian rainforest are described. Androdeloscia bicornuata sp. nov., A. paraleilae sp. nov., and A. micropunctata sp. nov. were distinguished from the 26 other species of the genus mainly based on the shape of male pleopod I endopod. Androdeloscia bicornuata sp. nov. differs from all the species in the genus by the complex morphology of the distal portion of the male pleopod I endopod bearing hyaline lamella and two horn-like tips. Androdeloscia paraleilae sp. nov. is characterized by the male pleopod I endopod with simple distal portion, without hyaline lamella, and apex represented by a curved tip and inner margin serrate proximally; and by the concavity on the lateral margin of the first maxilla (except for the A. leilae that is related to other listed characteristics). Androdeloscia micropunctata sp. nov. differs from the remaining species of the genus by the male pleopod I endopod with simple distal portion, without hyaline lamella, and apex truncate bearing a small acute tip in the outer corner; and 5+5 teeth on the first maxilla. Some characters related to the genus are later discussed.  


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