Forest Response to Increased Disturbance in the Central Amazon
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Frutos Y Semillas De Annonaceae Más Comunes Del Perú 1
Guía Práctica Frutos y semillas de Annonaceae más comunes del Perú 1 Edward Jimmy Alarcón Mozombite1 1 Universidad Nacional de la Amazonía Peruana (UNAP) Fotos de Edward Jimmy Alarcón Mozombite (JA). Producido por: Edward Jimmy Alarcón Mozombite © Edward Jimmy Alarcón Mozombite [[email protected]] [fieldguides.fieldmuseum.org] [1083] versión 1 10/2018 Introducción La familia Annonaceae está muy bien representada en el Perú, especialmente en la Amazonía peruana, con especies silvestres y cultivadas. En el Perú existen alrededor de 238 especies de Annonaceae (Vásquez & Rojas, 2016), de las cuales 217 especies más 1 variedad son considerados árboles hasta el momento (Vásquez et al., 2018), pero este número irá ascendiendo por el descubrimiento de nuevas especies. Esta familia es ampliamente aprovechada por sus frutos, corteza, fuste y fácilmente reconocida por los “materos” y población que tiene cercanía a los bosques. Una forma de estudiar a esta familia es a través de la revisión de muestras depositadas en Herbarios, donde se registra datos de fenología, distribución, hábitat, usos y nombres vernaculares. Los frutos y semillas son estructuras que presentan ventajas que, al encontrarse secas, se hacen evidentes los surcos, formas, matices, fibras y porosidades que les permite diferenciarse entre especies. El presente trabajo aborda 91 especies, 2 variedades y 2 especímenes identificados a nivel de género para el Perú y 1 especie de Brasil, que equivale a casi el 40% de las especies de Annonaceas en el Perú, es una guía de reconocimiento por medio de las descripciones y fotografías que hacen más fácil su uso para el público en general y profesionales dedicados a la botánica, ciencias forestales, silvicultura, así como para la enseñanza e identificación en campo. -
Livro-Inpp.Pdf
GOVERNMENT OF BRAZIL President of Republic Michel Miguel Elias Temer Lulia Minister for Science, Technology, Innovation and Communications Gilberto Kassab MUSEU PARAENSE EMÍLIO GOELDI Director Nilson Gabas Júnior Research and Postgraduate Coordinator Ana Vilacy Moreira Galucio Communication and Extension Coordinator Maria Emilia Cruz Sales Coordinator of the National Research Institute of the Pantanal Maria de Lourdes Pinheiro Ruivo EDITORIAL BOARD Adriano Costa Quaresma (Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia) Carlos Ernesto G.Reynaud Schaefer (Universidade Federal de Viçosa) Fernando Zagury Vaz-de-Mello (Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso) Gilvan Ferreira da Silva (Embrapa Amazônia Ocidental) Spartaco Astolfi Filho (Universidade Federal do Amazonas) Victor Hugo Pereira Moutinho (Universidade Federal do Oeste Paraense) Wolfgang Johannes Junk (Max Planck Institutes) Coleção Adolpho Ducke Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi Natural resources in wetlands: from Pantanal to Amazonia Marcos Antônio Soares Mário Augusto Gonçalves Jardim Editors Belém 2017 Editorial Project Iraneide Silva Editorial Production Iraneide Silva Angela Botelho Graphic Design and Electronic Publishing Andréa Pinheiro Photos Marcos Antônio Soares Review Iraneide Silva Marcos Antônio Soares Mário Augusto G.Jardim Print Graphic Santa Marta Dados Internacionais de Catalogação na Publicação (CIP) Natural resources in wetlands: from Pantanal to Amazonia / Marcos Antonio Soares, Mário Augusto Gonçalves Jardim. organizers. Belém : MPEG, 2017. 288 p.: il. (Coleção Adolpho Ducke) ISBN 978-85-61377-93-9 1. Natural resources – Brazil - Pantanal. 2. Amazonia. I. Soares, Marcos Antonio. II. Jardim, Mário Augusto Gonçalves. CDD 333.72098115 © Copyright por/by Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, 2017. Todos os direitos reservados. A reprodução não autorizada desta publicação, no todo ou em parte, constitui violação dos direitos autorais (Lei nº 9.610). -
Chec List What Survived from the PLANAFLORO Project
Check List 10(1): 33–45, 2014 © 2014 Check List and Authors Chec List ISSN 1809-127X (available at www.checklist.org.br) Journal of species lists and distribution What survived from the PLANAFLORO Project: PECIES S Angiosperms of Rondônia State, Brazil OF 1* 2 ISTS L Samuel1 UniCarleialversity of Konstanz, and Narcísio Department C.of Biology, Bigio M842, PLZ 78457, Konstanz, Germany. [email protected] 2 Universidade Federal de Rondônia, Campus José Ribeiro Filho, BR 364, Km 9.5, CEP 76801-059. Porto Velho, RO, Brasil. * Corresponding author. E-mail: Abstract: The Rondônia Natural Resources Management Project (PLANAFLORO) was a strategic program developed in partnership between the Brazilian Government and The World Bank in 1992, with the purpose of stimulating the sustainable development and protection of the Amazon in the state of Rondônia. More than a decade after the PLANAFORO program concluded, the aim of the present work is to recover and share the information from the long-abandoned plant collections made during the project’s ecological-economic zoning phase. Most of the material analyzed was sterile, but the fertile voucher specimens recovered are listed here. The material examined represents 378 species in 234 genera and 76 families of angiosperms. Some 8 genera, 68 species, 3 subspecies and 1 variety are new records for Rondônia State. It is our intention that this information will stimulate future studies and contribute to a better understanding and more effective conservation of the plant diversity in the southwestern Amazon of Brazil. Introduction The PLANAFLORO Project funded botanical expeditions In early 1990, Brazilian Amazon was facing remarkably in different areas of the state to inventory arboreal plants high rates of forest conversion (Laurance et al. -
Tbiseries3.Pdf
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The Identity of Ucuqui by Joao Murca Fires1 and Richard Evans Schultes2
THE IDENTITY OF UCUQUI BY JOAO MURCA FIRES1 AND RICHARD EVANS SCHULTES2 ONE of the results of recent field work in the upper Rio Negro basin of Brazil has been the identification of a useful plant of that area—the ucuqui. The fruit of this tree has an edible and delicious mesocarp and is an impor- tant part of the diet of the native peoples of the region. Investigation has shown that the ucuqui is an unde- scribed species of the sapotaceous genus Pouteria. It is altogether fitting that, in publishing a description of this food plant, we employ as a specific epithet the common name which refers exclusively to this species over the greater part of its range. Pouteria Ucuqui is immediately set apart from all other species of the genus by the excessively developed disk which surrounds the ovary. Pouteria Ucuqui Pi res &, Schultes sp. nov. Arbor enormis, usque ad centum viginti pedes alta, radicibus tabularibus, trunco columnari usque ad tres pedes in diametro, cortice crasso, molli, extus atrobadio 1 Chief, Section of Biology, Instituto Agronomico do Norte, Belem do Para, Brazil. * Botanist, Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engi- neering, Agricultural Research Administration, U.S. Department of Agriculture; Research Fellow, Botanical Museum, Harvard Univer- sity ; Collaborator, Instituto Agronomico do Norte. [87] et intus sanguineo cum latice alho aquosoque. Hamuli juniores, inflorescentiae, petioli et foliorum nervi indu- mento ferrugineo-pulverulento vel ferrugineo-furfuraceo obtecti. Folia alterna, bene coriacea, elliptica, basi et apice acuta vel obtusiuscula, plerumque cum acumine 7-10 mm. longo, margine Integra, 11—20 cm. -
Anatomical Structure of Barks in Neotropical Genera of Annonaceae
Ann. Bot. Fennici 44: 79–132 ISSN 0003-3847 Helsinki 28 March 2007 © Finnish Zoological and Botanical Publishing Board 2007 Anatomical structure of barks in Neotropical genera of Annonaceae Leo Junikka1 & Jifke Koek-Noorman2 1) Finnish Museum of Natural History, Botanical Museum, P.O. Box 7, FI-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland (present address: Botanic Garden, P.O. Box 44, FI-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland) (e-mail: [email protected]) 2) National Herbarium of the Netherlands, P.O. Box 80102, 3508 TC Utrecht, The Netherlands (e-mail: [email protected]) Received 1 Oct. 2004, revised version received 23 Aug. 2006, accepted 21 Jan. 2005 Junikka, L. & Koek-Noorman, J. 2007: Anatomical structure of barks in Neotropical genera of Annonaceae. — Ann. Bot. Fennici 44 (Supplement A): 79–132. The bark anatomy of 32 Neotropical genera of Annonaceae was studied. A family description based on Neotropical genera and a discussion of individual bark compo- nents are presented. Selected character states at the family and genus levels are sur- veyed for identification purposes. This is followed by a discussion on the taxonomical and phylogenetic relevance of bark characters according to a phylogram in preparation based on molecular characters. Although the value of many bark anatomical characters turned out to be insignificant in systematic studies of the family, some features lend support to recent phylogenetic results based on morphological and molecular data sets. The taxonomically most informative features of the bark anatomy are sclerification of phellem cells, shape of fibre groups and occurrence of crystals in bark components. Key words: anatomy, Annonaceae, bark, periderm, phloem, phylogeny, rhytidome, taxonomy Introduction collections and the development of some novel methods a multidisciplinary programme on Anno- Woody members of the Annonaceae are one of naceae was embarked on in 1983 at the Univer- the most species-rich components in the tropi- sity of Utrecht. -
Alkaloids and Volatile Constituents from the Stem of Fusaea Longifolia (Aubl.) Saff
Revista Brasileira de Farmacognosia Brazilian Journal of Pharmacognosy Received 11/27/04. Accepted 03/31/05 15(2): 115-118, Abr./Jun. 2005 Alkaloids and volatile constituents from the stem of Fusaea longifolia (Aubl.) Saff. (Annonaceae) J.F. Tavares1, J.M. Barbosa-Filho1, M.S. da Silva*1, J.G.S. Maia2, E.V.L. da-Cunha1,3 Artigo 1Laboratório de Tecnologia Farmacêutica “Delby Fernandes de Medeiros”, Universidade Federal da Paraíba, Caixa Postal 5009, 58051-970, João Pessoa, PB, Brasil. 2 Departamento de Engenharia Química e de Alimentos, Universidade Federal do Pará, Campus Universitário do Guamá, 66075-900 Belém, PA, Brasil. 3 Departamento de Farmácia, Universidade Estadual da Paraíba, CCBS, 58100-000, Campina Grande, PB, Brasil. ABSTRACT: A phytochemical study of the ethanol extract and an extraction of the volatile compounds, performed by means of Clevenger apparatus were carried out with the stem of Fusaea longifolia (Aubl.) Saff. (Annonaceae). The ethanol extract yielded O-methylmoschatoline, isolated for the fi rst time in this species, and stepholidine, reported for the fi rst time in genus Fusaea. The structural identifi cation of the alkaloids was made based on the analysis of their NMR spectra. Through the use of GC and GC-MS, two sesquiterpenoids, α-cadinol (12.5%) and spatulenol (12.0%) were identifi ed as the major constituents of the essential oil. Keywords: Fusaea longifolia, Annonaceae, alkaloids, volatile constituents. INTRODUCTION MATERIAL AND METHODS The family Annonaceae, created by Jussieu in Plant material 1789 (Hutchinson, 1973), is comprised by 2.300 species distributed in approximately 130 pantropical genera The botanic material was collected in the (Maas et al., 2001). -
Wood Anatomy of the Neotropical Sapotaceae Xxiv. Ecclinusa
WOOD ANATOMY OF THE NEOTROPICAL SAPOTACEAE XXIV. ECCLINUSA RESEARCH PAPER FPL 395 FOREST PRODUCTS LABORATORY FOREST SERVICE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE MADISON, WIS. MAY 1981 Abstract Ecclinusa is a small genus of South American species characterized by their pale-brown, roseate, or sometimes rust-colored woods of moderate density (specific gravity averages 0.71). The small pores are in clustered-echelon arrangement or in laterally spaced files in echelon or radial arrangement. Ecclinusa is a silica accumulating genus, attaining concentrations of 2.05 percent in E. guianensis. Since its inception in 1839, the genus has remained remarkably stable and has accumulated a minimal amount of synonomy. Preface The Sapotaceae form an important part of the ecosystem in the neotropics; for example, limited inventories made in the Amazon Basin indicate that this family makes up about 25 percent of the standing timber volume there. This would represent an astronomical volume of timber but at present only a very small fraction is being utilized. Obviously, better information would help utilization-- especially if that information can result in clear identification of species. The Sapotaceae represent a well-marked and natural family but the homogeneous nature of their floral characters makes generic identification extremely dif- ficult. This in turn is responsible for the extensive synonomy. Unfortunately, species continue to be named on the basis of flowering or fruiting material alone and this continues to add to the already confused state of affairs. This paper on Ecclinusa is the twenty-fourth in a series describing the anatomy of the secondary xylem of the neotropical Sapotaceae. -
Community Structure of Vascular Plants in Treefall Gaps and Fire
Revista Brasil. Bot., V.30, n.2, p.303-313, abr.-jun. 2007 Community structure of vascular plants in treefall gaps and fire-disturbed habitats in the Atlantic rainforest, southern Bahia, Brazil ADRIANA MARIA ZANFORLIN MARTINI1,5, FLAVIO ANTONIO MAËS DOS SANTOS2, PAULO INÁCIO PRADO3 and JOMAR GOMES JARDIM4 (recebido: 23 de março de 2006; aceito: 03 de maio de 2007) ABSTRACT – (Community structure of vascular plants in treefall gaps and fire-disturbed habitats in the Atlantic rainforest, southern Bahia, Brazil). The effects of disturbances on plant community structure in tropical forests have been widely investigated. However, a majority of these studies examined only woody species, principally trees, whereas the effects of disturbances on the whole assemblage of vascular plants remain largely unexplored. At the present study, all vascular plants < 5m tall were surveyed in four habitats: natural treefall gaps, burned forest, and their adjacent understorey. The burned area differed from the other habitats in terms of species composition. However, species richness and plant density did not differ between burned area and the adjacent understorey, which is in accordance to the succession model that predict a rapid recovery of species richness, but with a different species composition in areas under moderate disturbance. The treefall gaps and the two areas of understorey did not differ among themselves in terms of the number of individuals, number of species, nor in species composition. The absence of differences between the vegetation in treefall gaps and in understorey areas seems to be in agreement with the current idea that the species present in treefall gaps are directly related to the vegetation composition before gap formation. -
Niche Versus Chance and Tree Diversity in Forest Gaps
Niche versus chance and tree 07t.pcl diversity in forest gaps Nicholas Brokaw and Richard T. Busing by have so many ecolo- Studies that are unprecedented in scale, detail are lower in the temperate zone, gists been concerned or approach show that niche partitioning direct light is less in the temper- W with gap dynamics in contributes less, and chance events more, than ate gaps but reaches further into forests? One compelling reason is expected to maintaining tree species richness the surrounding understory12. that gap dynamics might promote via gap dynamics in tropical and temperate The second premise is largely the coexistence of competing tree forests. Some tree species are differentially valid. In controlled studies in species and thus help explain tree adapted for regeneration in different gap both tropica1 13-15 and temperate diversity. Gap dynamics is the microenvironments. However, the stochastic forests5.16,17, many tree species do process by which one or a few availability of gaps, and limited recruitment of perform differently along resource trees die, leaving a gap in the for- juveniles, mean that gaps are filled mostly by gradients characteristic of the est canopy that is then filled by chance occupants rather than by best adapted gap—understory continuum, but other trees. Our question is: how species. This chance survival can slow some species do not8. The differ- much does niche partitioning competitive exclusion and maintain tree ences in performance involve (specialization on different re- diversity. Gap dynamics do not explain the establishment, growth and survival sources), versus chance events of latitudinal gradient in tree richness. -
Entomological Society of America Eastern Branch
Entomological Society of America Eastern Branch 83rd Annual Meeting March 16-19, 2012 Hilton Hotel Hartford, CT Entomologists Doing Entomology Photo Credits: male Spotted Wing Drosophila (SWD), Gevork Arakelian; SWD distribution map, Hannah Burrack The Program Encapsulated – 2012 Friday, March 16 Evening President‘s Informal Reception 5:00-7:00 Hilton Ballroom West Saturday, March 17 Morning Registration 8:00-12:00 3rd floor foyer Executive Committee Meeting 8:00-11:00 Mark Twain Spotted Wing Drosophila 8:00-12:00 Connecticut salon A Poster Setup 8:00-12:00 Hilton Ballroom East/Central Bug‘s world 10:00-12:00 Hilton Ballroom West & foyer Afternoon Registration 12:00-5:00 3rd floor foyer Bug‘s world 12:00-3:00 Hilton Ballroom West & foyer Posters, Sponsors 12:00-5:00 Hilton Ballroom East/Central Student Poster Competition 12:00-5:00 Hilton Ballroom East/Central Student Oral Competition 1:00-5:48 Ethan Allen Evening President‘s Reception 6:00-8:00 Hilton Ballroom East/Central Branch Awards, ESA Presidential 8:00-11:00 Hilton Ballroom West Address & Linnaean Games Sunday, March 18 Morning Registration 8:00-12:00 3rd floor foyer IDEP Symposium 8:00-12:00 Ethan Allen Urban Entomology Symposium 8:00-12:00 Connecticut salon A Student Symposium w/ 8:00-12:00 Hilton Ballroom West Asa Fitch & Comstock Award Winners Afternoon Registration 12:00-5:00 3rd floor foyer Industry Symposium 1:00-5:00 Ethan Allen Taxonomy/Systematics Symposium 1:00-5:00 Connecticut salon A Submitted Oral Presentations 2:00-3:46 Mark Twain Evening Social and Cash Bar 6:00-7:00 3rd floor foyer Banquet, Student Competition 7:00-10:00 Hilton Ballroom West Awards & Keynote Speaker (Tom Turpin) Monday, March 19 Morning Final Business Meeting 7:00-8:00 Mark Twain Brown Marmorated Stink Bug 8:00-12:00 Hilton Grand Ballroom East Vector Biology Symposium 8:00-12:00 Ethan Allen Adjourn 12:00 2 Hotel Floor Plan 3 www.entsoc.org Phone: 301-731-4535 4 2012 Sponsors AMVAC BASF CORPORATION BAYER CROPSCIENCE DELAWARE DEPT. -
Angiosperms of Rondônia State, Brazil
Check List 10(1): 33–45, 2014 © 2014 Check List and Authors Chec List ISSN 1809-127X (available at www.checklist.org.br) Journal of species lists and distribution What survived from the PLANAFLORO Project: PECIES S Angiosperms of Rondônia State, Brazil OF 1* 2 ISTS L Samuel1 UniCarleialversity of Konstanz, and Narcísio Department C.of Biology, Bigio M842, PLZ 78457, Konstanz, Germany. [email protected] 2 Universidade Federal de Rondônia, Campus José Ribeiro Filho, BR 364, Km 9.5, CEP 76801-059. Porto Velho, RO, Brasil. * Corresponding author. E-mail: Abstract: The Rondônia Natural Resources Management Project (PLANAFLORO) was a strategic program developed in partnership between the Brazilian Government and The World Bank in 1992, with the purpose of stimulating the sustainable development and protection of the Amazon in the state of Rondônia. More than a decade after the PLANAFORO program concluded, the aim of the present work is to recover and share the information from the long-abandoned plant collections made during the project’s ecological-economic zoning phase. Most of the material analyzed was sterile, but the fertile voucher specimens recovered are listed here. The material examined represents 378 species in 234 genera and 76 families of angiosperms. Some 8 genera, 68 species, 3 subspecies and 1 variety are new records for Rondônia State. It is our intention that this information will stimulate future studies and contribute to a better understanding and more effective conservation of the plant diversity in the southwestern Amazon of Brazil. Introduction The PLANAFLORO Project funded botanical expeditions In early 1990, Brazilian Amazon was facing remarkably in different areas of the state to inventory arboreal plants high rates of forest conversion (Laurance et al.