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Centro Nacional de Pesquisa e Conservação de Répteis e Anfíbios
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Item Prospects for domestic and feral Cat management on an inhabited tropical island.(Biological Invasions, 2017) Dias, Ricardo Augusto; Abrahão, Carlos Roberto; Micheletti, Tatiane; Mangini, Paulo Rogério; Gasparotto, Vinícius Peron de Oliveira; Pena, Hilda Fátima de Jesus; Ferreira, Fernando; Russell, James Charles; Silva, Jean Carlos RamosCat management campaigns have been implemented on several islands worldwide. However, few successful campaigns have occurred on permanently inhabited islands. Cats are known for causing severe impacts on the native insular fauna, posing an important threat to biodiversity. Moreover, this species is also responsible for zoonosis maintenance and transmission. A thorough understanding of cat population structure (e.g., supervised vs. unsupervised) is strongly suggested as a management action on inhabited islands, as it might promote more efficient and effective management of this species. Fernando de Noronha is an archipelago in the tropical Atlantic Ocean. The total cat population on the main island was estimated at 1287 animals, most of them supervised and subsidized around inhabited areas. Free-roaming cats currently threaten the endemic terrestrial fauna of Fernando de Noronha, and the cat density found by the present work is among the highest ever recorded on an island. Using population dynamic simulations, the long-term effects of reproduction control and removal of cats from the archipelago were assessed. Removal of cats was also suggested as a necessary management strategy to achieve negative population growth. In addition, it was more cost-effective than reproduction control. However, applying both removal and sterilization strategies to this population resulted in a higher population decrease than removal alone. For these reasons, a combination of reproductive control and cat eradication should be implemented in Fernando de Noronha.Item Procedure for collecting gastric contents in Giant Amazon Turtles Podocnemis expansa (Schweigger, 1812) (testudines, Podocnemididae).(Braz. J. Vet. Pathol., 2011) Alves Júnior, José R. F.; Sousa, Eliane de; Lustosa, Ana P. G.; Magajevski, Fernanda S.; Girio, Raul J. S.; Werther, KarinThe genus Podocnemis, of the family Podocnemididae, is represented in South America by six species: P. expansa, P. erytrocephala, P. vogli, P. lewyana, P. unifilis and P. sextuberculata (4, 7). The species P. expansa (Fig. 1), known as the giant Amazon turtle, is largely distributed throughout the Amazon river and in most of its tributaries (3). The giant Amazon turtle is found in the states of Amapá, Pará, Amazonas, Rondônia, Acre, Roraima, Tocantins, Goiás and Mato Grosso, encompassing equatorial forests and savanna (cerrado) ecosystems in the north and west-central regions of Brazil (3). This reptile can measure from 75 to 107cm in length, 50 to 75cm in width and weigh up to 60kg (9), being the largest fresh water testudine in South America (2, 5, 8). They are long-lived animals with late sexual maturation and a low individual replacement rate (1, 6).Item Population ecology of the freshwater turtle Mesoclemmys vanderhaegei (Testudines: Chelidae)(Herpetological Conservation and Biology, 2018-07-31) Brito, Elizângela Silva; Vogt, Richard Carl; Valadão, Rafael Martins; França, Leonardo Fernandes; Penha, Jerry Magno Ferreira; Strüssmann, ChristineWe sampled Mesoclemmys vanderhaegei in the Upper Paraguay River Basin, in the Cerrado ecosystem of Central Brazil. Populations were sampled between 2010 and 2013, and we used capture-mark-recapture methods to determine the catchability, density, population size structure, and sex ratio of the populations. We sampled two protected areas (Chapada dos Guimarães National Park [CGNP] and Serra das Araras Ecological Station [SAES]) and we captured 300 individuals (77 at CGNP and 223 at SAES) and made 343 recaptures in the two areas. Some individuals were recaptured more than once. We estimated population sizes to be 90 turtles at CGNP and 245 turtles at SAES. Sex ratio was not significantly different from 1:1 at CGNP, whereas at SAES there were more females than males. The population structure varied significantly between the two sampled populations with carapace lengths of turtles at CGNP normally distributed but not at SAES. Although both areas occur within the same ecosystem and are close to each other (180 km straight line distance), the populations possessed distinct demographic characteristics, possibly resulting from local patterns of environmental conditions and biological interactions.Item Population assessment of a novel island invasive: tegu (Salvator merianae) of Fernando de Noronha. In: C.R. Veitch, M.N. Clout, A.R. Martin, J.C. Russell and C.J. West (eds.) (2019). Island invasives(Occasional Paper SSC no. 62. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN., 2019) Abrahão, Carlos R.; Russell, James Charles; Silva, Jean Carlos Ramos; Ferreira, F. E. Rodrigues; Dias, Ricardo AugustoFernando de Noronha is an oceanic archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean, 345 km o൵shore from the Brazilian coast. It comprises 21 islands and islets, of which the main island (FN) is 17 km2 with a rapidly growing tourism industry in the last decades. Despite being a protected area and bearing Ramsar and UNESCO World Heritage site status, it is threatened by multiple terrestrial invasive species since its colonisation in the early 16th century. Invasive species and the increasing tourism contributes to a list of at least 15 endangered or critically endangered species according to IUCN criteria. The black and white tegu (Salvator merianae) is the largest lizard in South America, occurring in most of the Brazilian territory and reaching up to 8 kg and 1.6 m from head to tail. As an omnivorous and opportunistic lizard, it feeds on a variety of available items, including smaller vertebrates and eggs. The introduction of the tegu to FN as well as its immediate impact on local fauna were not recorded; however, its ongoing impact is expected to be high. We captured and marked 103 tegu in FN during the months of February and November of 2015 and 2016. We also counted animals by line-transect census in a sparsely inhabited and an uninhabited area of FN. Body size a൵ected the capture probabilities, while season and sex had little or no e൵ect. Densities estimated by capture-recapture in the sparsely inhabited area varied from 2.29 to 8.28 animals/ha according to sampling season. Line transect census in the same area revealed a density of 3.98 (±1.1) animals/ha and in the uninhabited area 13.83 (±3.9) animals/ha. Home range was 10.54 ha, ranging from 7.36 to 15.33 hectares. Tegu activity decreased in the months of July and August of 2015. Results from this study can assist conservation managers and decision makers to implement a science-based tegu management programme in the future.Item Osteologia de Melanosuchus niger (Crocodylia: Alligatoridae) e a evidência evolutiva.(Pesq. Vet. Bras., 2016-10) Vieira, Lucélia G.; Santos, André L.Q.; Lima, Fabiano C.; Mendonça, Sônia H.S.T.; Menezes, Lorena T.; Sebben, AntônioO objetivo foi realizar a descrição anatômica do esqueleto de Melanosuchus niger, com o intuito de contribuir com informações evolutivas sobre a espécie. Utilizaram-se três espécimes adultos de M. niger, com comprimento médio de 2,40m, provenientes da coleção biológica do Lapas-UFU. Na cintura peitoral, a escápula é maior do que o coracóide. Já nos elementos da cintura pelvina, o púbis não participa da formação do acetábulo, o contato com o ilío, ocorre por ligamentos, e sua articulação com o ísquio, permite movimentos dorso-ventrais. Nos membros torácicos, o úmero figura como elemento do estilopódio, a ulna e rádio como elementos do zeugopódio. No carpo há o ulnar do carpo, fusão do radial+intermédio, fusão dos distais do carpo 3+4+5 e o pisiforme; possui cinco metacarpos, numerados lateromedialmente e a fórmula falângica 23432. Nos membros pelvinos, o estilopódio é formado pelo fêmur e o zeugopódio pela tíbia e fíbula. No tarso há a fusão do intermédio+central, fibular do tarso, distal do tarso 3, distal do tarso 4; possui quatro metatarsos longos I, II, III e IV, sendo os metatarsos II e III maiores que os demais. O metatarso V é um osso bastante reduzido e o pé possui a fórmula falângica 2344. No crânio, a abertura nasal é única, o palatino, vômer, pterigóide, pré-maxila e maxila formam a estrutura óssea do palato secundário; o osso parietal é o único elemento no teto craniano. No esqueleto pós- axial em pares de costelas distintas que se articulam com as vértebras cervicais, dorsais, lombares, sacrais e caudais. A gastrália é formada por sete fileiras de ossos finos localizados entre o púbis e a região caudal do esterno.(AU)Item On the future of the giant South American river turtle Podocnemis expansa.(Oryx, Fauna & Flora International, 2019) FORERO-MEDINA, GERMAN; FERRARA, CAMILA R.; FAGUNDES, RICHARD C. VOGT CAMILA K.; BALESTRA, RAFAEL ANTÔNIO M.; LACAVA, PAULO C. M. ANDRADE ROBERTO; BERNHARD, RAFAEL; LIPMAN, ALISON J.; FERRER, ANA JULIA LENZ ARNALDO; CALLE, ARSENIO; CALLE-RENDÓN, ANDRES F. APONTE BAYRON R.; CAMILO, CÁSSIA SANTOS; MIRAÑA, ELIS PERRONE ESTEBAN; CUNHA, FABIO A. G.; LOJA, EVA; DEL RIO, JENNIFER; FERNANDEZ, J ORGE LUIZ VERA; HERMÁNDEZ, OMAR E.; DEL AGUILA, RAFAEL; PINO, RAFAEL; CUEVA, RUBEN; MARTINEZ, SINDY; BERNARDES, VIRGÍNIA CAMPOS DINIZ; SAINZ, LILA; HORNE, BRIAN D.There is a long history of exploitation of the South American river turtle Podocnemis expansa. Conservation efforts for this species started in the 1960s but best practices were not established, and population trends and the number of nesting females protected remained unknown. In 2014 we formed a working group to discuss conservation strategies and to compile population data across the species’ range. We analysed the spatial pattern of its abundance in relation to human and natural factors using multiple regression analyses. We found that > 85 conservation programmes are protecting 147,000 nesting females, primarily in Brazil. The top six sites harbour > 100,000 females and should be prioritized for conservation action. Abundance declines with latitude and we found no evidence of human pressure on current turtle abundance patterns. It is presently not possible to estimate the global population trend because the species is not monitored continuously across the Amazon basin. The number of females is increasing at some localities and decreasing at others. However, the current size of the protected population is well below the historical population size estimated from past levels of human consumption, which demonstrates the need for concerted global conservation action. The data and management recommendations compiled here provide the basis for a regional monitoring programme among South American countries.Item Occasional herpetofaunal introductions into and from the archipelago of Fernando de Noronha, Brazil.(Spixiana, 2023) Toledo, Luís Felipe; Zanotti, Alexandre P.; Bezerra, Lisandra Maria de Lima Silva; Abrahão, Carlos; Lisboa, Cybele SabinoInvasive species are on the rise. It is a global problem and early detections of alien species may be the key to control and eradicate potentially invasive popula tions. Thus, we gathered information of amphibian and reptile species that were introduced to or from the archipelago of Fernando de Noronha, in the northeast of Brazil. We found that at least one lizard species, Tropidurus hispidus (Spix, 1825), may be recently establishing a population in Fernando de Noronha main island, and the endemic skink from Fernando de Noronha, Trachylepis atlantica (Schmidt, 1945), may be establishing a breeding population in Recife, mainland Brazil. Ad ditional cases of accidental or intentional transport of amphibians and reptiles to or from the archipelago that apparently did not lead to the establishment of allo chthonous populations have also been detected and are reported herein. We sug gest stronger surveillance at the ports of the archipelago to prevent further inva sions or evasionsItem Notes on the conservation status, geographic distribution and ecology of Bothrops muriciensis Ferrarezzi & Freire, 2001 (Serpentes, Viperidae).(North-Western Journal of Zoology, 2012) FREITAS, Marco Antonio de; FRANÇA, Daniella Pereira Fagundes de; GRABOSKI, Roberta; UHLIG, Vivian; VERÍSSIMO, DiogoThe Atlantic forest of Brazil is one of the most biodiverse regions in the world. However, in the last centuries this biome has suffered unparalled fragmentation and degradation of its forest cover, with only 8% of its original area remaining. The region of Murici, in the state of Alagoas, Brazil, houses some of the largest forest fragments of Atlentic forest and is of one of the regions within the biome with more threatened and endemic taxa. One of this is Bothrops muriciensis, a snake species previously only known from the three records used to describe it. We present six new records for Bothrops muriciensis along with additional information and inferences on the species geographic distribution and natural history. Lastly we use the new information to assess the species according to the IUCN Redlist criteria and suggest that the species should be placed in the Critically Endangered category under criteria IUCN Redlist criteria B2ab(iii). The effective management of this species will require further data on its ecology, geographic distribution and population dynamics but its survival will more likely depend on an effective protection of the Murici Ecological Station, the only locality where Bothrops muriciensis has so far been recorded.Item A new species of flea-toad (Anura: Brachycephalidae) from southern Atlantic Forest, Brazil.(Zootaxa, 2016-02-18) CONDEZ, THAIS HELENA; CONDEZ, THAIS HELENA; COMITTI, ESTEVÃO JASPER; GARCIA, PAULO CHRISTIANO DE ANCHIETTA; AMARAL, IVAN BOREL; HADDAD, CÉLIO FERNANDO BAPTISTAWe describe a new species of Brachycephalus that is morphologically similar to the flea-toads B. didactylus, B. hermogenesi, and B. pulex. The new species occurs from the sea level up to 1000 m and it is widely distributed throughout southern Atlantic Forest. Brachycephalus sulfuratus sp. nov. is distinguished from all of its congeners by the combination of the following characters: (1) small body size (SVL of adults: 7.4–8.5 mm for males and 9.0–10.8 mm for females); (2) “leptodactyliform” body; (3) pectoral girdle arciferal and less robust compared to the Brachycephalus species with “bufoniform” body; (4) procoracoid and epicoracoid fused with coracoid but separated from the clavicle by a large fenestrae; (5) toe I externally absent; toes II, III, IV, and V distinct; phalanges of toes II and V reduced; (6) skin smooth with no dermal ossifications; (7) in life, general background color brown with small dark-brown spots; skin of throat, chest, arms, and forearms with irregular yellow blotches; in ventral view, cloacal region of alive and preserved specimens surrounded by a dark-brown inverted v-shaped mark outlined with white; (8) advertisement call long, composed of a set of 4–7 high-frequency notes (6.2–7.2 kHz) repeated regularly.Item A new species of Atractus (Serpentes: Dipsadidae) from Serra do Cipó, Espinhaço Range, Southeastern Brazil, with proposition of a new species group to the genus.(Papéis Avulsos de Zoologia, 2013) Passos, Paulo; Texeira Junior, Mauro; Recoder, Renato S.; Sena, Marco Aurélio de; Vechio, Francisco Dal; Pinto, Hugo Bonfim de A.; Mendonça, Sônia H.S.T.; Cassimiro, José; Rodrigues, Miguel TrefautWe describe a new species of Atractus from Serra do Cipó, at the southeastern versant of Serra do Espinhaço, an inland mountain range nearly parallel to the Brazilian Atlantic coast. The new species is morphologically similar to A. paraguayensis and A. potschi with which it shares: 15 dorsal scale rows; white occipital region in juvenile specimens; dorsal ground color reddish pink to red (in life) with alternate black transversal spots, blotches or transversal bands; seven upper and lower labial scales; ventrals and subcaudals creamish white; hemipenis slightly bilobed, semicapitate and semicalyculate. The new species differs from both taxa mainly on the basis of exclusive coloration characters (number and shape of transversal bands) and hemipe nial morphology (median face of the lobes without ornamentation), besides punctual meristic (number of ventral scales and maxillary teeth) and morphometric (adult snout-vent length) differences. Finally, we provide a discussion regarding the potential affinities of the new species and we redefine some Atractus species groups in order to better accommodate species sharing unique combinations of morphological characters.