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Kinds of De Janeiro Terms modified by De Janeiro Selected AbstractsRefining Biodiversity Conservation PrioritiesCONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 6 2005GRANT M. HARRIS Bosque del Atlántico; percepción remota; priorización; SIG; sitios prioritarios para la conservación Abstract:,Although there is widespread agreement about conservation priorities at large scales (i.e., biodiversity hotspots), their boundaries remain too coarse for setting practical conservation goals. Refining hotspot conservation means identifying specific locations (individual habitat patches) of realistic size and scale for managers to protect and politicians to support. Because hotspots have lost most of their original habitat, species endemic to them rely on what remains. The issue now becomes identifying where this habitat is and these species are. We accomplished this by using straightforward remote sensing and GIS techniques, identifying specific locations in Brazil's Atlantic Forest hotspot important for bird conservation. Our method requires a regional map of current forest cover, so we explored six popular products for mapping and quantifying forest: MODIS continuous fields and a MODIS land cover (preclassified products), AVHRR, SPOT VGT, MODIS (satellite images), and a GeoCover Landsat thematic mapper mosaic (jpg). We compared subsets of these forest covers against a forest map based on a Landsat enhanced thematic mapper. The SPOT VGT forest cover predicted forest area and location well, so we combined it with elevation data to refine coarse distribution maps for forest endemic birds. Stacking these species distribution maps enabled identification of the subregion richest in threatened birds,the lowland forests of Rio de Janeiro State. We highlighted eight priority fragments, focusing on one with finer resolved imagery for detailed study. This method allows prioritization of areas for conservation from a region >1 million km2 to forest fragments of tens of square kilometers. To set priorities for biodiversity conservation, coarse biological information is sufficient. Hence, our method is attractive for tropical and biologically rich locations, where species location information is sparse. Resumen:,Aunque hay acuerdo generalizado sobre las prioridades de conservación a escalas mayores (i. e., sitios prioritarios para la conservación de la biodiversidad), los límites son muy gruesos como para definir metas de conservación prácticas. La refinación de la conservación de sitios prioritarios significa la identificación de localidades específicas (parches de hábitat individuales) de tamaño y escala realistas para ser protegidos por gestores y apoyados por políticos. Debido a que los sitios prioritarios han perdido la mayor parte de su hábitat original, las especies endémicas dependen del que permanece. Ahora el asunto es identificar donde están el hábitat y las especies. Logramos lo anterior mediante técnicas directas de percepción remota y de SIG para identificar localidades específicas importantes para la conservación de aves en el sitio prioritario Bosque del Atlántico en Brasil. Nuestro método requiere de un mapa regional de la cobertura forestal actual, así que exploramos seis productos populares para el mapeo y cuantificación de bosques: campos continuos MODIS y una cobertura de suelo MODIS (productos preclasificados), AVHRR, SPOT VGT, MODIS (imágenes de satélite) y un mosaico GeoCover Landsat thematic mapper (jpg). Comparamos subconjuntos de estas coberturas forestales con las de un mapa basado en un Landsat enhanced thematic mapper. La cobertura forestal SPOT VGT predijo bien la superficie y localización del bosque, así que lo combinamos con datos de altitud para refinar los mapas generales de distribución de aves endémicas de bosques. La sobreposición de estos mapas de distribución permitió la identificación de la subregión más rica en aves amenazadas,los bosques en bajíos del Estado de Río de Janeiro. Dimos relevancia a ocho fragmentos prioritarios, con atención en uno con imágenes de resolución fina para estudio en detalle. Este método permite la priorización de áreas para conservación de fragmentos de decenas de kilómetros cuadrados en una región >1 millón km2. La información biológica general es suficiente para definir prioridades de conservación de la biodiversidad. Por lo tanto, nuestro método es atractivo para localidades tropicales y biológicamente ricas, para las que la información sobre la ocalización de las especies es escasa. [source] Evaluation of the knowledge of the treatment of avulsions in elementary school teachers in Rio de Janeiro, BrazilDENTAL TRAUMATOLOGY, Issue 2 2003Luciana Fernandes Pacheco Abstract ,,,Avulsions are very common in a school setting. Teachers are often requested to help in such emergency situations. A survey consisting of seven simple questions regarding dental avulsion was answered by 60 teachers from five different elementary schools in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in order to evaluate their knowledge on the subject and establish a guideline to be followed when an accident of this type happens. A lack of technical information was observed among the teachers; most of them answered intuitively rather than on an informative basis. This study showed the need of a more effective communication between dental professionals and school teachers in order to better handle dental emergencies. [source] Effects of a saxitoxin-producer strain of Cylindrospermopsis raciborskii (cyanobacteria) on the swimming movements of cladoceransENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY, Issue 2 2008Aloysio da S. Ferrão Filho Abstract This study evaluated the effects of a saxitoxin-producer strain (T3) of the cyanobacteria species Cylindrospermopsis raciborskii on the swimming movements of three cladoceran species (Daphnia gessneri, D. pulex, and Moina micrura). Acute toxicity bioassays were designed to access the effects of T3 strain, of a nonsaxitoxin producer strain (NPLP-1) of the same species and of a raw water sample from Funil reservoir (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), that contained this and other cyanobacteria. In the acute bioassays, animals were exposed to C. raciborskii filaments or Funil water for 24,48 h and then transferred to food suspensions without cyanobacterial filaments for a further 48 h. During the exposure time to T3 strain filaments there was a decrease in the number of swimming individuals, with animals showing progressive immobilization. The same effect was observed with Funil water sample. Animals stayed alive on the bottom of the test tube and recovered swimming movements when transferred to food suspensions without toxic cells. This effect was not observed with the strain NPLP-1. The cladoceran D. pulex showed to be extremely sensitive to T3 strain and to Funil water containing C. raciborskii filaments, showing complete paralysis after 24-h exposure to T3 cell densities of 103 and 104 cells mL,1, and after 24-h exposure to only 10% of raw water. However, D. gessneri was not sensitive to both T3 and to Funil water, whereas M. micrura was intermediate in sensitivity. This is the first report on the effects of cyanobacterial saxitoxins on movements of freshwater cladocerans, showing also difference in sensitivity among closely related Daphnia species. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Environ Toxicol, 2008. [source] Study of the space,time effects in the concentration of airborne pollutants in the Metropolitan Region of Rio de JaneiroENVIRONMETRICS, Issue 4 2003Marina Silva Paez Abstract In this article, we present an application of models with temporal and spatial components, from the Bayesian point of view, on data pollutants collected in 16 different monitoring sites located in the Metropolitan Area of Rio de Janeiro during 1999. All the models considered here assume conditionally independent observations, with a mean specified by the sum of random temporal and spatial components and a linear function of the maximum daily temperature and indicators of the day of the week. Our aim here is to analyze distinct specifications for the components, assuming different kinds of modeling that are not usually compared. The comparison is based on the posterior predictive loss function proposed by Gelfand and Ghosh (1998). The best specifications for the spatial component were the ones which considered a geostatistical approach to its correlation function. The best specification for the temporal component was the stationary autoregressive form. The pollutant concentrations were interpolated in a grid of points in the area of higher population density at a fixed period of time for the selected model. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] From gene amplification to V(D)J recombination and back: A personal account of my early years in B cell biologyEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, Issue S1 2007Frederick Abstract I have been invited to write a short historical feature in the context of being a co-recipient with Klaus Rajewsky and Fritz Melchers of the 2007,Novartis Prize in Basic Immunology that was given in the general area of the molecular biology of B cells. In this feature, I cover the main points of the short talk that I presented at the Award Ceremony at the International Immunology Congress in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. This talk focused primarily on the work and people involved early on in generating the models and ideas that have formed the basis for my ongoing efforts in the areas of V(D)J recombination and B cell development. [source] Exploring the diversity of bacterial communities in sediments of urban mangrove forestsFEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY, Issue 1 2008Newton C. Marcial Gomes Abstract Municipal sewage, urban runoff and accidental oil spills are common sources of pollutants in urban mangrove forests and may have drastic effects on the microbial communities inhabiting the sediment. However, studies on microbial communities in the sediment of urban mangroves are largely lacking. In this study, we explored the diversity of bacterial communities in the sediment of three urban mangroves located in Guanabara Bay (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil). Analysis of sediment samples by means of denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) of 16S rRNA gene fragments suggested that the overall bacterial diversity was not significantly affected by the different levels of hydrocarbon pollution at each sampling site. However, DGGE and sequence analyses provided evidences that each mangrove sediment displayed a specific structure bacterial community. Although primer sets for Pseudomonas, alphaproteobacterial and actinobacterial groups also amplified ribotypes belonging to taxa not intended to be enriched, sequence analyses of dominant DGGE bands revealed ribotypes related to Alteromonadales, Burkholderiales, Pseudomonadales, Rhodobacterales and Rhodocyclales. Members of these groups were often shown to be involved in aerobic or anaerobic degradation of hydrocarbon pollutants. Many of these sequences were only detected in the sampling sites with high levels of anthropogenic inputs of hydrocarbons. Many dominant DGGE ribotypes showed low levels of sequence identity to known sequences, indicating a large untapped bacterial diversity in mangrove ecosystems. [source] Neutron Activation Analysis Applied to the Determination of Heavy Metals and Other Trace Elements in Sediments from Sepetiba Bay (RJ), BrazilGEOSTANDARDS & GEOANALYTICAL RESEARCH, Issue 2-3 2001Fàbio Pellegatti analyse par activation neutronique; métaux lourds; éléments en traces; sédiments marins In this work, instrumental neutron activation analysis (INAA) was applied to the determination of the elements As, Ba, Br, Ce, Co, Cr, Cs, Eu, Fe, Hf, La, Lu, Nd, Rb, Sc, Sm, Ta, Tb, Th, U, Yb, Zn in twenty eight bottom sediment samples from Sepetiba Bay, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. With the concentration data obtained, contour maps were prepared, by using Kriging method, to show the spatial distribution of the studied elements in the Bay. The elements Co, Cr, Cs, Fe, Sc, Ta and Zn showed similar behaviour in the sediments, with higher concentrations along the northern coast of the bay, where the fluvial water inputs are concentrated. The distribution of U, rare earth elements and Ba in the Bay indicates that these elements are not deposited as contaminants. Dans ce travail, les éléments suivants, As, Ba, Br, Ce, Co, Cr, Cs, Eu, Fe, Hf, La Lu, Nd, Rb, Sc, Sm, Ta, Tb, Th, U, Yb et Zn ont été analysés par activation neutronique instrumentale dans vingt huit sédiments de fond de la baie de Sepetiba, Rio de Janeiro, Brésil. Par krigeage et à partir des concentrations obtenues, nous avons établi des cartes de la répartition spatiale des éléments étudiés dans la baie. Co, Cr, Cs, Fe, Sc, Ta et Zn ont des comportements similaires dans les sédiments, avec des concentrations plus importantes le long de la côte nord de la baie, oú les apports en eau fluviale sont concentrés. La distribution en U, Terres Rares et Ba indique que ces éléments ne sont pas déposés comme polluants dans la baie. [source] Late-glacial and Holocene vegetation, climate and fire dynamics in the Serra dos Órgãos, Rio de Janeiro State, southeastern BrazilGLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Issue 6 2010HERMANN BEHLING Abstract We present a high-resolution pollen and charcoal record of a 218 cm long sediment core from the Serra dos Órgãos, a subrange of the coastal Serra do Mar, located at 2130 m altitude in campos de altitude (high elevation grass- and shrubland) vegetation near Rio de Janeiro in southeastern Brazil to reconstruct past vegetation, climate and fire dynamics. Based on seven AMS 14C ages, the record represents at least the last 10 450 14C yr bp (12 380 cal years bp), The uppermost region was naturally covered by campos de altitude throughout the recorded period. Diverse montane Atlantic rain forest (ARF) occurred close to the studied peat bog at the end of the Late-glacial period. There is evidence of small Araucaria angustifolia populations in the study area as late as the early Holocene, after which point the species apparently became locally extinct. Between 10 380 and 10 170 14C yr bp (12 310,11 810 cal yr bp), the extent of campos de altitude was markedly reduced as montane ARF shifted rapidly upward to higher elevations, reflecting a very wet and warm period (temperatures similar to or warmer than present day) at the end of the Younger Dryas (YD) chronozone. This is in opposition to the broadly documented YD cooling in the northern Hemisphere. Reduced cross-equatorial heat transport and movement of the Intertropical Convergence Zone over northeastern Brazil may explain the YD warming. Markedly extended campos de altitude vegetation indicates dry climatic conditions until about 4910 14C yr bp (5640 cal yr bp). Later, wetter conditions are indicated by reduced high elevation grassland and the extension of ARF into higher elevation. Fire frequency was high during the early Holocene but decreased markedly after about 7020 14C yr bp (7850 cal yr bp). [source] Clinical features of cutaneous and disseminated cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis in Paraty, Rio de JaneiroINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, Issue 9 2008Ricardo Vieira-Gonçalves MD Background, American tegumentary leishmaniasis (ATL) caused by Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis is endemic in Rio de Janeiro State (RJ), where the disease shows epidemiologic and clinical characteristics distinct from those of ATL in other Brazilian regions. Paraty is the second most important endemic area in RJ; however, reports on leishmaniasis in this region refer to the occurrence of the disease without describing its characteristics. Methods, The clinical features of 71 cases of ATL reported between 1991 and 1997 in Paraty are presented. Thirty patients were re-evaluated 10 years later. Results, Males and females were affected in similar proportions, and the disease was more prevalent in patients aged between 10 and 49 years (63.4%). Cutaneous leishmaniasis was the most prevalent clinical form observed. Unique lesions were present in 69% of cases, 91.6% of which displayed an ulcerated aspect. Although mucosal leishmaniasis was not observed, severe clinical manifestations, such as disseminated cutaneous lesions caused by L. braziliensis, were diagnosed in two patients. These patients presented skin lesions with different clinical aspects spread throughout the body, as well as low cellular immune responses. Montenegro skin test (92% positivity) and serology (8% IgM and 56% IgG anti- Leishmania positive results) were the most utilized tests for supporting the diagnosis of leishmaniasis. Parasites, detected in 27 of the 33 cases analyzed, were characterized as L. braziliensis. Conclusion, ATL in Paraty shares the clinical and laboratory characteristics reported for ATL in other regions of RJ, probably because of the similar epidemiologic context related to the Atlantic rainforest region. [source] American Tegumentary Leishmaniasis in Older Adults: 44 Cases Treated with an Intermittent Low-Dose Antimonial Schedule in Rio de Janeiro, BrazilJOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 3 2010Érica De Camargo Ferreira e Vasconcellos MSc No abstract is available for this article. [source] Occurrence of Staphylococcus and enteropathogens in soft cheese commercialized in the city of Rio de Janeiro, BrazilJOURNAL OF APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 6 2002V.S. Araújo Aims: To investigate the presence of Staphylococcus aureus, enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC), Aeromonas spp. and Yersinia spp. in soft cheese commercialized in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Methods and Results: A total of 45 samples of cheese from three different brands marketed in Rio de Janeiro city were analysed for faecal coliform levels using the Most Probable Number (MPN) technique. The samples were also analysed using conventional methodology for the investigation of food-borne pathogens. High levels of faecal contamination were detected in 95·5% of cheese samples. Staphylococcus aureus was isolated from 20% of samples, of which 17·7% were above the limits allowed by Brazilian legislation. Aeromonas hydrophila and Aer. caviae were detected in 17·7% of the samples. Yersinia spp. were not found in this study. EPEC was isolated from 21·1% of the samples and the most frequently found serogroups were O127, followed by O55 and O26. Conclusions: Our results showed that 95·5% of cheese samples had high levels of faecal coliforms. The isolation of Staph. aureus, serogroups of EPEC and Aeromonas spp. suggested that the soft cheese commercialized in the city of Rio de Janeiro may represent a health risk for the consumers. Significance and Impact of the Study: These results suggest that soft cheese may act as an important vehicle of transmission for well-established pathogens. [source] The Cultural Politics of Aerial Vision: Le Corbusier in Brazil (1929)JOURNAL OF ARCHITECTURAL EDUCATION, Issue 4 2002Adnan Morshed The early twentieth-century invention of the airplane brought on a cultural euphoria that influenced the works and writings of urbanists, architects, artists, and science-fiction writers during the 1920s and 1930s. Le Corbusier's urban design for Rio de Janeiro,which he sketched, so he claimed, from an airplane,offers a visual basis to study how the aesthetic experience of flight was translated spatially, visually, and politically into his design of the future city. The polemics informing Le Corbusier's aerial "discovery" of South American geography revealed that there was a new empowerment in the act of looking from above, and that the spatial characteristics of his subsequent design interventions evoked that empowerment. [source] Effect of selective logging on forest structure and nutrient cycling in a seasonally dry Brazilian Atlantic forestJOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, Issue 3 2006Dora Maria Villela Abstract Aim, The Brazilian Atlantic forest covers c. 10% of its original extent, and some areas are still being logged. Although several ecological studies in Atlantic forest have been published over the past two to three decades, there has been little research on forest dynamics and there is a particular lack of information on the effects of disturbance. The aim of the present study was to assess the impact of selective logging on forest structure, floristic composition soil nutrients, litterfall and litter layer in a seasonally dry Atlantic forest. Location, The Mata do Carvão is located in the Guaxindiba Ecological Reserve in São Francisco do ltabapoana district (21°24, S, 41°04, W), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Methods, Four plots (50 × 50 m) were set up in 1995 in each of two stands: unlogged and logged. In each plot, all trees , 10 cm d.b.h. were enumerated, identified and measured. Vouchers were lodged at UENF Herbarium. Five surface soil samples were collected in each plot in the dry season (in October 1995). Litterfall was collected in eight traps (0.50 m2) in each plot over a year from 14 November 1995 to 11 November 1996. The litter layer was sampled in eight quadrats (0.25 m2) in each plot in the dry and wet seasons. Soils were air-dried, sieved, and chemically analysed. The litter was dried (80 °C), sorted into six fractions, weighed and bulked samples analysed for nutrients. Results, Forest stands did not differ in stem density and total basal area, with a total of 1137 individuals sampled in 1996 (564 unlogged and 573 logged), and a total basal area of 15 m2 (unlogged) and 13.0 m2 (logged). However, unlogged stands had more large trees (, 30 cm in d.b.h.) and greater mean canopy height. Among the families, Rutaceae and Leguminosae were the most abundant families in both sites, although the Rutaceae had a higher density in unlogged and Leguminosae in the logged stand. The species diversity index was similar between stands. Late-successional species, such as Metrodorea nigra var. brevifolia and Paratecoma peroba, were less abundant in the logged stand. Selective logging did not affect nutrient concentrations in the soil or in the litter. However, quantities of the nutrients in the total litterfall and in the leaf litterfall and litter layer were higher in unlogged than in logged stands, mainly as a result of fallen M. nigra leaves. Metrodorea nigra was considered a key species in the nutrients dynamics in Carvão forest. Main conclusions, Despite the fact that effects on tree diversity and soil nutrients were not clear, selective logging in this Atlantic forest altered canopy structure, increased the relative abundance of some early-secondary species and decreased the litter input and stock of nutrients. Detailed information on the influence of logging on the distribution and structure of plant populations and in nutrient processes is fundamental for a sustainable logging system to be developed. [source] Effects of a 10% Carbamide Peroxide Bleaching Agent on Roughness and Microhardness of Packable Composite ResinsJOURNAL OF ESTHETIC AND RESTORATIVE DENTISTRY, Issue 4 2005ROBERTA TARKANY BASTING DDS ABSTRACT Purpose:: Bleaching agents containing 10% carbamide peroxide may be applied to the surface of preexisting packable resin-based composite restorations. The aim of this in vitro study was to evaluate the effect of a 10% carbamide peroxide bleaching agent (Review, SS White, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) on surface roughness and microhardness of three packable resin-based composites (Fill Magic condensable, Vigodent, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Alert, Jeneric Pentron, Wallingford, CT, USA; Definite, Degussa, Hanau, Germany). Materials and Methods: For the control (no bleaching) and experimental (bleaching treatment) groups, 12 specimens of each material were prepared in cylindrical acrylic molds. The experimental specimens were exposed to the bleaching agent for 6 hours a day for 3 weeks. During the remaining time (18 h), they were stored in artificial saliva. The control specimens remained immersed in artificial saliva throughout the experiment. Surface roughness and microhardness measurements were performed on the top surface of each specimen. Results: Analysis of variance and the Tukey test showed no significant differences in roughness among the packable composites evaluated (p=.18), but those submitted to the treatment with a 10% carbamide peroxide bleaching agent displayed significantly higher mean surface roughness than did the corresponding control group for each material. For the microhardness tests, there were significant differences among materials (p < .0001). Alert showed the highest microhardness values followed by Definite and Fill Magic condensable. Conclusions: Ten percent carbamide peroxide bleaching agents may change the surface roughness of packable composites, but they do not alter their microhardness. [source] Embracing Race: Deconstructing Mestiçagem in Rio de JaneiroJOURNAL OF LATIN AMERICAN & CARIBBEAN ANTHROPOLOGY, Issue 1 2003Robin E. Sheriff Baseado num trabalho de campo realizado numa favela do Rio de Janeiro, este artigo propoe a necessidade de uma reavaliaç´o do entendimento convencional das categorias de raça no Brasil. Pesquisadores anteriores haviam assumido que afrobrasileiros se identificam usando múltiplas categorias racias. Através de uma an´lise do uso di´rio de varios termos e das conceptualizaçóes locais de significaçáo argumento é feito que os residentes da favela usam termos de rac,a-cor numa variedade de contextos discursivos que expressam funçöes lingüísticas distintas. Termos intermedi´ries como moreno podem ser usados para descrever um grupo espeefficx) de características (em vez de uma "categoria racial") ou, alternamente, podem ser usados como termos de cortesia ou como eufemismos. É significante notar que os residentes da favela conceptualizam raca como uma noç´ bipolar. Assim, apesar de usarem termos de raça,cor, os residentes da favela insistem que todos afro-brasileiros sao membros da "raça negra". Este fato influencia significativamente os debates sobre as caracten'sticas de consciência racial e democracia racial no Brasil contemporâneo. [source] Characterization of hepatitis A virus isolates from subgenotypes IA and IB in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,JOURNAL OF MEDICAL VIROLOGY, Issue 1 2002Vanessa S. de Paula Abstract Hepatitis A virus (HAV) isolates from around the world have been classified into seven genotypes (I,VII). Most human strains belong to genotype I, which has been divided into two subgenotypes, A and B. South America has provided a small number of strains studied at the genome level. In the present study, IgM anti-HAV antibodies were detected in 116 out of 250 (46%) serum samples collected from consecutive patients with acute hepatitis referred to the Brazilian Reference Center for Viral Hepatitis, Rio de Janeiro. Viral RNA were extracted from all 250 samples and submitted to a reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay designed to amplify a genome segment in the VP1/2A junction region. HAV RNA was detected in 54/116 (47%) and 17/134 (13%) IgM anti-HAV-positive and -negative sera, respectively. In addition, HAV RNA was detected in 17/35 (49%) IgM anti-HAV-positive sera that had been collected at a day care center where cases of acute hepatitis were being observed for 3 months. Nucleotide sequences (168 bp) of PCR products were determined for 30 HAV isolates. Phylogenetic analysis showed that 21 belonged to subgenotype IB, while 9 were of subgenotype IA. Interestingly, a concomitant circulation of isolates from subgenotypes IA and IB was observed in the day care center. J. Med. Virol. 66:22,27, 2002. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] CONSUMER PERCEPTION OF IRRADIATED FRUIT: A CASE STUDY USING CHOICE-BASED CONJOINT ANALYSISJOURNAL OF SENSORY STUDIES, Issue 2 2010ROSIRES DELIZA ABSTRACT Papaya is a popular fruit among Brazilian consumers, but one problem is that fruit ripens quickly due to the high temperatures of the country. Irradiation is an effective way of slowing down ripening, hereby increasing shelf-life, but consumer acceptance of this novel technology is paramount for its successful introduction by industry. Using conjoint analysis, this research measures consumer acceptance of irradiated papaya fruit in a sample of urban Brazilian consumers. The study assesses the joint influence of product appearance, price and information about the use of irradiation for consumer choice. Real fruit was used and consumer responses were collected through intercept interviews in supermarkets. These two empirical aspects add external validity to the research. The responses from a convenience sample of 168 consumers from Rio de Janeiro revealed that the product appearance, as a proxy for product quality, was the most important factor influencing decision to purchase papaya. Price was of lesser importance. The participants in this study did not reject papaya due to the labelled information about the use of irradiation. This suggests irradiation as a viable alternative for fruit producers. Consumers demonstrated no knowledge about food irradiation, and education initiatives may be useful as a strategy to aid commercial introduction of irradiated papaya in Brazil. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS This study has important practical implications for Brazilian agribusinesses because it contributes to our understanding of the relationship between market changes, consumer behavior, food products and processing technologies. It has shown that sensory appearance was the key factor influencing Brazilian consumers' choice of papaya, however, more education and information regarding irradiation technology should be provided. The results suggest that irradiation could be used in Brazil and provide a viable alternative to fruit producers. As a consequence, these results are useful for strategic planning of consumer education regarding food irradiation (with emphasis on the benefits of processing and addressing the myths), something which could, eventually, contribute to a more favorable consumer response to the technology. [source] Ostemyelitis by Pseudomonas aeruginosa in a dog from Rio de Janeiro, BrazilJOURNAL OF SMALL ANIMAL PRACTICE, Issue 9 2009B. Penna No abstract is available for this article. [source] Correlating two continuous variables subject to detection limits in the context of mixture distributionsJOURNAL OF THE ROYAL STATISTICAL SOCIETY: SERIES C (APPLIED STATISTICS), Issue 5 2005Haitao Chu Summary., In individuals who are infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), distributions of quantitative HIV ribonucleic acid measurements may be highly left censored with an extra spike below the limit of detection LD of the assay. A two-component mixture model with the lower component entirely supported on [0, LD] is recommended to model the extra spike in univariate analysis better. Let LD1 and LD2 be the limits of detection for the two HIV viral load measurements. When estimating the correlation coefficient between two different measures of viral load obtained from each of a sample of patients, a bivariate Gaussian mixture model is recommended to model the extra spike on [0, LD1] and [0, LD2] better when the proportion below LD is incompatible with the left-hand tail of a bivariate Gaussian distribution. When the proportion of both variables falling below LD is very large, the parameters of the lower component may not be estimable since almost all observations from the lower component are falling below LD. A partial solution is to assume that the lower component's entire support is on [0, LD1]×[0, LD2]. Maximum likelihood is used to estimate the parameters of the lower and higher components. To evaluate whether there is a lower component, we apply a Monte Carlo approach to assess the p -value of the likelihood ratio test and two information criteria: a bootstrap-based information criterion and a cross-validation-based information criterion. We provide simulation results to evaluate the performance and compare it with two ad hoc estimators and a single-component bivariate Gaussian likelihood estimator. These methods are applied to the data from a cohort study of HIV-infected men in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and the data from the Women's Interagency HIV oral study. These results emphasize the need for caution when estimating correlation coefficients from data with a large proportion of non-detectable values when the proportion below LD is incompatible with the left-hand tail of a bivariate Gaussian distribution. [source] Mating behaviour of the ,cosmopolitan' species Phyllognathopus viguieri (Copepoda: Harpacticoida) and its systematical significanceJOURNAL OF ZOOLOGICAL SYSTEMATICS AND EVOLUTIONARY RESEARCH, Issue 4 2008D. Königshoff Abstract The mating behaviour was studied and recorded on video with individuals of four cultures of Phyllognathopus viguieri from different populations obtained from the interstitial water of a slow sand filter near the river Ruhr (Germany) (Ruhr population), from a compost heap in Bethesda (Maryland, USA) (Maryland population), from a rain gauge in Windsor Campbell farm (Jamaica) (Jamaica population), and a tree trunk with moss in a forest in the municipality of Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) (Brazil population). The mating behaviour was divided into the well-known initial phase, copula phase and postcopulatory mate guarding phase. An additional phase prior to the initial phase serves to recognize the female, the recognition phase. The mating behaviour is identical in the males of the Jamaica and Brazil populations of P. viguieri. A postcopulatory mate guarding phase is not found in these two groups. Here, we refute the hypothesis, that a postcopulatory mate guarding phase is found in taxa in which only adult males grasp adult females. The males of the Ruhr and Maryland populations differ from each other in their mating behaviour. Generally, the males of all four populations do not mate with fertilized females which are equally unattractive to the males, i.e., females mate only once in their lifetime to produce offspring. These results corroborate the view that the different populations of P. viguieri do not belong to a single cosmopolitan species. Zusammenfassung Das Kopulationsverhalten wurde an Vertretern aus vier Populationen von Phyllognathopus viguieri mit unterschiedlicher geographischer Herkunft mit Videoaufzeichnung untersucht. Die Tiere stammen aus dem Grundwasser der Ruhr (Langsamsandfilter) Deutschland (Ruhr-Population), aus Moospolstern im städtischen Wald von Rio de Janeiro, Brasilien (Brazil-Population), aus einem Komposthaufen in Bethesda, Maryland, USA (Maryland-Population) und aus einer Zisterne der Windsor Campbell farm, Jamaika (Jamaica-Population). Das Kopulationsverhalten kann in wie bereits bekannt Initialphase, Kopulaphase und Postkopulaphase eingeteilt werden. Während der Initialphase findet keine Balz statt. Als zusätzliche Phase findet vor der Initialphase eine Prüfphase statt, die dem Erkennen des Weibchens dient. Es konnte festgestellt werden, daß die Vertreter der vier Populationen sich in Bezug auf ihr Kopulationsverhalten voneinander unterscheiden. Das Kopulationsverhalten der Tiere aus Jamaika und Brasilien war identisch, sowohl die Dauer der einzelnen Phasen, als auch das Verhalten der einzelnen Versuchsindividuen. Bei ihnen trat keine Postkopulaphase auf. Bei den Tieren der Ruhr- und der Marylandpopulation trat eine Postkopulaphase von unterschiedlicher Dauer auf. Auch das Fortpflanzungsverhalten der Männchen war unterschiedlich. Die in der Literatur vertretene Hypothese, dass bei Taxa, in denen die Männchen nur adulte Weibchen greifen, eine Postkopulaphase vorkommt, wird in dieser Studie widerlegt. Die Weibchen kopulieren nur einmal in ihrem Leben, was für ihre gesamte Reproduktion ausreichend ist. Männchen kopulieren in der Regel nicht mit bereits begatteten Weibchen. Bereits begattete Weibchen zeigen ein Abwehrverhalten, um die Männchen an der Anheftung der Spermatophore zu hindern. Die Spermatophore wird ohne Hilfe der Schwimmbeine übertragen. Die Befestigung der Spermatophore am Genitalfeld des Weibchens geschieht mit einer Kittsubstanz, die vom Männchen abgegeben wird. Die Individuen der Ruhr- und der Marylandpopulation zeigen trotz einer bei beiden vorkommenden Postkopulaphase unterschiedliches Fortpflanzungsverhalten. Wir schließen daraus, dass sie unterschiedlichen biologischen Arten angehören. Die Individuen der Jamaika- und Brazil-Populationen sind einer Art zuzuordnen, die sich von diesen beiden Arten unterscheidet. Die in dieser Arbeit gemachten Beobachtungen sind eine Bestätigung dafür, dass P. viguieri keine kosmopolitische Art ist, sondern dass es sich tatsächlich um eine Gruppe kryptischer valider Arten handelt. [source] Faith in Our Neighbors: Networks and Social Order in Three Brazilian FavelasLATIN AMERICAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY, Issue 1 2004Enrique Desmond Arias ABSTRACT After nearly 20 years of democratization, residents of Rio's favelas suffer high levels of civil and human rights abuse at the hands of both police and drug traffickers. The government is generally unable to guarantee the political order necessary to protect the rights of residents in these communities. Existing theories of democratization and advocacy networks offer little to explain how the types of endemic violence that affect poor neighborhoods in the developing world can be brought under control. Based on more than two years of participant observation and interviews in Rio de Janeiro, this article examines how democratic order can be extended to favelas. It argues that networks can link favela residents to organizations in civil society, and state actors can play a critical role in reducing violence and establishing democratic order. [source] The International Liver Transplantation Society, 13th Annual International Congress, June 20,23, 2007, Rio de Janeiro, BrazilLIVER TRANSPLANTATION, Issue S1 2007Article first published online: 25 JUL 200 First page of article [source] Complete assignment of the NMR spectra of [D -Leu1]-microcystin-LR and analysis of its solution structureMAGNETIC RESONANCE IN CHEMISTRY, Issue 9 2002Jan Schripsema Abstract [D -Leu1]-microcystin-LR is a recently discovered microcystin. We report the isolation of this microcystin analogue from a Microcystis aeruginosa strain isolated from the Lagoa de Iquipari, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The 1H and 13C NMR spectra were completely assigned in both MeOH- d4 and DMSO- d6. Further, the solution structure of this compound was investigated with the use of two-dimensional NMR and the amide proton temperature dependence, and was compared with those of its analogs, microcystin-RR and microcystin-LR. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] GEOGRAPHIC GENETIC STRUCTURE IN THE FRANCISCANA DOLPHIN (PONTOPORIA BLAINVILLEI)MARINE MAMMAL SCIENCE, Issue 2 2004Marila Lázaro Abstract The franciscana, Pontoporia blainvillei, is endemic to the South Atlantic coast of South America. The species is of conservation concern because it suffers elevated mortality rates due to incidental captures in fishing nets, and perhaps it is one of the most threatened small cetaceans in this region. Previous morphological and genetic studies have suggested the existence of at least two distinct stocks to the north and south of Santa Catarina Island in Brazil. Fixed differences were found between a sample from Rio de Janeiro and one from Rio Grande do Sul, in southern Brazil. Using 94 sequences of the control region of mitochondrial DNA, we examined the genetic structure of the species. We found no shared haplotypes between Rio de Janeiro and samples from the southern range of the species distribution. However, a phylogenetic analysis suggests that the former population is diphyletic with respect to the southern samples. This suggests that the populations have not been isolated long enough to reach reciprocal monophyly. Furthermore, genetic differentiation is broadly consistent with a simple model of isolation by distance, that therefore appears as an alternative to a model of strict isolation of two stocks. The estimated levels of gene flow are higher among neighboring populations, and decrease as more distant localities are compared. Finally, the molecular data suggest that franciscanas have expanded in Rio de Janeiro. [source] Influence of the spatial distribution of human hosts and large size containers on the dispersal of the mosquito Aedes aegypti within the first gonotrophic cycleMEDICAL AND VETERINARY ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 1 2010R. MACIEL-DE-FREITAS It is generally accepted that Aedes aegypti (L.) (Diptera: Culicidae) has a short dispersal capacity, and that displacement can be influenced by the availability of oviposition sites in the surroundings of emergence or release sites. In the present article, we observed the influence of spatial heterogeneity of large containers and human hosts on the cumulative flight direction of Ae. aegypti females during the first gonotrophic cycle, testing the hypothesis that they aggregate in resource-rich areas, i.e. where there are higher concentrations of large containers and/or humans per habitation. We analysed data from pupal surveys and mark-release-recapture experiments (non-blood-fed females were released) carried out in two dengue endemic neighbourhoods of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: Tubiacanga (a suburb, with a human density of 337 inhabitants/ha) and Favela do Amorim (a slum, with a human density of 901 inhabitants/ha). In both areas, host-seeking females of three different release cohorts showed an overall non-uniform and extensive dispersal from their release point within 1,2 days post-release. At 4,5 days post-release, when many of the released females would be expected to be gravid, in Tubiacanga most mosquitoes were collected in areas with a relatively higher density of containers/premise, independently of the density of residents/house, whereas in Favela do Amorim, almost half of the captured mosquitoes were collected in relatively resource-poorer areas. Although Ae. aegypti dispersal patterns varied between sites, overall the distances travelled from the release point and the cumulative flight directions were correlated with the density of containers and hosts, more markedly in Tubiacanga than in Favela do Amorim. [source] Twelve microsatellite loci for marine and riverine tucuxi dolphins (Sotalia guianensis and Sotalia fluviatilis)MOLECULAR ECOLOGY RESOURCES, Issue 6 2007HAYDÉE A. CUNHA Abstract Twelve dinucleotide polymorphic microsatellite loci were isolated from the marine tucuxi dolphin (Sotalia guianensis). Levels of genetic diversity were assessed using 34 individuals from the coasts of Rio de Janeiro and Pará, Brazil. Numbers of alleles varied between two and 14, and observed and expected heterozygosities ranged from 0.040 to 0.704, and from 0.093 to 0.818, respectively. Moreover, eight of these loci were variable in the riverine tucuxi Sotalia fluviatilis. This is the first description of microsatellite primers from a dolphin that does not belong to the Delphininae. These loci are currently being used in the analysis of population structure of both tucuxi species. [source] The Language That Came Down the Hill: Slang, Crime, and Citizenship in Rio de JaneiroAMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST, Issue 1 2009Jennifer Roth-Gordon ABSTRACT, In Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, the register of slang has historically been embraced to forge salient social and spatial distinctions, demarcating the physical space of the favela (shantytown) and naturalizing the exclusion of its residents. In this article, I examine the ongoing enregisterment of slang in Rio's current context of profound social inequality, democratic instability, heightened urban violence, and geographic proximity. Within this climate of fear and insecurity, newly vulnerable and newly marginalized city residents draw on and reify salient speech repertoires to negotiate rights to the city and to the nation-state that have become increasingly threatened along socioeconomic, racial, and residential lines. I argue that the enregisterment of slang constructs newly emergent citizenship categories that both challenge and reinforce Brazil's entrenched regime of differentiated citizenship, illuminating the productive role of linguistic differentiation in the modern nation-state. [Keywords: slang, crime, citizenship, marginality, Brazil] [source] The stone forum: Implementing a consensus building methodology to address impacts associated with small mining and quarry operationsNATURAL RESOURCES FORUM, Issue 1 2000C. Peiter Abstract Small-scale mining, including quarry operations, continues to play an important social and economic role in hundreds of communities throughout Brazil. Often operating outside the formal economy, conflicts between the owners of small-scale mining operations, the mineworkers, various government agencies, and other stakeholders have contributed to the progressive degradation of the environment, poor health and safety standards, and low productivity. The Centre for Mineral Technology (CETEM) of Brazil is implementing a consensus building methodology in order to produce dimension stone by small-scale miners on a more sustainable basis in the Pádua region, located in the northwest of the State of Rio de Janeiro. The approach being used by CETEM is based on its own experience in working with gold prospectors in the Amazon, and lessons and experiences learned from Canadian officials and industry representatives. The lessons and insights gained from this project may prove to be useful to those involved in addressing similar problems elsewhere in Brazil, South America and around the world. [source] Antibody response to Pseudomonas aeruginosa in children with cystic fibrosisPEDIATRIC PULMONOLOGY, Issue 4 2009Lucimar G. Milagres PhD Abstract Cystic fibrosis (CF) is the most frequent life threatening autosomal recessive disease in white subjects. The primary cause of morbidity and mortality in children with CF is chronic pulmonary infection, mainly caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The purpose of this study was to assess the value of the measurement of antibodies to P. aeruginosa in diagnosing lung infection by the bacteria in CF patients. We assessed P. aeruginosa antibody titers in CF patients from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, using cell lysate antigens as well as recombinant PcrV, a Type III Secretion System protein. Sputum (more than 70% of the specimens) or oropharyngeal swabs were obtained whenever patients were regularly followed for their pulmonary disease. Blood samples were obtained with an average interval of 6 months for a period of 2 years. The ELISA cut-offs were assigned as the positive 95% confidence interval of the mean antibody levels from non-fibrocystic controls. Our data showed that most CF patients (81%) of whom were not chronically infected by P. aeruginosa (Groups I and II), had their first serology positive for rPcrV. Cell-lysate ELISA was able to detect P. aeruginosa antibodies before positive culture in the first serum sample of 44% of the patients from Groups I and II. When serum reactivity to rPcrV and cell lysate were combined, 94% of CF patients from Groups I and II (n,=,16) had the first serology positive for P. aeruginosa over a mean time of 20 months before the first isolation of P. aeruginosa. In conclusion, longitudinal P. aeruginosa serology should become part of respiratory care follow-up, in conjunction with other lung parameter functions. Pediatr Pulmonol. 2009; 44:392,401. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Hydrostatic pressure effects on the structural and electronic properties of carbon nanotubesPHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI (B) BASIC SOLID STATE PHYSICS, Issue 14 2004Rodrigo B. Capaz This issue's Editor's Choice [1] is a theoretical study of the properties of single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) under hydro-static pressure. The cover picture is a snapshot of room-temperature molecular dynamics simulations of a chiral (8,7) SWNT at a pressure of 4 GPa, where a symmetry-breaking collapse of the tube into a flat shape is observed. This paper is an invited presentation from the 11th Interna-tional Conference on High Pressure Semiconductor Physics (HPSP-11), held in Berkeley, California, USA, 2,5 August 2004. The Proceedings of this conference series have been published for the fifth time in physica status solidi (b). The first author, Rodrigo Barbosa Capaz, is Associate Professor of Physics at Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro and works on electronic properties and computer modeling of materials. [source] |