|
|
Registros recuperados : 9 | |
1. | | DECAENS, T.; ROUGERIE, R.; RICHARD, B.; JAMES, S.; HEBERT, P. A taxonomic survey of Upper-Normandy earthorms with DNA barecodes. In: INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM ON SOIL ZOOLOGY, 15; INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM ON APTERYGOTA, 12., 2008, Curitiba. Biodiversity, conservation and sustainabele management of soil animal: abstracts. Colombo: Embrapa Florestas. Editors: George Gardner Brown; Klaus Dieter Sautter; Renato Marques; Amarildo Pasini. 1 CD-ROM. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Florestas. |
| |
2. | | ROUGERIE, R.; DECAENS, T.; DEHARVENG, L.; CHIH-HAN, C.; JAMES, S.; PORCO, D.; HEBERT, P. DNA barcodes for soil animal taxonomy: transcending the final frontier. In: INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM ON SOIL ZOOLOGY, 15; INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM ON APTERYGOTA, 12., 2008, Curitiba. Biodiversity, conservation and sustainabele management of soil animal: abstracts. Colombo: Embrapa Florestas. Editors: George Gardner Brown; Klaus Dieter Sautter; Renato Marques; Amarildo Pasini. 1 CD-ROM. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Florestas. |
| |
4. | | ROUGERIE, R.; DECAËNS, T.; DEHARVENG, L.; PORCO, D.; JAMES, S. W.; CHANG, C.-H.; RICHARD, B.; POTAPOV, M.; SUHARDJONO, Y.; HEBERT, P. D. N. DNA barcodes for soil animal taxonomy. Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira, Brasília, DF, v. 44, n. 8, p. 789-802, ago. 2009. XV International Colloquium on Soil Zoology and XII International Colloquium on Apterygota. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Agricultura Digital; Embrapa Solos / UEP-Recife. |
| |
5. | | ROUGERIE, R.; DECAËNS, T.; DEHARVERNG, L.; PORCO, D.; JAMES, S. W.; CHANG, C.-H.; RICHARD, B.; MIKHAIL, P.; SUHARDJONO, Y.; HEBERT, P. D. N. DNA barcodes for soil animal taxonomy Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira, Brasília, DF, v. 44, n. 8, p. 789-801, ago. 2009 Título em português: Código de barras de DNA para a taxonomia de animais do solo. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Unidades Centrais. |
| |
6. | | DECAËNS, T.; PORCO, D.; JAMES, S. W.; BROWN, G. G.; SILVA, E. da; DUPONT, L.; LAPIED, E.; ROUGERIE, R.; TABERLET. P.; ROY, V. Dissecting tropical earthworm biodiversity patterns in tropical rainforests through the use of DNA barcoding. In: ENCONTRO LATINO-AMERICANO DE ECOLOGIA E TAXONOMIA DE OLIGOQUETAS, 5; SIMPÓSIO ENGENHEIROS EDÁFICOS, FERTILIDADE DO SOLO E TERRA PRETA DE ÍNDIO (TPI), 2015, Curitiba. Anais. [S.l.]: Federação Brasileira de plantio direto de irrigação, 2015. p. 14. Disponível online. Resumo. 5° ELAETAO. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Florestas. |
| |
7. | | TAHERI, S.; JAMES, S. W.; DECAËNS, T.; ROY, V.; ROUGERIE, R.; WILLIAMS, B.; ANDERSON, F.; BROWN, G. G.; CUNHA, L.; SILVA, E. da; CHANG, C.; DUPONT, L. Phylogenetic assessment within a complex of tropical peregrine species, Pontoscolex corethrurus. In: ANNUAL MEETING OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR TROPICAL BIOLOGY AND CONSERVATION, 53., 2016, Montpellier. Tropical ecology and society reconciliating conservation and suatainable use of biodiversity: program & abstracts. [S.l.]: ATBC, 2016. p. 98. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Florestas. |
| |
8. | | TAHERI, S.; AMES, S.; ROY, V.; DECAËNS, T.; WILLIAMS, B. W.; ANDERSON, F.; ROUGERIE, R.; CHANG, C.-H.; BROWN, G. G.; CUNHA, L.; STANTON, D. W. G.; SILVA, E. da; CHEN, J-H.; LEMMON, A. R.; LEMMON, E. M.; BARTZ, M.; BARETTA, D.; BAROIS, I.; LAPIED, E.; COULIS, M.; DUPONT, L. Complex taxonomy of the "brush tail" peregrine earthworm Pontoscolex corethrurus. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, v. 124, p. 60-70, July 2018. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Florestas. |
| |
9. | | DECÄENS, T.; MARTINS, M. B.; FEIJOO, A.; OSZWALD, J.; DOLEDEC, S.; MATHIEU, J.; SARTRE, X. A. de; BONILLA, D.; BROWN, G. G.; CRIOLLO, Y. A. C.; DUBS, F.; FURTADO, I. S.; GOND, V.; GORDILLO, E.; LE CLEC'H, S.; MARICHAL, R. el; MITJA, D.; SOUZA, I. M. de; PRAXEDES, C.; ROUGERIE, R.; RUIZ, D. H.; OTERO, J. T.; SANABRIA, C.; VELASQUEZ, A.; ZARARTE, L. E. M.; LAVELLE, P. Biodiversity loss along a gradient of deforestation in Amazonian agricultural landscapes. Conservation Biology, v. 32, n. 6, p. 1380-1391, Dec. 2018. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Florestas. |
| |
Registros recuperados : 9 | |
|
|
| Acesso ao texto completo restrito à biblioteca da Embrapa Florestas. Para informações adicionais entre em contato com cnpf.biblioteca@embrapa.br. |
Registro Completo
Biblioteca(s): |
Embrapa Florestas. |
Data corrente: |
23/09/2008 |
Data da última atualização: |
23/09/2008 |
Autoria: |
ROUGERIE, R.; DECAENS, T.; DEHARVENG, L.; CHIH-HAN, C.; JAMES, S.; PORCO, D.; HEBERT, P. |
Título: |
DNA barcodes for soil animal taxonomy: transcending the final frontier. |
Ano de publicação: |
2008 |
Fonte/Imprenta: |
In: INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM ON SOIL ZOOLOGY, 15; INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM ON APTERYGOTA, 12., 2008, Curitiba. Biodiversity, conservation and sustainabele management of soil animal: abstracts. Colombo: Embrapa Florestas. Editors: George Gardner Brown; Klaus Dieter Sautter; Renato Marques; Amarildo Pasini. 1 CD-ROM. |
Idioma: |
Inglês |
Conteúdo: |
Soil animal communities comprise one of the largest biodiversity reservoirs in terrestrial
ecosystems and a very large proportion of species is undescribed. Soil biologists thus confront
a medium populated by probably millions of species whose discrimination remains an unfaced
challenge. While much soil biological research depends upon species diagnoses, taxonomic
expertise is collapsing. In fact, soil invertebrate identifications crystallize the four main
limitations pointed by Hebert et al. (2003): (1) that both phenotypic plasticity and genetic
variability in the characters employed for species recognition can lead to incorrect
identifications; (2) that this approach overlooks morphologically cryptic taxa, which are
common in many groups; (3) that since morphological keys are often effective only for a
particular life stage, gender or caste, many individuals cannot be identified; (4) that although
modern interactive versions represent a major advance, the use of keys often demands
such a high level of expertise that misdiagnoses are common. The aim of this review is to
present a promising approach to taxon recognition, which involves microgenomic identification
systems that involve discrimination of taxonomic units through the use of DNA sequences as
taxon ?barcodes?. The mitochondrial gene cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) has been identified
as a potential universal species barcode for animals. The taxonomic utility of this gene segment
has now been revealed in a broad range of taxonomic groups. It is used in an integrated
bioinformatics platform that supports all phases of the analytical pathway from specimen
collection to tightly validated barcode library (Ratnasingham & Hebert 2007). Current research
using this approach is in progress for soil animals and preliminary results on collembolans
and earthworms are used for illustration. We believe that barcoding of soil animals, as a
complementary tool for morphological approaches, would support soil biologists in species
identifications, stimulate accurate soil biodiversity surveys or any ecological research based
on species lists, and help soil systematists to solve taxonomic as well as phylogenetic
problems. MenosSoil animal communities comprise one of the largest biodiversity reservoirs in terrestrial
ecosystems and a very large proportion of species is undescribed. Soil biologists thus confront
a medium populated by probably millions of species whose discrimination remains an unfaced
challenge. While much soil biological research depends upon species diagnoses, taxonomic
expertise is collapsing. In fact, soil invertebrate identifications crystallize the four main
limitations pointed by Hebert et al. (2003): (1) that both phenotypic plasticity and genetic
variability in the characters employed for species recognition can lead to incorrect
identifications; (2) that this approach overlooks morphologically cryptic taxa, which are
common in many groups; (3) that since morphological keys are often effective only for a
particular life stage, gender or caste, many individuals cannot be identified; (4) that although
modern interactive versions represent a major advance, the use of keys often demands
such a high level of expertise that misdiagnoses are common. The aim of this review is to
present a promising approach to taxon recognition, which involves microgenomic identification
systems that involve discrimination of taxonomic units through the use of DNA sequences as
taxon ?barcodes?. The mitochondrial gene cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) has been identified
as a potential universal species barcode for animals. The taxonomic utility of this gene segment
has now been revealed in a broad range... Mostrar Tudo |
Categoria do assunto: |
-- |
Marc: |
LEADER 02973naa a2200193 a 4500 001 1314917 005 2008-09-23 008 2008 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d 100 1 $aROUGERIE, R. 245 $aDNA barcodes for soil animal taxonomy$btranscending the final frontier. 260 $c2008 520 $aSoil animal communities comprise one of the largest biodiversity reservoirs in terrestrial ecosystems and a very large proportion of species is undescribed. Soil biologists thus confront a medium populated by probably millions of species whose discrimination remains an unfaced challenge. While much soil biological research depends upon species diagnoses, taxonomic expertise is collapsing. In fact, soil invertebrate identifications crystallize the four main limitations pointed by Hebert et al. (2003): (1) that both phenotypic plasticity and genetic variability in the characters employed for species recognition can lead to incorrect identifications; (2) that this approach overlooks morphologically cryptic taxa, which are common in many groups; (3) that since morphological keys are often effective only for a particular life stage, gender or caste, many individuals cannot be identified; (4) that although modern interactive versions represent a major advance, the use of keys often demands such a high level of expertise that misdiagnoses are common. The aim of this review is to present a promising approach to taxon recognition, which involves microgenomic identification systems that involve discrimination of taxonomic units through the use of DNA sequences as taxon ?barcodes?. The mitochondrial gene cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) has been identified as a potential universal species barcode for animals. The taxonomic utility of this gene segment has now been revealed in a broad range of taxonomic groups. It is used in an integrated bioinformatics platform that supports all phases of the analytical pathway from specimen collection to tightly validated barcode library (Ratnasingham & Hebert 2007). Current research using this approach is in progress for soil animals and preliminary results on collembolans and earthworms are used for illustration. We believe that barcoding of soil animals, as a complementary tool for morphological approaches, would support soil biologists in species identifications, stimulate accurate soil biodiversity surveys or any ecological research based on species lists, and help soil systematists to solve taxonomic as well as phylogenetic problems. 700 1 $aDECAENS, T. 700 1 $aDEHARVENG, L. 700 1 $aCHIH-HAN, C. 700 1 $aJAMES, S. 700 1 $aPORCO, D. 700 1 $aHEBERT, P. 773 $tIn: INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM ON SOIL ZOOLOGY, 15; INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM ON APTERYGOTA, 12., 2008, Curitiba. Biodiversity, conservation and sustainabele management of soil animal: abstracts. Colombo: Embrapa Florestas. Editors: George Gardner Brown; Klaus Dieter Sautter; Renato Marques; Amarildo Pasini. 1 CD-ROM.
Download
Esconder MarcMostrar Marc Completo |
Registro original: |
Embrapa Florestas (CNPF) |
|
Biblioteca |
ID |
Origem |
Tipo/Formato |
Classificação |
Cutter |
Registro |
Volume |
Status |
Fechar
|
Nenhum registro encontrado para a expressão de busca informada. |
|
|