Navegando por Assunto "Palmeira"
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Item Acesso aberto (Open Access) Ecologia da polinização do buriti (Mauritia flexuosa L. – Arecaceae) na restinga de Barreirinhas, Maranhão, Brasil(Universidade Federal do Pará, 2013) MENDES, Fernanda Nogueira; VALENTE, Roberta de Melo; http://lattes.cnpq.br/9638288458835324; ESPOSITO, Maria Cristina; http://lattes.cnpq.br/2112497575917273The study of native palms is important for its great value economic and in maintenance of communities of several species of vertebrates and invertebrates that feed on their fruits, seeds and leaves. The efficiency in the production of palm fruits is directly related to the presence of pollinating insects, especially beetles, bees and flies. The palm Mauritia flexuosa, commonly known as buriti, is the most abundant species in Brazil and is also called the "tree of life" because it is 100% usable. This study aimed to contribute to the knowledge of the pollination ecology of buriti in Restinga, in the municipality of Barreirinhas, Maranhão, Brazil. Therefore, we obtained data on reproductive phenology, floral biology, breeding system, and flower visitors. For phenological monitoring 25 individuals of each sex were selected, which were observed from August/2009 to October/2012. The stages of a flower and fruit were related to climatic variables through correlation Speaman. The process of anthesis and floral longevity was observed during peak flowering species, verifying the pollen viability, stigmatic receptivity, the regions emitting scent and occurrence of thermogenesis. Tests of cross-pollination and apomixis were made to check the reproductive system. The transport of pollen grains by wind was observed through glass slides greased with vaseline which have remained hanging near the pistillate inflorescences for 24 hours. The floral visitors were collected by bagging inflorescences of 20 of each sex and were classified according to the frequency and behavior. The buriti presented annual, synchronous and seasonal phenological pattern with flowering from August to November and peak fruit falling in September, which corresponds to the dry season, differing from that of the Amazon, where these phenological events occurred in rainy season. This difference can be explained by the greater availability of water in the region, which makes the buriti not necessarily depend on the rains to flowering. This was evidenced by the significant negative correlation of phenophases with precipitation and relative humidity. A strong solar irradiation and water availability in the environment contributed to the success in flowering and fruiting of buriti. In addition, biotic factors may have influenced the phenology, whose reproductive strategy adopted appears to be synchronization of flowering and fruiting with the activity of pollinators and seed dispersers. Thus the species warrants its reproduction in an optimal period for seed germination and seedling establishment. The reproductive system of buriti is xenogamic. The set of floral traits, combined with the abundance of pollen and the strong odor suggests that the buriti has as its main strategy pollination cantharophly, but the wind has a great importance in pollination. Besides presenting a mixed pollination (ambophily), flowers buriti attracted a wide variety of visitors, whose wealth was higher than those observed in the the Amazon.Item Acesso aberto (Open Access) Planting coconuts in Indian villages: ethnoecological aspects and evaluation of a "sustainable development" project(2010-03) SALM, Rodolfo Aureliano; FEDER, Lisa; JALLES FILHO, Euphly; JARDIM, Mário Augusto GonçalvesAlthough scientists and policy makers embrace the general concept "sustainable development", there are few who agree on how to carry out sustainable development in specific situations. As such, sustainable development projects among ethnoscientists are widely critiqued as to how well they are inter-culturally formulated. Here we report on a controversial case of planting coconuts in Kayapó Indian villages of southern Pará, Brazil and offer our own self-critique. We began under the premise that reforestation and Kayapó general health/nutrition go hand in hand. Therefore, the flourishing of coconut culture will contribute to forest conservation in the long run, in itself, and simultaneously, maintain good nutrition for the Kayapó people who protect the forest from the threat of non-sustainable practices. We take an ethnoecological approach in discovering how Kayapó behavior affects the growth and flourishing of coconut culture when fostered with external supply. We present the results of two field trips to the Kayapó indigenous territory, where we found socio-ecological factors relevant to the success of our project supporting the culture of coconuts in indigenous villages. First, in November 2007, we visited Kikretum, Moikarakô and Aukre villages (among 10 villages which received coconut seedlings from our support program) to deliver a second shipment of coconut seedlings (the first shipment to these villages took place in April 2006) and quantitatively described one aspect of coconut seed-disperser's (the Kayapó's) behavior. We looked specifically at how the pre-existing coconuts palms were distributed among the Indian families, how they distributed last year's shipment, and how that shipment survived due to ethnoecological factors. Second, in July 2008 we visited Kokraimoro and Pykararankre villages and estimated the position of the previously existing and newly planted coconut palms in relation to other cultivated trees by making use of censuses departing from the village center to their outside limits. In the three Indian villages we visited in 2007, virtually all pre-existing coconut trees belonged to a select few families, and the coconut fruit distribution was, in most cases, highly concentrated among these family members. However, assuming that all the coconut saplings that survived the first year will reach maturity (from the first shipment in April 2006), they represent a remarkable increase in the projected number of adult coconut palms in the three visited villages (48, 195 and 101% in Kikretum, Moikarakô and Aukre, respectively), and a substantial reduction in the inequality in access to coconuts. In the 2008 field trip, we found that the Indians usually plant coconuts very close to their houses where competition with other cultivated trees may hinder the palms development.Item Acesso aberto (Open Access) Reproductive phenology of Mauritia flexuosa L. (Arecaceae) in a coastal restinga environment in northeastern Brazil(Universidade Federal do Pará, 2017-03) MENDES, Fernanda Nogueira; VALENTE, Roberta de Melo; RÊGO, Márcia Maria Corrêa; ESPOSITO, Maria CristinaThe buriti, Mauritia flexuosa, is the most common palm in Brazil, where it has considerable ecological and economic importance. However, few data are available on the phenology of the species, mainly in coastal restinga ecosystems. The present study monitored the reproductive phenology of M. flexuosa in the restinga of Barreirinhas, in the Brazilian Northeast, and investigated the relationship between phenophases and climatic variables. The presence/absence of flowers and fruits was recorded monthly in 25 individuals of each sex between August, 2009, and October, 2012. There was no difference in the phenology of male and female specimens, with flowering and fruiting occurring exclusively in the dry season. We believe that the specific abiotic characteristics of the study environment, such as the intense sunlight and availability of water in the soil, contribute to the reproductive success of M. flexuosa in the dry season, with consequent germination and establishment of seedlings occurring during the subsequent rainy season