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1.
PLoS One ; 12(9): e0184771, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28926594

RESUMO

Nonnative Monk Parakeets have been reported in increasing numbers across many cities in Mexico, and were formally classified as an invasive species in Mexico in late 2016. However, there has not been a large-scale attempt to determine how international pet trade and national and international governmental regulations have played a part in colonization, and when the species appeared in different areas. We describe the changes in regulations that led the international pet trade market to shift to Mexico, then used international trade data to determine how many parakeets were commercially imported each year and where those individuals originated. We also quantified the recent increases in Monk Parakeet (Myiopsitta monachus) sightings in Mexico in both the scientific literature and in citizen science reports. We describe the timeline of increased reports to understand the history of nonnative Monk Parakeets in Mexico. As in other areas where the species has colonized, the main mode of transport is through the international pet trade. Over half a million Monk Parakeets were commercially imported to Mexico during 2000-2015, with the majority of importation (90%) occurring in 2008-2014, and almost all (98%) were imported from Uruguay. The earliest record of a free-flying Monk Parakeet was observed during 1994-1995 in Mexico City, but sightings of the parakeets did not become geographically widespread in either the scientific literature or citizen science databases until 2012-2015. By 2015, parakeets had been reported in 97 cities in Mexico. Mexico City has consistently seen steep increases in reporting since this species was first reported in Mexico. Here we find that both national and international legal regulations and health concerns drove a rise and fall in Monk Parakeet pet trade importations, shortly followed by widespread sightings of feral parakeets across Mexico. Further monitoring of introduced Monk Parakeet populations in Mexico is needed to understand the establishment, growth and spread of introduced populations.


Assuntos
Espécies Introduzidas/história , Periquitos/fisiologia , Animais , Bases de Dados Factuais , História do Século XX , México
3.
Anat Histol Embryol ; 41(4): 248-55, 2012 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22211874

RESUMO

In this experiment, testicle fragments of 14 adult White-eyed Parakeets (Aratinga leucophthalma) were evaluated as for their seasonal reproductive activities using the following quantitative parameters: average thickness of the testicular tunica albuginea, volumetric proportion of tubular and extratubular compartments, average diameter of the seminiferous tubules and corporal weight. Parameters were created for qualitative evaluations of the degree of spermatogenic development. In this experiment, all the animals were distributed into four groups, and their testicular fragments were collected during the middle of summer, fall, winter and spring. The animals were submitted to volatile general anaesthesia, and a biopsy was made by celioscopy. The fragments collected were processed histologically. The slides were prepared and later evaluated by using an optical microscope. The average seasonal values of the corporal weight increased, starting in the winter and reaching the peak during the spring. A seasonal testicle cycle was observed, because, in the spring, the testicles showed values for the quantitative and qualitative parameters of spermatic production compatible with the period of greater activity, while the opposite thing happened during the fall. Our data indicate that the parameters of sperm production may be correlated with daily light rather than with air humidity.


Assuntos
Periquitos/fisiologia , Fotoperíodo , Espermatogênese/fisiologia , Testículo/fisiologia , Animais , Masculino , Técnicas de Cultura de Órgãos , Estações do Ano , Túbulos Seminíferos/fisiologia , Testículo/anatomia & histologia
4.
Braz J Biol ; 67(2): 243-9, 2007 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17876434

RESUMO

The genus Pyrrhura includes small to medium-sized parakeets, which inhabit both low and dry alongside tall rainforests, mainly in South America. Pyrrhura molinae is still common, year round, in the markedly seasonal forests of western Brazil. This parakeet, as well as most Neotropical parrots, continues to be poorly understood. Hence, in the present study I examined their foraging ecology both in a highly deciduous and in a semi-deciduous forest in western Brazil. In addition, I assessed the relationship between food resource production (flowers and fruits), and the diet of this parakeet. Pyrrhura molinae exhibited a flexible diet consisting of 16 tree species, from which it consumed flowers (three species), seeds (three species), fruit pulp or aril (four species), and both pulp and seeds (six species). Parakeets consumed a wide array of fleshy fruits in the semi-deciduous forest, especially Cecropia pachystachya catkins. Conversely, in the highly deciduous forest they extensively foraged for figs (70% of the diet), in addition to nectar and seeds from dry fruits. Ficus calyptroceras, besides being abundant, bore fruits year round, and was substantially used by parakeets every month. Potentially, by exploiting a diverse set of plant food resources, and particularly due to the substantial use of figs, asynchronously produced, Pyrrhura molinae persists during the long dry season in the markedly seasonal forests of western Brazil.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Comportamento Alimentar/fisiologia , Periquitos/fisiologia , Árvores , Animais , Brasil , Preferências Alimentares , Periquitos/classificação , Estações do Ano
5.
Braz. j. biol ; 67(2): 243-249, May 2007. graf, tab
Artigo em Inglês | LILACS | ID: lil-459996

RESUMO

The genus Pyrrhura includes small to medium-sized parakeets, which inhabit both low and dry alongside tall rainforests, mainly in South America. Pyrrhura molinae is still common, year round, in the markedly seasonal forests of western Brazil. This parakeet, as well as most Neotropical parrots, continues to be poorly understood. Hence, in the present study I examined their foraging ecology both in a highly deciduous and in a semi-deciduous forest in western Brazil. In addition, I assessed the relationship between food resource production (flowers and fruits), and the diet of this parakeet. Pyrrhura molinae exhibited a flexible diet consisting of 16 tree species, from which it consumed flowers (three species), seeds (three species), fruit pulp or aril (four species), and both pulp and seeds (six species). Parakeets consumed a wide array of fleshy fruits in the semi-deciduous forest, especially Cecropia pachystachya catkins. Conversely, in the highly deciduous forest they extensively foraged for figs (70 percent of the diet), in addition to nectar and seeds from dry fruits. Ficus calyptroceras, besides being abundant, bore fruits year round, and was substantially used by parakeets every month. Potentially, by exploiting a diverse set of plant food resources, and particularly due to the substantial use of figs, asynchronously produced, Pyrrhura molinae persists during the long dry season in the markedly seasonal forests of western Brazil.


O gênero Pyrrhura é constituido de pequenos periquitos comuns tanto em matas secas quanto úmidas, sobretudo da América do Sul. Pyrrhura molinae ocorre durante o ano todo em florestas altamente sazonais do oeste brasileiro. Essa espécie, bem como a maioria dos psitacídeo, permanece pouco conhecida. Portanto, nesse estudo, foi examinada a ecologia alimentar de P. molinae em dois tipos de florestas secas (altamente decídua e semidecídua), do oeste brasileiro, bem como as relações entre a produção de flores frutos e a utilização desses recursos. Pyrrhura molinae exibiu uma dieta flexível em que utilizou recursos de 16 espécies arbóreas, sendo flores de três, sementes de outras três, a polpa dos frutos ou arilo de quatro espécies e, simultaneamente, a polpa e semente de seis espécies. Os periquitos consumiram principalmente frutos carnosos na floresta semidecídua, especialmente as infrutescências de Cecropia pachystachya. Por outro lado, na floresta altamente decídua, figos predominaram na dieta (70 por cento dos registros de alimentação), somados ao néctar e sementes de frutos secos. Ficus calyptroceras, além de abundante produziu frutos o ano todo, que foram consumidos substancialmente pelos periquitos mês a mês. Presumivelmente, por explorar uma ampla variedade de recursos vegetais e subsistir, em grande parte, a base de figos produzidos assincronicamente, Pyrrhura molinae persiste à severa estação seca nas matas decíduas do oeste brasileiro.


Assuntos
Animais , Ecossistema , Comportamento Alimentar/fisiologia , Periquitos/fisiologia , Árvores , Brasil , Preferências Alimentares , Periquitos/classificação , Estações do Ano
6.
Braz J Biol ; 65(2): 339-44, 2005 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16097737

RESUMO

Neotropical parrots forage for various food items such as seeds, fruit pulp, flowers, young leaves, and even arthropods. While foraging, many species wander over large areas that include both open and closed habitats. In this study, I examined parrot foraging activity during a brief synchronous and massive flowering in August 1998 in a tecoma savanna (dominated by Tabebuia aurea) in the southern Pantanal. Six parrot species, ranging from the small Brotogeris chiriri to the large Amazona aestiva, foraged for T. aurea nectar, but Nandayus nenday was by far the major nectar consumer, and the results of each of their visits, like those of the other species, was damage of a substantial proportion of the existing flower crop. Parrots foraged mostly during the afternoon, when nectar concentration tended to be higher. Nevertheless, compared to bird-pollinated flowers, which produce copious nectar, T. aurea had a smaller mean nectar volume per flower. Hence, presumably the amount of damage wreaked by these parrots resulted from their efforts to obtain part of their daily energy and water requirements. Thus, the synchronous and massive flowering occurring in such a brief period in the dry season may be related to, among other factors, the necessity of satiating predators such as parrots, which are still abundant in the Pantanal.


Assuntos
Comportamento Alimentar/fisiologia , Papagaios/fisiologia , Pólen , Tabebuia , Animais , Brasil , Flores , Periquitos/fisiologia , Estações do Ano
7.
Braz. j. biol ; 65(2): 339-344, May 2005.
Artigo em Inglês | LILACS | ID: lil-417929

RESUMO

Papagaios e periquitos neotrópicos utilizam amplamente recursos como frutos e sementes. No entanto, flores, brotos e mesmo artrópodes podem ser alternativas alimentares importantes. Usualmente, essas aves forrageiam por amplas áreas, que incluem tanto formações vegetais abertas como fechadas. Neste estudo examinei o padrão de consumo de néctar por psitacídeos em uma savana dominada por ipês-amarelos (Tabebuia aurea) durante um episódio de floração massiva e sincrônica no sul do Pantanal em agosto de 1998. Seis espécies de psitacídeos, incluindo desde o pequeno periquito Brotogeris chiriri, até o papagaio Amazona aestiva, consumiram intensamente o néctar das flores dos ipês. Nandayus nenday, de longe, explorou a maior proporção do total de flores utilizadas, e bandos desse periquito, bem como das outras espécies, destruíam, a cada visita, parcela substancial das flores presentes em uma dada copa. Os psitacídeos consumiram néctar com maior freqüência durante a tarde, principalmente no final, quando a concentração tendeu a ser maior. O volume, no entanto, foi comparativamente baixo em relação às flores de espécies polinizadas por pássaros. Dessa forma, aparentemente, os psitacídeos foram acentuadamente destrutivos ao explorar T. aurea, uma vez que o néctar de muitas flores era requerido para suprir parte da demanda diária de energia e água dessas aves. Portanto, a floração massiva e sincrônica em T. aurea durante curto período no auge da estação seca, dentre outros fatores, pode estar voltada a saciar predadores, como os psitacídeos, ainda abundantes no Pantanal.


Assuntos
Animais , Comportamento Alimentar/fisiologia , Pólen , Papagaios/fisiologia , Tabebuia , Brasil , Flores , Periquitos/fisiologia , Estações do Ano
8.
Braz J Biol ; 64(4): 867-77, 2004 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15744428

RESUMO

Parakeets usually forage for massive and ephemeral plant resources at forest canopies. Fruit pulp is widely cited as a major food resource for these birds, which often eat seeds and nectar. In this study, I assessed flower and fruit production at a gallery forest in the Pantanal flood plain (Brazil) in order to evaluate the relationship between food resource production and abundance of a common parakeet, Brotogeris chiriri. Also, I evaluated the relationship between food resource production and foraging activity. Parakeet abundance varied markedly along the year, coinciding with massive episodes of flower and fleshy fruit availability. Inga vera nectar, intensely used during the latter part of dry season, was by far the most exploited food item by parakeets when they were very abundant. The nectar comprised 34% of the parakeets' diet (N = 131 feeding records) at the gallery forest, while fleshy fruits made up the rest. Parakeets principally exploited fruits of Cecropia pachystachya and Ficus luschnathiana, besides palm fruits and Inga vera arils. The consistent relationship between foraging activity and parakeet abundance, as well as the coincidence between fluctuations of these parameters and availability of major food resources, suggests that food availability mostly influenced B. chiriri occurrence in the gallery forest. Furthermore, I found no evidence for gallery forest use for roosting and/or breeding, in spite of the fact that such factors usually influence local parakeet abundance.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Comportamento Alimentar/fisiologia , Flores , Frutas , Periquitos/fisiologia , Animais , Brasil , Periquitos/classificação , Densidade Demográfica , Estações do Ano
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