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Og de Souza
  • http://www.isoptera.ufv.br
Research Interests:
We propose a shift in the traditional way to teach Entomology for undergraduate and postgraduate courses. We envisage a system in which undergraduate and postgraduate students interact, discussing Entomology outside the classroom. This... more
We propose a shift in the traditional way to teach Entomology for undergraduate and postgraduate courses. We envisage a system in which undergraduate and postgraduate students interact, discussing Entomology outside the classroom. This would get them to actively seek for knowledge, rather than being paternalistically told how they should learn. Such a system does not preclude lectures as a didactic strategy, nor it rules out lecturers as responsible for instructorship. On the contrary, we believe lectures and discussion outside classroom are complementary for effective teaching. Our results show that undergraduate and postgraduate students who interact outside classroom are able to get better grades even when submitted to traditional written tests. Moreover, it seems that postgraduate students who get involved in such a system get permanent jobs faster than those postgraduates not taking part in it. Apparently, the key here was that when discussing outside classroom, students are al...
Research Interests:
A soldier-based key for the identification of the species of the neotropical termite genus Atlantitermes Fontes 1979 is presented. The diagnostic characters for the genus are reviewed and discussed, and the upturned nasus is excluded... more
A soldier-based key for the identification of the species of the neotropical termite genus Atlantitermes Fontes 1979 is presented. The diagnostic characters for the genus are reviewed and discussed, and the upturned nasus is excluded because it is not present in the soldier of every species. A. stercophilus n. sp., from the cerrado vegetation of Minas Gerais, Brazil, is described and illustrated. A. osborni (Emerson 1925) is recorded for the first time in the cerrado vegetation of southeastern Brazil. Drawings of the soldier of A. kirbyi (Snyder 1926) are presented for the first time.
Research Interests:
We investigate the local and regional determinants of galling insect richness on the dioecious shrub Baccharis concinna Barroso (Asteraceae) in the southeastern portion of the Espinhaço Mountains in Brazil. The total number of galling... more
We investigate the local and regional determinants of galling insect richness on the dioecious shrub Baccharis concinna Barroso (Asteraceae) in the southeastern portion of the Espinhaço Mountains in Brazil. The total number of galling species and the richness of galling Cecidomyiidae (Diptera) were influenced by plant gender. Male plants supported a higher richness of galling insects than female plants, supporting the hypothesis of sex-biased herbivory at the community level. The total number of galling species and the richness of galling cecidomyiids showed a peak at intermediate altitudes. The richness of all galling species and galling cecidomyiids were strongly influenced by habitat. Plants in xeric habitats supported more galling species than plants in mesic habitats, corroborating the hypothesis of hygrothermal/nutritional stress. Our results indicate that local factors may be the most important factors structuring the galling insect community on B. concinna.
Foi analisado um caso bem conhecido de insucesso técnico no controle biológico natural: a coexistência enigmática do bicho-mineiro-do-cafeeiro, Leucoptera coffeellum (Guérin-Mèneville), e seus inimigos naturais. Apesar de ser uma presa... more
Foi analisado um caso bem conhecido de insucesso técnico no controle biológico natural: a coexistência enigmática do bicho-mineiro-do-cafeeiro, Leucoptera coffeellum (Guérin-Mèneville), e seus inimigos naturais. Apesar de ser uma presa adequada a oito espécies de parasitóides e três espécies de vespas predadoras, todas ocorrendo simultaneamente, o bicho-mineiro-do-cafeeiro apresenta, muito frequentemente, populações acima do nível de dano econômico para o cafezal. Foi demonstrado que vespas predadoras e parasitóides interagem negativamente, possivelmente porque vespas matam as lagartas de bicho-mineiro-do-cafeeiro parasitadas. Fazendo assim, vespas predadoras matam parasitóides indiretamente, prejudicando a eficiência do controle biológico natural. Conclui-se que programas de controle biológico deveriam estar baseados em conhecimentos de interações tróficas, ao invés de simplesmente se basearem em estratégias que envolvam a introdução de inimigos naturais exóticos.
Research Interests:
This work evaluated the functional response of adult females of Eriopis connexa to different densities of Macrosiphum euphorbiae and Tetranychus evansi. When preying upon aphids, E. connexa presented a sigmoidal functional response (Type... more
This work evaluated the functional response of adult females of Eriopis connexa to different densities of Macrosiphum euphorbiae and Tetranychus evansi. When preying upon aphids, E. connexa presented a sigmoidal functional response (Type III). This behavior, however, changed drastically to an exponential (Type II) functional response, when mites (T. evansi), rather than aphids, were offered to E. connexa. Such different patterns showed that this coccinellid needed to adopt distinct strategies according to the kind of prey available. Since predators were believed to be able to regulate prey populations only when adopting Type III functional response. E. connexa would be a good candidate for a biological control agent of M. euphorbiae, but would not suppress a growing population of T. evansi.
The objective of this work was to study the populational dynamics of oriental fruit moth [Grapholita molesta (Busk)] in peach and plum orchards. Adults were monitored in two peach and one plum orchards for five years. Equivalent time... more
The objective of this work was to study the populational dynamics of oriental fruit moth [Grapholita molesta (Busk)] in peach and plum orchards. Adults were monitored in two peach and one plum orchards for five years. Equivalent time series of maximum and minimum temperatures were correlated to the population fluctuation data to verify the correspondence between pest occurrence and temperature fluctuations. A Fourier analysis of the moth time series revealed cyclic dynamics, with a main average period of 53.91 weeks. Another mean short period of 7.45 weeks was also obtained, and approximates to the mean pest generation time. The power spectrum analysis of the time series, with and without the main periodicity, revealed that G. molesta population dynamics has one regular component characterized by the observed periods, and one irregular component, reminiscent of 1/f noise, characterized by the observed apparently irregular amplitude oscillations in the insect occurrence. The combination of components generate a process in the low frequency domain, consistent with noisy periodic dynamic. The pest cycles occurred in phase with the maximum and minimum temperature fluctuations.
The interaction patterns between the dioecious shrub Baccharis concinna Barroso (Asteraceae) and its speciose galling insect community were studied in southeastern Brazil. Two hypotheses were tested in this study: "the differential... more
The interaction patterns between the dioecious shrub Baccharis concinna Barroso (Asteraceae) and its speciose galling insect community were studied in southeastern Brazil. Two hypotheses were tested in this study: "the differential reproduction and growth hypothesis" that predicts that male plants present fewer reproductive structures and are larger than female plants; and the 'sex-biased herbivory hypothesis' that predicts that male plants support a larger abundance of insect galls than female plants. Plants did not show sexual dimorphism in growth (= mean leaf number). However, male plants had longer shoots and a lower average number of inflorescences than female plants. These results corroborate the hypothesis that male plants grow more and reproduce less than female plants. No statistically significant difference was found in the number of galls between male and female plants, but a sex by environmental effect on gall number was detected. When each species of galling insect was individually analyzed per population of the host plant, the rates of attack varied between sex and population of the host plant, and they were highly variable among the species of galling insects. These results highlight the importance of the interaction between sex and environment in the community structure of galling insects and indicate that other variables besides host sex may influence the patterns of attack by galling herbivores.
The effect of area size, number of collecting hours and months surveyed, on the estimation of relative richness of bees is analized. In order to characterize a biogeographical region, it is suggested to collect various samples of no less... more
The effect of area size, number of collecting hours and months surveyed, on the estimation of relative richness of bees is analized. In order to characterize a biogeographical region, it is suggested to collect various samples of no less than 400 especimens for each one, in contrasting localities within a region, utilizing the usual standardized methodology for wild bees collecting. Thus, it is possible to have a better profit of the effort invested in the survey, making it possible to estimate the relative species richness among different biogeographical regions, in shorter periods of time.
... The more extreme the species packing, the more susceptible to environmental fluctuations the community will be ... Microclimate can also be altered by gap creation promoted by treefalls (Brokaw 1985), a common ... small (1 and 10 ha),... more
... The more extreme the species packing, the more susceptible to environmental fluctuations the community will be ... Microclimate can also be altered by gap creation promoted by treefalls (Brokaw 1985), a common ... small (1 and 10 ha), we can expect such changes in habitat quality ...
Falling of berries bored by Hypothenemus hampei (Ferrari) may be the major loosing factor during the fruiting period. However, only those bored berries which remain in the soil surface before a new yielding period have been recognized as... more
Falling of berries bored by Hypothenemus hampei (Ferrari) may be the major loosing factor during the fruiting period. However, only those bored berries which remain in the soil surface before a new yielding period have been recognized as responsible for the damage level Ho achieved by new developing berries. In this paper, we investigated in the plants and in the soil surface, the presence of Coffea canephora cv. Conilon berries bored by H. hampei during the yielding period in Ouro Preto d'Oeste, Rondônia, Brazil. We took samples, weekly, from December 2000 to June 2001. The data were submitted to the Surviving Regression Analysis, based on a censored Weibull model. During the yielding period, berries fall down continuously and, in average, the proportion of H. hampei bored berries was 4 to 20 times higher in the soil (P < 2,3x10-18, n = 62,747) than in the plants. Thus, we argue that adding the "soil environment" to the integrated management strategies could point to new technologies for the control of this insect.