JP Fontenelle

The Great Amazonian Biotic Exchange @ Global and Planetary Change

To cap the month of July, our publication in the Global and Planetary Change journal came out!

This great study lead my my colleague and co-author Dr. James Albert uses empirical data from fish distribution allied with geological data from the literature, as well as other distribution data from different organisms in the Amazon, to discuss how Late Neogene river captures are responsible for the distribution patterns we see today.

We discuss how these geological events and the modern channelization of the Amazon and Orinoco have impacted in the distribution patterns seen today.

It was a great experience and I am honored to be part of this great contribution to the field, published in this excellent special volume organized by Dr. Carina Hoorn

Find the PDF for download here!

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Presentations @ Joint Meeting of Ichthyology and Herpetology, 2021

I was very delighted to participate in the 2021 Joint Meeting of Ichthyology and Herpetology (JMIH) organized by the American Society of Ichthyology and Herpetology (ASIH) this past week. Unfortunately I was not able to attend it in person this year, but had the opportunity to present our research on the phylogenics of Potamotrygoninae virtually. It is always a great meeting, and I am very happy that I could share results of my research with so many friends and colleages.

Not only that, I had the honor of being part of two other great studies presented at the same meeting. Victor de Britto (Twitter) presented his brilliant study on body size correlations to habitat transitions between marine and freshwater environments; and Taegan Perez(Twitter) gave a really nice talk in her first JMIH about the importance of integrative approaches in biological surveys and conservation implications in Costa Rica.

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Potamotrygoninae molecular phylogeny @ Biological Journal of the Linnean Society

We have just published the most complete molecular phylogeny for the subfamily Potamotrygoninae in the Biological Journal of the Linnean Society.

Our research highlights the taxonomic difficulties of the Neotropical freshwater stingrays, and we discuss the incongruencies between morphology and molecular taxonomy and systematics of this group.

We identify instances of cryptic diversity, possible morphological converge and molecular introgression between lineages of Potamotrygon.

Finally, we discuss the implications of these findings from a conservation perspective.

You can download the PDF here!

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ECR feature @ Journal of Biogeography Blog

Journal of Biogeography has written an Early Career Researcher (ECR) feature on our work about the evolution and biogeography of the Neotropical freshwater stingrays that has been published in the same journal. I talk a bit about the research, the process behind it, motivation and hypotheses, as well as future goals for this and other lines of study.

Check the original post here!

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Phenotype is still important in the Genomic era @ SBE Meeting 2021

I had the opportunity to discuss a bit about how the interpretation of phenotypes (the physical manifestation of genetic information) is very important in studies using genomic data at the II SBE Meeting. I participated in the “Phenotype still matters in the genomic era” symposium among fantastic and diverse colleagues and research. Can’t wait for next year’s meeting!

Link for the talk will be available soon.

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Biogeography of the Neotropical Freshwater Stingrays featured on The New Scientist

The New Scientist wrote a great article about our paper on the origin, diversification and biogeography of the Neotropical Freshwater Stingrays, recently published in the Journal of Biogeography.

Check it out!

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