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Publications

Publications by Mário Cunha

2015

THE DIAGNOSIS AND RECOMMENDATION INTEGRATED SYSTEM (DRIS) - FIRST APROACH FOR THE ESTABLISHMENT OF NORMS FOR VINEYARDS IN PORTUGAL

Authors
Carneiro, A; Pereira, O; Cunha, M; Queiroz, J;

Publication
CIENCIA E TECNICA VITIVINICOLA

Abstract
The Diagnosis and Recommendation Integrated System (DRIS) is an alternative tool for the evaluation of nutritional status and fertilizer recommendation of several crops. However, as this methodology implies the establishment of norms or standards, without which one cannot infer about the nutritional status of a crop, in Portugal this tool has little application. The aim of this study was to establish preliminary DRIS norms for vineyards in Portugal. From 2007 to 2009, petiole samples were collected on a set of 199 selected plots. The DRIS norms were established according to the proposed by Beaufils (1973), based on the results of the laboratory procedures. The results suggest the need for further studies in order to validate the DRIS norms presented. In the future it will be important to increase the number of observations for the establishment of DRIS norms, as well as to determine the relevance of establishing specific nutritional standard according the edaphic, climatic and varietal variability of Portuguese wine regions.

2017

Assessing mismatches in ecosystem services proficiency across the urban fabric of Porto (Portugal): The influence of structural and socioeconomic variables

Authors
Graca, MS; Goncalves, JF; Alves, PJM; Nowak, DJ; Hoehn, R; Ellis, A; Farinha Marques, P; Cunha, M;

Publication
ECOSYSTEM SERVICES

Abstract
Knowledge regarding Ecosystem Services (ES) delivery and the socio-ecological factors that influence their proficiency is essential to allow cities to adopt policies that lead to resource-efficient planning and greater resilience. As one of the matrix elements of urban ecological structure, vegetation may play a major role in promoting ES proficiency through planting design. This research addresses the heterogeneity of ES delivered by the urban vegetation of Porto, a Portuguese city. A methodology is proposed to investigate associations between socioeconomic indicators and structural variables of the urban forest, and also which structural variables of the urban forest, if any, differ along a socioeconomic gradient. Our results reveal that before setting planning and management goals, it is crucial to understand local patterns of ES and their relationships with socioeconomic patterns, which can be affected by variables such as building age. This should be followed by the identification of structural variables of the urban forest that better explain the differences, in order to target these through planning and management goals. The conceptual framework adopted in this research can guide adaptation of our methodology to other cities, providing insights for planning and management suitable to site-specific conditions and directly usable by stakeholders.

2017

Hyperspectral-based predictive modelling of grapevine water status in the Portuguese Douro wine region

Authors
Pocas, I; Goncalves, J; Costa, PM; Goncalves, I; Pereira, LS; Cunha, M;

Publication
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF APPLIED EARTH OBSERVATION AND GEOINFORMATION

Abstract
In this study, hyperspectral reflectance (HySR) data derived from a handheld spectroradiometer were used to assess the water status of three grapevine cultivars in two sub-regions of Douro wine region during two consecutive years. A large set of potential predictors derived from the HySR data were considered for modelling/predicting the predawn leaf water potential (Psi(pd)) through different statistical and machine learning techniques. Three HySR vegetation indices were selected as final predictors for the computation of the models and the in-season time trend was removed from data by using a time predictor. The vegetation indices selected were the Normalized Reflectance Index for the wavelengths 554 nm and 561 nm (NRI554;561), the water index (WI) for the wavelengths 900 nm and 970 nm, and the D1 index which is associated with the rate of reflectance increase in the wavelengths of 706 nm and 730 nm. These vegetation indices covered the green, red edge and the near infrared domains of the electromagnetic spectrum. A large set of state-of-the-art analysis and statistical and machine-learning modelling techniques were tested. Predictive Modelling techniques based on generalized boosted model (GBM), bagged multivariate adaptive regression splines (B-MARS), generalized additive model (GAM), and Bayesian regularized neural networks (BRNN) showed the best performance for predicting Psi(pd), with an average determination coefficient (R-2) ranging between 0.78 and 0.80 and RMSE varying between 0.11 and 0.12 MPa. When cultivar Touriga Nacional was used for training the models and the cultivars Touriga Franca and Tinta Barroca for testing (independent validation), the models performance was good, particularly for GBM (R-2 = 0.85; RMSE = 0.09 MPa). Additionally, the comparison of Psi(pd) observed and predicted showed an equitable dispersion of data from the various cultivars. The results achieved show a good potential of these predictive models based on vegetation indices to support irrigation scheduling in vineyard.

2017

Parabolic variation in sexual selection intensity across the range of a cold-water pipefish: implications for susceptibility to climate change

Authors
Monteiro, N; Cunha, M; Ferreira, L; Vieira, N; Antunes, A; Lyons, D; Jones, AG;

Publication
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY

Abstract
While an understanding of evolutionary processes in shifting environments is vital in the context of rapid ecological change, one of the most potent selective forces, sexual selection, remains curiously unexplored. Variation in sexual selection across a species range, especially across a gradient of temperature regimes, has the potential to provide a window into the possible impacts of climate change on the evolution of mating patterns. Here, we investigated some of the links between temperature and indicators of sexual selection, using a cold-water pipefish as model. We found that populations differed with respect to body size, length of the breeding season, fecundity, and sexual dimorphism across a wide latitudinal gradient. We encountered two types of latitudinal patterns, either linear, when related to body size, or parabolic in shape when considering variables related to sexual selection intensity, such as sexual dimorphism and reproductive investment. Our results suggest that sexual selection intensity increases toward both edges of the distribution and that the large differences in temperature likely play a significant role. Shorter breeding seasons in the north and reduced periods for gamete production in the south certainly have the potential to alter mating systems, breeding synchrony, and mate monopolization rates. As latitude and water temperature are tightly coupled across the European coasts, the observed patterns in traits related to sexual selection can lead to predictions regarding how sexual selection should change in response to climate change. Based on data from extant populations, we can predict that as the worm pipefish moves northward, a wave of decreasing selection intensity will likely replace the strong sexual selection at the northern range margin. In contrast, the southern populations will be followed by heightened sexual selection, which may exacerbate the problem of local extinction at this retreating boundary.

2013

The Role of the TRS in Precision Agriculture: DGPS with EGNOS and RTK Positioning Using Data from NTRIP Streams

Authors
Osorio, I; Cunha, M;

Publication
REFERENCE FRAMES FOR APPLICATIONS IN GEOSCIENCES

Abstract
For Precise Agriculture purposes, several steps of a maize crop-system were recorded by the use of a GPS receiver with EGNOS and RTK capabilities. The field is about 35 km far from two GNSS CORS, one from RENEP, operated by IGS, and the other from SERVIR, operated by IGEoE. Both networks disseminate real-time GNSS data streams over the Internet using the NTRIP protocol. The GNSS data streams from RENEP reference stations (including validated station coordinates) provide the user with a real-time access to the ETRS89 and, those same streams from IGEoE, a military institution, are in ITRS, allowing large scale scientific applications. The validation of the EGNOS and the RTK solutions, obtained in the two TRS systems, was achieved by the results from post-processed measurements. RTK solutions, when compared to the post-processed values in the same TRS, show sub-decimeter accuracy what is enough for many of the Precision Agriculture studies. However, the two RTK solutions have a translation with a magnitude of the order of 0.5 m that can be explained by the independence of the ETRS89 on the continental drift. Indeed, at the zone where the field is located, while the ETRFyy Cartesian coordinates have velocities less than 1 mm/year, the ITRFyy Cartesian coordinates have velocities greater than 1 cm/year, what give rise to a point position variation with a magnitude of 2.5 cm/year. In order to correlate the tractor velocity, during a pre-emergence herbicide application, to the terrain slope, the field orthometric heights were obtained by the use of GRS80 ondulations, on a 1.5' x 1.5'grid, in the local Portuguese geoid model GeodPT08. The global precision of this model is estimated in 4 cm, which is within the error for the real time solutions obtained.

2017

Olive crop-yield forecasting based on airborne pollen in a region where the olive groves acreage and crop system changed drastically

Authors
Ribeiro, H; Abreu, I; Cunha, M;

Publication
AEROBIOLOGIA

Abstract
Olive trees are one of the most economically important perennial crops in Portugal. During the last decade, the Alentejo olive-growing region has suffered a significantly change in the crop production system, with the regional pollen index (RPI) and olive fruit production registering a significant growth. The aim of this study was to ascertain the utility of this highly variable production and pollen data in crop forecasting modeling. Airborne pollen was sampled using a Cour-type trap from 1999 to 2015. A linear regression model fitted with the regional pollen index as the independent variable showed an accuracy of 87% in estimating olives fruit production in Alentejo. However, the average deviation between observed and modeled production was 32% with half of the tested years presenting deviations between 36 and 66%. The low accuracy of this model is a consequence of the great overall variation and significant upward trend observed in both the production and the RPI dataset that conceal the true association between these variables. In order to overcome this problem, a detrend procedure was applied to both time series to remove the trend observed. The regression model fitted with the fruit production and the RPI detrended data showed a lowest forecasting accuracy of 63% but the average deviation between observed and modeled production decrease to 14% with a maximum deviation value of 33%. This procedure allows focusing the analysis on the production fluctuations related to the biological response of the trees rather than with the changes in the production system.

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