Cabeceira do rio das pedras - mapa base - 2007
- Sent by Samuel Fernando Adami - 27/10/2009
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Cartografia de base da área da cabeceira do rio das Pedras. O mapa foi utilizado nos primeiros trabalhos de campo do projeto.
Leia MaisCartografia de base da área da cabeceira do rio das Pedras. O mapa foi utilizado nos primeiros trabalhos de campo do projeto.
Leia MaisModelo 3D da cabeceira do Ribeirão das Pedras, desenvolvida a partir das curvas de nível da carta topográfica da área (http://www.bdc.ib.unicamp.br/gv/visualizarMaterial.php?idMaterial=1072). Unidade: UTM (23K) / datum: Córrego Alegre
Leia MaisO GeoVirt II foi desenvolvido com o objetivo de propiciar a navegação (campo virtual) na área da cabeceira do Ribeirão das Pedras, no município de Campinas, permitindo a compreensão do uso e ocupação do solo ao longo do tempo histórico. Poderá ser utilizado como exemplo em exercícios.
Leia MaisNome popular: pixirica.
Árvore até 3m; extremidade dos ramos denso-longo-estrelada; folha simples, oposta, sem estípula, pecíolo canaliculado, 3 X 0,3cm, denso-estrelado, lâmina elíptica, ápice agudo a acuminado, base cuneada às vezes levemente assimétrica, 19-27 X 8-10,5cm, margem denticulada, ciliada, membranácea, venação acródroma, 2 pares de nervuras secundárias, mais conspícuas na face abaxial, venação terciária paralela, conspícua na abaxial, face adaxial com tricomas simples e estrigosos, abaxial com tricomas longos-estrelados e simples, adensando nas nervuras; fruto baga globosa, denso-estrelada, imatura, verde no material seco. ...
Leia MaisMapa de solos da cabeceira do riberião das Pedras extraído do mapa pedológico da bacia.
Leia Mais60 a 70 cm. The top of the head, the back and the wings are black and the other parts of the body are mostly grey. The immature is brown and striated. Distribution: All over the world, except from the poles and Australia. Habitat: Slow flowing rivers, lakes, reservoirs and swamps. Diet: Aquatic insects, mollusks, crustaceans, fish, amphibians and reptiles. May also eat carrion and rests of food fallen from other bird’s nests, including dead hatchlings. Reproduction: Breeds in colonies together with other species of herons. The nests are built from 1 to 7m from the ground or water. Lays two or three bluish green or buffy eggs. Natural history: During most of the day it rests...
Leia Mais75 cm. Aquatic with narrow beak curved in the tip. The feet are webbed. The body is black and sometimes the throat is yellow. In the breeding season the male has some white feathers in the throat and ear region. The immature is fuliginous. Distribution: From Mexico to Southern South America Habitat: Lives in lakes, swamps and estuaries. Diet: Feeds on fish, even spiny ones. The gastric acids dissolve the spines. Reproduction: The nest is built on tall trees near lakes, sometimes mixing with heron flocks. Natural history: It is an excellent diver. When in flocks may pen fish schools, leading them to shallow water where they catch the fishes in frenzy. When it goes out of the wate...
Leia MaisPhysical appearance: 40 cm. The feet are red and webbed. The chest is brown, as well as the face that is a bit darker. There is a patch of iridescent feathers in the wings. When flying it shows a large white spot at the back of the wing. The male has a red beak and the female’s is blue. The Female also has white spots on the face. Distribution: From Venezuela to Argentina. Habitat: Wetlands, lakes, ponds and rivers even in polluted places. Diet: Feeds on seeds, leaves and small invertebrates. The hatchlings are goot at catching insects. Reproduction: Lays up to 14 bluish or greenish eggs. When the adult realizes the presence of a potential predator it distracts its attention...
Leia MaisPhysical appearance: 36 cm. The legs are short and yellow. The body is predominantly grey, darker in the back. The top of the head is black. The immature is striated and brownish. Distribution: American Continent, Africa, Asia, Australia and islands in the Pacific. Habitat: Rivers, lakes and mangroves of different sizes. Diet: Aquatic insects, mollusks, amphibians, reptiles and fish. Reproduction: The nest is a platform on the top of tall trees. Lays three eggs. Natural history: Solitary and migratory. There are saw-like structures inside the beak to help holding slippery food. May be eaten by carnivorous fish such as the trahiras (Hoplias sp.) when walking on flooded land....
Leia MaisLength: 20cm Identification: nightjars are always very difficult to identify as they are nocturnal birds, rarely seen during the day due to their camouflage. On the other hand there are few species inhabitting urban areas and among these the little nightjar is usually the smallest and with the lightest color pattern. Distribution: it is distributed through all the South American countries east to the Andes. Habitat: occurs in a wide range of ecosystems, but is specially common in forest edges surrounded by crops and wetlands. This nightjar spends the whole day quiet and very well camouflaged on the ground and thus is rarely seen at daylight. It only flies during the day ...
Leia Mais48cm Identification: the body is mostly cinnamon with dark streaks on the wings. It may be locally the commonest duck, especially in Southern Brazil wetlands, where its hunting is allowed provided the state’s quotas are respected. Regarding its habitat this species tends occur in open wetlands, surrounded by grasslands. Feeds mainly by grazing small grasses on the lake shores or underwater but also eats aquatic plants, aquatic insects and small fish. It may build the nest either in a tree hole or on the aquatic plants. The female lays from 8 to 14 eggs that are sat for about one month. The offspring start to fly within 55 days after hatching.
Leia Mais35cm Identification: when seen from below its body is basically white with the tip of the wings and a region around the eyes black. There is a gray area on the upper parts of the wings. Its color pattern reminds that of some seagulls. The name in Portuguese – Gavião Peneira – means hovering hawk and it is due to the behavior of hovering before diving onto the prey. It is certainly one of the most beautiful hawks found in urban areas. It flies over open areas, pastures, crops and even on the banks of polluted streams in search for rats. This kite feeds mainly on large insects such as grasshoppers and beetles and on small rodents and lizards. The nest, made of twigs, is built on iso...
Leia Mais15 cm. The body is white with a band around the eye, the wing and the tail black. Distribution: From Northeastern Brazil to São Paulo. It is currently spreading its distribution southwards. Habitat: Lives in riverbanks, muddy places near lakes and ponds. Diet: Feeds mainly on arthropods, sometimes small fruits. Reproduction: The male exhibits himself standing on the body and opening the tail and the wings. The nest is spherical with a lateral entrance. It is built on small trees above the water. The white eggs are incubated by the female. Natural history: Runs on the aquatic plants, catching insects among them. Attacks other birds that enter its territory. Some people and eve...
Leia Mais30cm Members of the Caprimulgidae family are very difficult to tell apart. The best clues to recognize the Pauraque are its very typical song and the fact that it is one of the few nighthawks to get so close to urban areas. The Pauraque spends the whole day quietly sat on the ground, so well camouflaged that it is almost impossible to see. It remains quiet when approached, but when you are too close the bird flies in a fast zig-zag, and lands few meters away. It is curious to notice that even landing close it is difficult to see. The eggs are laid directly on the ground and have an earthy color. The Pauraque can be easily seen on dirt tracks at night, when its eyes reflect the cars’...
Leia Mais22 cm. The beak is strong and black. The chest and the belly are bright yellow and the back is brown. The throat is white and the head black, with a white band above the eyes. Male and female are similar. Distribution: From Texas (U.S.A) to Patagonia. Habitat: It is one of the most generalist birds. Thrives in environments as different as rocky beaches and semi-arid landscapes. It is very common in cities. Does not penetrate dense vegetation, but may be found in forests near the riverbanks or in the borders. Diet: Also very generalist in the diet, consumes mainly insects, but also fruits, learns to catch small fish and tadpoles (as from the author’s tanks), hunts hatchlings and e...
Leia Mais14 cm. The legs, beak and the neck are short. The throat is red, contrasting with the fuliginous sides of the head, the back and the chest that is lighter. The belly is pale yellow. The last feather of the male’s wing is rough. Distribution: From Panama to Argentina. Migrates in the south. Habitat: Open landscapes and cities, generally near the water. Diet: Feeds on insects it catches when flying. Reproduction: Builds a nest digging holes in slopes, sometimes in colonies. Lays three to six white eggs. The couple sleeps together in the nest, but only the female incubates. The couple takes turns to feed the brood. When the offspring leave the nest they remain nearby for some ...
Leia Mais91cm. The neck and the legs are thin and long. All white, but with iris, beak and legs yellow. Distribution: Throughout the world. Habitat: Lakes, rivers, ponds, reservoirs, swamps, mangroves, estuaries and even polluted rivers. Diet: Eats fishes, amphibians, insects. The author witnessed an egret catching and eating a mouse in a riverbank in Campinas-SP. Reproduction: Breeding takes place generally in the end of the dry season, when the food supply is more abundant for this species. During this period the adults have the egrets that are long feathers used in the courtship. The breeding couples gather in nesting sites that may have hundreds of individuals, sometimes mixing with o...
Leia MaisNome popular: -.
Árvore até 6m; extremidade dos ramos glabra, achatada; folha simples, oposta, estípula interpeciolar, foliácea, 3 X 1cm, elíptica a elíptico-ovada, pecíolo canaliculado, 0,8 X 0,3cm, glabro, avermelhado no material seco, lâmina elíptico-oboval, ápice agudo a acuminado, base cuneada, 24 X 7,5-12cm, margem algo revoluta, limbo ondulado, cartácea, venação camptódroma, ca. 25 pares de nervuras secundárias, conspícuas, paralelas, espaçadas 1-1,5cm, venação terciária inconspícua, glabra, faces brilhantes no material seco.
Distribuição: Bahia, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Paraná e Santa Catarina rara ao l...
Leia MaisNome popular: -.
Árvore até 5,5m; extremidade dos ramos achatada, levemente estriada, tomentulosa a glabrescente, gema apical com tricomas; folha simples, oposta, estípula interpeciolar, triangular, 0,7cm compr., coléteres envolvendo a região basal, interna das estípulas, pecíolo estriado, 2 X 0,2cm, glabrescente, lâmina elíptica, oboval-elíptica, ápice agudo a acuminado, base atenuada, 14,5 X 5,5cm, margem inteira, levemente ondulada no material seco, tricomas esparsos, membranácea, venação camptódroma, 7 pares de nervuras secundárias, conspícuas, paralelas, espaçadas ca. 1cm, venação terciária formando retículo, mais conspícuo na face abaxial...
Leia MaisA escola quando concebida enquanto espaço de reflexão, discussão e produção de conhecimento (inclusive sobre o lugar em que está inserida) pode contribuir para processos de apreensão e significação de mundo pautados na inauguração de novos dizeres. Para tanto, o estudo do lugar e os trabalhos de campo têm importância fundamental e possibilitam o exercício de construção de identidade (diferença) e pertencimento. Sendo assim, apresento neste trabalho, uma proposta de ação educacional composta por diferentes atividades com o objetivo de contribuir para a apreensão do lugar onde se vive por meio da produção de conhecimentos sobre o mesmo. Tal ação é pensada tendo em vista uma escola situada à fr...
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