Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Instituto de Biociências (IB) (Institutional affiliation for the last research proposal) Birthplace: Brazil
Forestry Engineer, Master and PhD in Sciences. Works and develops researches in phylogeography, population genomics, ecology, reproductive biology and conservation of endangered plant species. I am a member of the editorial board of the journal Ecology and Evolution (Wiley Online Library) and Applications in Plant Sciences (American Journal of Botany). I am a Professor of Genetics & Ecology at Federal University of Minas Gerais. Currently, I am a Visiting Professor at University of Michigan. (Source: Lattes Curriculum)
News published in Agência FAPESP Newsletter about the researcher |
An up-to-date survey of tropical forest lianas |
The Amazon is one of the most diverse biomes on the planet. Despite the importance of this ecosystem, very little is still known about the ecological and evolutionary processes involved in the diversification, maintenance and distribution of species in this region. Given the extension of this biome, study cases of organisms with disjunct geographical distributions are critical for a bet...
The Amazon is one of the most diverse biomes on the planet. Despite its importance, little is still known about the ecological and evolutionary processes that led to the high diversity encountered in this region. In this study, we will use four plant species with different modes dispersal (i.e., Amphirrhox longifolia, Buchenavia oxypetala, Passiflora spinosa and Psychotria sp.), to test...
The Amazon is one of the most diverse biomes on the planet. Despite its importance, very little is still known about the ecological and evolutionary processes involved in the diversification, maintenance and distribution of species in this region. The tribe Bignonieae (Bignoniaceae) is the most abundant and diverse clade of lianas in the Brazilian Amazon, representing an excellent model...
1 / 1 | Completed scholarships in Brazil |
2 / 2 | Completed scholarships abroad |
3 / 3 | All Scholarships |
Associated processes |
(References retrieved automatically from Web of Science and SciELO through information on FAPESP grants and their corresponding numbers as mentioned in the publications by the authors)
Publications | 6 |
Citations | 82 |
Cit./Article | 13.7 |
Data from Web of Science |
NAZARENO, ALISON G.; DICK, CHRISTOPHER W.; LOHMANN, LUCIA G.. Wide but not impermeable: Testing the riverine barrier hypothesis for an Amazonian plant species. Molecular Ecology, v. 26, n. 14, p. 3636-3648, JUL 2017. Web of Science Citations: 11.
NAZARENO, ALISON G.; DICK, CHRISTOPHER W.; LOHMANN, LUCIA G.. Tangled banks: A landscape genomic evaluation of Wallace's Riverine barrier hypothesis for three Amazon plant species. Molecular Ecology, v. 28, n. 5, p. 980-997, MAR 2019. Web of Science Citations: 0.
BEYER, MAILA; NAZARENO, ALISON G.; LOHMANN, LUIA G.. USING GENOMIC DATA TO DEVELOP CHLOROPLAST DNA SSRS FOR THE NEOTROPICAL LIANA STIZOPHYLLUM RIPARIUM (BIGNONIEAE, BIGNONIACEAE). APPLICATIONS IN PLANT SCIENCES, v. 5, n. 10, OCT 2017. Web of Science Citations: 0.
NAZARENO, ALISON GONCALVES; CARLSEN, MONICA; LOHMANN, LUCIA GARCEZ. Complete Chloroplast Genome of Tanaecium tetragonolobum: The First Bignoniaceae Plastome. PLoS One, v. 10, n. 6, JUN 23 2015. Web of Science Citations: 29.
FRANCISCO, JESSICA N. C.; NAZARENO, ALISON G.; LOHMANN, LUCIA G.. A GENOMIC APPROACH FOR ISOLATING CHLOROPLAST MICROSATELLITE MARKERS FOR PACHYPTERA KERERE (BIGNONIACEAE). APPLICATIONS IN PLANT SCIENCES, v. 4, n. 9, SEP 2016. Web of Science Citations: 1.
NAZARENO, ALISON G.; BEMMELS, JORDAN B.; DICK, CHRISTOPHER W.; LOHMANN, LUCIA G.. Minimum sample sizes for population genomics: an empirical study from an Amazonian plant species. MOLECULAR ECOLOGY RESOURCES, v. 17, n. 6, p. 1136-1147, NOV 2017. Web of Science Citations: 41.