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Author |
Lavrillier A. |
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Title |
Le pas léger sur la Terre des peuples des neiges |
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Book |
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2021 |
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80-81 |
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1127 |
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978-2368041192 |
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8381 |
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Author |
Paul Tixier, Nicolas Gasco, Jared R. Towers, Christophe Guinet |
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Title |
Killer whales of the Crozet Archipelago and adjacent waters: photo-identification catalogue, population status and distribution in 2020 |
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Report |
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Year |
2021 |
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1-167 |
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109 |
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8380 |
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Author |
Bonadonna F |
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Title |
It was a Dark and Stormy Night |
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Communication |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
Symposium:sochal olfactory communication 8-9 october 2018 |
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354 |
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8379 |
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Author |
Morgane Amelot, Floriane Plard, Christophe Guinet, John P. Y. Arnould, Nicolas Gasco, Paul Tixier |
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Title |
Increasing numbers of killer whale individuals use fisheries as feeding opportunities within subantarctic populations |
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Journal |
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Year |
2022 |
Publication |
Biology Letters |
Abbreviated Journal |
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Volume |
18 |
Issue |
2 |
Pages |
20210328 |
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109 |
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yes |
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8378 |
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Title |
Incisor microwear of Arctic rodents as a proxy for microhabitat preference |
Type |
Journal |
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Year |
2021 |
Publication |
Mammalian Biology |
Abbreviated Journal |
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Volume |
101 |
Issue |
6 |
Pages |
1033-1052 |
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Keywords |
Arctic Environment Habitats Narrow-headed vole Russia Siberian lemming Tooth wear Tundra Yamal Peninsula |
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Abstract |
Changing environmental conditions in the Arctic make it important to document and understand habitat preferences and flexibility of vulnerable high-latitude mammals. Indirect proxies are especially useful for elusive species, such as rodents. This study explores incisor microwear as an indicator of variation in behavior and microhabitat use in Siberian lemmings (Lemmus sibiricus) and narrow-headed voles (Lasiopodomys gregalis) from the Yamal Peninsula, Russia. Fifty-nine individuals were sampled at four sites along a latitudinal gradient from forest-tundra ecotone to high-Arctic tundra. Lemmings are present at the northernmost site, voles at the southernmost site, and both species at the middle two. Lemmus sibiricus prefers wet, mossy lowland, whereas La. gregalis favors drier thickets and more open microhabitats and burrows underground. Feature-based analyses indicate higher densities of features and more uniformly oriented striations for voles than lemmings at sites with both species. The species also differ significantly in microwear texture attributes suggesting larger features for lemmings, and smaller ones, but more of them, for voles. While no texture differences were found between sites within species, voles from sites with open tundra have higher striation densities than those from the forest-tundra ecotone. Furthermore, lemmings from open tundra sites have higher striation densities than those from the water-saturated, moss-covered northernmost site. While microhabitat preferences and burrowing by voles likely contribute to differences between species, variation within seems to reflect habitat variation given differences in abrasive loads between sites. This suggests that incisor microwear patterning can be used to track microhabitat differences among Arctic rodent populations. |
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1036 |
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1618-1476 |
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yes |
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Serial |
8377 |
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Author |
Labonne J., Robin J.-p., Améziane N., Barbraud C., Bétoulle S., Bost C., Boulinier T., Charassin J.-b., Cotté C., Eleaume M., Gallut C., Gaudin P., Guinet C., Hennion F., Koubbi P., Le Bohec C., Lebouvier M., Mazé C., Renault D., Ropert-coudert Y., Saucède T. Et Weimerskirch H. |
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Title |
Implementation of the Long Term Ecological Research network of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands (LTER ZATA “ Zone Atelier Antarctique et Terres Australes”): toward an overall monitoring of the southern ecosystem through its marine and terrestrial communities |
Type |
Peer-reviewed symposium |
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Year |
2020 |
Publication |
SCAR 2020 Online, 3-7 August 2020, oral. actes du colloque |
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Since 2000, the French Long Term Ecological Research network of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands (LTER ZATA “ Zone Atelier Antarctique et Terres Australes”) has endeavoured to monitor the dynamics of biodiversity in Antarctic and sub-Antarctic marine and terrestrial ecosystems. Our LTER encompasses multiple scientific programs and can provide access to long term monitoring of more than 40 marine, freshwater and terrestrial vertebrate species (including 27 bird species), 20 terrestrial and freshwater plant and invertebrate species. For some species, monitoring was initiated well before the 2000s, as earlier as the years 1960-1970. More recently, monitorings have been initiated at the community level for pelagic and coastal marine biota, and were complemented by eco-physiological, eco-epidemiological and stress observing projects focussing on multiple species and communities. The main objective of our LTER is to provide a general dashboard to assess health of southern ecosystems along with the selective pressures and overall resilience due to environmental changes. The French LTER ZATA has strongly benefited from sustained support from the French Polar Institute over decades, clearly linking fundings and resource allocations to our capacity to assess and understand southern ecosystems. In this talk, we will give a first picture of this dashboard based on our existing databases. We will also present future developments and strategies that, for sure, have now to be integrated at the international level. |
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119 |
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yes |
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Serial |
8376 |
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Author |
Zhuang Jiang, Becky Alexander, Joel Savarino, Joseph Erbland, Lei Geng |
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Title |
Impacts of the photo-driven post-depositional processing on snow nitrate and its isotopes at Summit, Greenland: a model-based study |
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Journal |
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Year |
2021 |
Publication |
The Cryosphere |
Abbreviated Journal |
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Volume |
15 |
Issue |
9 |
Pages |
4207-4220 |
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1177 |
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1994-0416 |
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yes |
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8375 |
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Title |
Impact of extreme environmental conditions: Foraging behaviour and trophic ecology responses of a diving seabird, the common diving petrel |
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Journal |
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Year |
2021 |
Publication |
Progress in Oceanography |
Abbreviated Journal |
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Volume |
198 |
Issue |
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Pages |
102676 |
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Keywords |
GPS tracking Habitat modelling Inter-annual variation Marine heatwave Stable isotopes |
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The reproductive success of birds is strongly driven by environmental conditions at different time scales. Thus, during periods of low food availability, breeding success is constrained by the ability of adults to adapt their foraging effort and feeding behaviour to maintain regular incubation shifts and chick provisioning. However, while large seabirds can buffer disruptions in prey availability, the ecophysiological constraints of smaller species may limit their behavioural flexibility. By combining information on at-sea movements, foraging habitat, trophic niche, and breeding success, this study evaluated the effects of intense variability in oceanographic conditions on common diving petrels (Pelecanoides urinatrix) at the northern extent of their range in south-eastern Australia during four consecutive breeding seasons. Unusually low breeding success (6 and 0%) was observed during two years with intense heatwave events, which were associated with higher foraging effort (foraging trips twice longer) and a substantial shift in trophic niche (lower blood ?15N values). These findings suggest that common diving petrels in Bass Strait may have reached a critical threshold above which buffering the effects of environmental variability on their reproductive output is not possible. The clear cascading impacts that marine heatwaves have on zooplankton feeders illustrate the profound bottom-up effect induced by such extreme environmental variations, and suggest strong impact on higher-trophic levels. The wide, circumpolar breeding distribution of the common diving petrel, and its high sensitivity to variations in oceanographic conditions, suggest that this species may be a suitable model to study short-term and long-term behavioural responses to the effects of climate change throughout the Southern Ocean. |
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109 |
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0079-6611 |
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yes |
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8374 |
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Title |
Human influence on brown trout juvenile body size during metapopulation expansion |
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Journal |
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Year |
2021 |
Publication |
Biology Letters |
Abbreviated Journal |
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Volume |
17 |
Issue |
10 |
Pages |
20210366 |
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Keywords |
brown trout density dependence dispersal invasion biology subantarctic |
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Change in body size can be driven by social (density) and non-social (environmental and spatial variation) factors. In expanding metapopulations, spatial sorting by means of dispersal on the expansion front can further drive the evolution of body size. However, human intervention can dramatically affect these founder effects. Using long-term monitoring of the colonization of the remote Kerguelen islands by brown trout, a facultative anadromous salmonid, we analyse body size variation in 32 naturally founded and 10 human-introduced populations over 57 years. In naturally founded populations, we find that spatial sorting promotes slow positive changes in body size on the expansion front, then that body size decreases as populations get older and local density increases. This pattern is, however, completely different in human-introduced populations, where body size remains constant or even increases as populations get older. The present findings confirm that changes in body size can be affected by metapopulation expansion, but that human influence, even in very remote environments, can fully alter this process. |
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1041 |
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yes |
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8373 |
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Title |
Huff and puff and blow down: invasive plants traits response to strong winds at the Southern Oceanic Islands |
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Journal |
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Year |
2021 |
Publication |
Oikos |
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Volume |
130 |
Issue |
11 |
Pages |
1919-1929 |
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Keywords |
environmental filter functional traits hypervolume Iles Kerguelen intraspecific variability mechanical stress |
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Abstract |
Invasions constitute a major driver of biodiversity changes. Insular plant communities are particularly vulnerable to invasions and are relevant models for investigating mechanisms supporting the establishment and spread of introduced plants. Terrestrial flora of sub-Antarctic islands must often thrive in highly windy habitats, thus imposing strong mechanical constraints on individuals. Many alien plants at the sub-Antarctic islands are of tropical or temperate origins, where they were exposed to less stringent wind conditions. As wind likely represents a strong environmental filter for the successful establishment and further geographic spread of plants, they should have developed responses to resist and successfully colonize the Iles Kerguelen. We studied responses to wind of three herbaceous species that are invasive at Iles Kerguelen. We sampled plant individuals at different locations, under windy and sheltered conditions. Traits related to wind avoidance and tolerance and to resource acquisition were measured. We additionally assessed individual performance (biomass) to determine the consequences of trait variations. We focused on trait mean and variance, in particular, through the calculation of hypervolumes. This study emphasized that wind has important effects on plant economics spectrum, including traits involved in mechanical avoidance and light acquisition, with varying strategies, which seem to depend on the biological type of the species (grass versus non-grass). Wind generally reduces individual performance, and this negative effect is not direct but operates through the modification of plant trait values. Furthermore, analyses performed at the hypervolume scale indicate that not only functional trait mean but also its variability account for plant performance. The existence of contrasting growth strategies to cope with local environmental conditions suggests that invaders will be able to occupy different niches, which may ultimately impact local communities. Our results highlight the importance of considering multi-traits responses to meaningfully capture plant adjustments to stress. |
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136 |
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1600-0706 |
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yes |
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8372 |
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