23 results on '"Caquet, Thierry"'
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2. Sols, sciences et recherches participatives : comment consolider et fédérer le foisonnement d'initiatives en France ?
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Gascuel, Chantal, Loiseau-Dubosc, Philippe, Auclerc, Apolline, Bougon, Nolwenn, Caquet, Thierry, Lerouyer, Valérie, Pierart, Antoine, Ranjard, Lionel, Resche-Rigon, Frédérique, Roturier, Christophe, Sauter, Joëlle, and Serin, Ludovic
- Abstract
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- 2023
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3. A research agenda for scaling up agroecology in European countries.
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Gascuel-Odoux, Chantal, Lescourret, Françoise, Dedieu, Benoit, Detang-Dessendre, Cécile, Faverdin, Philippe, Hazard, Laurent, Litrico-Chiarelli, Isabelle, Petit, Sandrine, Roques, Lionel, Reboud, Xavier, Tixier-Boichard, Michele, de Vries, Hugo, and Caquet, Thierry
- Abstract
A profound transformation of agricultural production methods has become unavoidable due to the increase in the world’s population, and environmental and climatic challenges. Agroecology is now recognized as a challenging model for agricultural systems, promoting their diversification and adaptation to environmental and socio-economic contexts, with consequences for the entire agri-food system and the development of rural and urban areas. Through a prospective exercise performed at a large interdisciplinary institute, INRAE, a research agenda for agroecology was built that filled a gap through its ambition and interdisciplinarity. It concerned six topics. For genetics, there is a need to study genetic aspects of complex systems (e.g., mixtures of genotypes) and to develop breeding methods for them. For landscapes, challenges lie in effects of heterogeneity at multiple scales, in multifunctionality and in the design of agroecological landscapes. Agricultural equipment and digital technologies show high potential for monitoring dynamics of agroecosystems. For modeling, challenges include approaches to complexity, consideration of spatial and temporal dimensions and representation of the cascade from cropping practices to ecosystem services. The agroecological transition of farms calls for modeling and observational approaches as well as for creating new design methods. Integration of agroecology into food systems raises the issues of product specificity, consumer behavior and organization of markets, standards and public policies. In addition, transversal priorities were identified: (i) generating sets of biological data, through research and participatory mechanisms, that are appropriate for designing agroecological systems and (ii) collecting and using coherent sets of data to enable assessment of vulnerability, resilience and risk in order to evaluate the performance of agroecological systems and to contribute to scaling up. The main lessons learned from this collective exercise can be useful for the entire scientific community engaged in research into agroecology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. Effect of thiram and of a hydrocarbon mixture on freshwater macroinvertebrate communities in outdoor stream and pond mesocosms: II. Biological and ecological trait responses and leaf litter breakdown.
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Bayona, Yannick, Roucaute, Marc, Cailleaud, Kevin, Lagadic, Laurent, Bassères, Anne, and Caquet, Thierry
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FRESH water ,THIRAM ,INVERTEBRATES ,MATRICES (Mathematics) ,FUNGICIDES - Abstract
Higher-tier ecological risk assessment of chemicals often relies upon studies in dynamic and/or static mesocosms. Physico-chemical and hydrological properties of each type of mesocosm result in specific chemicals fate, community functioning, and potential recovery. In the present study, macroinvertebrate abundance- and biomass-weighted biological and ecological trait matrices were used to assess the effects of a dithiocarbamate fungicide, thiram (35 and 170 µg l), and of a petroleum middle distillate (0.01, 0.4, 2 and 20 mg l) in outdoor stream and pond mesocosms. Trait sensitivity was characterized using functional diversity indices and trait modality distributions to assess the influence of the type of experimental systems and the ability of traits to disentangle chemical-induced effects from temporal and stochastic variations. In addition, leaf litter breakdown was used as an integrative functional endpoint. Regardless to the substance, treatments had a direct effect on the functional structure of benthic macroinvertebrate communities in streams but not in ponds, suggesting that global functional responses to chemicals are system-specific. Although both substances had an effect in streams, differences were noticed in the nature of the affected traits suggesting that chemical mode of action plays a role in functional alterations. This was illustrated by the link between negative effects of chemical exposure on detritivorous taxa and reduced litter breakdown rate in streams. Therefore, characterisation of macroinvertebrate biological traits associated with the measurement of a functional process such as litter breakdown may provide a comprehensive understanding of the effects occurring in mesocosms exposed to organic chemicals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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5. Effect of thiram and of a hydrocarbon mixture on freshwater macroinvertebrate communities in outdoor stream and pond mesocosms: I. Study design, chemicals fate and structural responses.
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Bayona, Yannick, Roucaute, Marc, Cailleaud, Kevin, Lagadic, Laurent, Bassères, Anne, and Caquet, Thierry
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THIRAM ,HYDROCARBONS ,FRESH water ,ECOLOGICAL risk assessment ,BIOMASS - Abstract
Higher-tier ecological risk assessment (ERA) in mesocosms is commonly performed in lotic or lentic experimental systems. These systems differ in their physico-chemical and hydrological properties, leading to differences in chemical fate, community characteristics and potential recovery. This raises the issue of the relevance and sensitivity of community-level endpoints in different types of mesocosms. In this study, macroinvertebrate abundance and biomass estimates were used to assess the effects of a dithiocarbamate fungicide, thiram (35 and 170 µg l), and a petroleum middle distillate (PMD; 0.01, 0.4, 2 and 20 mg l) in outdoor stream and pond mesocosms. Streams were continuously treated during 3 weeks followed by a 2-month long post-treatment period. Ponds were treated weekly for 4 weeks, followed by a 10-month long post-treatment period. Taxonomic structure of macroinvertebrate communities was characterized using the α, β and γ components of taxa richness, Shannon and Gini-Simpson indices. Computations were based either on abundance or biomass data. Results clearly highlighted that the effects of chemicals depended on the exposure regime (for thiram) and type of system (for the PMD). Causes of the differences between streams and ponds in the magnitude and nature of effects include differential sensitivity of taxa dwelling in lentic and lotic systems and the influence of hydrology (e.g., drift from upstream) and mesocosm connectivity on recovery dynamics. This study also showed complementarities in the use of both types of mesocosms to improve the characterization of chemical effects on communities in ERA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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6. A coordinated set of ecosystem research platforms open to international research in ecotoxicology, AnaEE-France.
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Mougin, Christian, Azam, Didier, Caquet, Thierry, Cheviron, Nathalie, Dequiedt, Samuel, Le Galliard, Jean-François, Guillaume, Olivier, Houot, Sabine, Lacroix, Gérard, Lafolie, François, Maron, Pierre-Alain, Michniewicz, Radika, Pichot, Christian, Ranjard, Lionel, Roy, Jacques, Zeller, Bernd, Clobert, Jean, and Chanzy, André
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ECOSYSTEMS ,POLLUTION ,MICROBIOLOGY ,MICROBIOLOGY experiments ,LAND-water ecotones - Abstract
The infrastructure for Analysis and Experimentation on Ecosystems (AnaEE-France) is an integrated network of the major French experimental, analytical, and modeling platforms dedicated to the biological study of continental ecosystems (aquatic and terrestrial). This infrastructure aims at understanding and predicting ecosystem dynamics under global change. AnaEE-France comprises complementary nodes offering access to the best experimental facilities and associated biological resources and data: Ecotrons, seminatural experimental platforms to manipulate terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, in natura sites equipped for large-scale and long-term experiments. AnaEE-France also provides shared instruments and analytical platforms dedicated to environmental (micro) biology. Finally, AnaEE-France provides users with data bases and modeling tools designed to represent ecosystem dynamics and to go further in coupling ecological, agronomical, and evolutionary approaches. In particular, AnaEE-France offers adequate services to tackle the new challenges of research in ecotoxicology, positioning its various types of platforms in an ecologically advanced ecotoxicology approach. AnaEE-France is a leading international infrastructure, and it is pioneering the construction of AnaEE (Europe) infrastructure in the field of ecosystem research. AnaEE-France infrastructure is already open to the international community of scientists in the field of continental ecotoxicology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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7. Analysing chemical-induced changes in macroinvertebrate communities in aquatic mesocosm experiments: a comparison of methods.
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Szöcs, Eduard, Brink, Paul, Lagadic, Laurent, Caquet, Thierry, Roucaute, Marc, Auber, Arnaud, Bayona, Yannick, Liess, Matthias, Ebke, Peter, Ippolito, Alessio, Braak, Cajo, Brock, Theo, and Schäfer, Ralf
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TOXICOLOGY of water pollution ,ECOLOGICAL impact ,POLLUTION ,INVERTEBRATES ,MULTIVARIATE analysis - Abstract
Mesocosm experiments that study the ecological impact of chemicals are often analysed using the multivariate method 'Principal Response Curves' (PRCs). Recently, the extension of generalised linear models (GLMs) to multivariate data was introduced as a tool to analyse community data in ecology. Moreover, data aggregation techniques that can be analysed with univariate statistics have been proposed. The aim of this study was to compare their performance. We compiled macroinvertebrate abundance datasets of mesocosm experiments designed for studying the effect of various organic chemicals, mainly pesticides, and re-analysed them. GLMs for multivariate data and selected aggregated endpoints were compared to PRCs regarding their performance and potential to identify affected taxa. In addition, we analysed the inter-replicate variability encountered in the studies. Mesocosm experiments characterised by a higher taxa richness of the community and/or lower taxonomic resolution showed a greater inter-replicate variability, whereas variability decreased the more zero counts were encountered in the samples. GLMs for multivariate data performed equally well as PRCs regarding the community response. However, compared to first axis PRCs, GLMs provided a better indication of individual taxa responding to treatments, as separate models are fitted to each taxon. Data aggregation methods performed considerably poorer compared to PRCs. Multivariate community data, which are generated during mesocosm experiments, should be analysed using multivariate methods to reveal treatment-related community-level responses. GLMs for multivariate data are an alternative to the widely used PRCs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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8. Secondary production of freshwater zooplankton communities exposed to a fungicide and to a petroleum distillate in outdoor pond mesocosms.
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Bayona, Yannick, Roucaute, Ana, Roucaute, Marc, Gorzerino, Caroline, Cailleaud, Kevin, Lagadic, Laurent, Bassères, Anne, and Caquet, Thierry
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FRESHWATER zooplankton ,BIOLOGICAL productivity ,FUNGICIDES ,ECOLOGICAL risk assessment ,INVERTEBRATE communities ,DITHIOCARBAMATES ,MICROPOLLUTANTS - Abstract
Ecological risk assessment of chemicals in mesocosms requires measurement of a large number of parameters at the community level. Studies on invertebrate communities usually focus on taxonomic approaches, which only provide insights into taxonomic structure changes induced by chemicals. In the present study, abundance, biomass (B), theoretical production (P), and instantaneous P/B ratio were used as endpoints to assess the effects of the commercial form of the dithiocarbamate fungicide thiram (35 µg/L and 170 µg/L nominal concentrations) and of the hydrocarbon water accommodated fraction (HWAF) of a petroleum distillate (0.01 mg/L, 0.4 mg/L, 2 mg/L, and 20 mg/L loadings) on the zooplankton community in freshwater pond mesocosms. Endpoints were measured during a 4-wk treatment period (1 pulse/wk) followed by a 5-mo posttreatment period to evaluate zooplankton population recovery. The chlorophyll a concentration in water was significantly increased after treatment with HWAF, whereas it was not affected by thiram treatment. Zooplankton abundance-based analysis showed effects on a limited number of taxa, whereas other endpoints (mainly the P/B ratio) revealed that more taxa were impacted, with recovery depending on the chemical and concentration. Exposure to HWAF mainly had a negative impact on cladocerans, which resulted in top-down effects (between cladocerans and phytoplankton). Thiram negatively affected rotifers and copepods, suggesting more direct toxic effects. The results show that the use of secondary production as an endpoint provides a more comprehensive assessment of potential direct and indirect effects of chemicals on a community, and they also support evidence of alteration in functional processes. Environ Toxicol Chem 2014;33:836-846. © 2013 SETAC [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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9. Bti sprays do not adversely affect non-target aquatic invertebrates in French Atlantic coastal wetlands.
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Lagadic, Laurent, Roucaute, Marc, Caquet, Thierry, and Arnott, Shelley
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AQUATIC invertebrates ,WETLANDS ,COASTS ,BACILLUS thuringiensis ,CLIMATE change ,BIRD food ,MOSQUITO control - Abstract
Both the increase in human mobility and climate change contribute to the globalization of vector-borne diseases. Some mosquito species are efficient disease vectors in Europe, thus increasing the risk of epidemic (re)emergence., Bacillus thuringiensis var. israelensis ( Bti) is considered as the most efficient larvicide to control mosquito populations with negligible environmental impacts. However, repeated field applications of Bti over many years raise the question of possible long-term effects on non-target invertebrates with putative subsequent alterations of food webs., Environmental effects of Bti have mainly been studied in continental freshwater wetlands. Much less is known for brackish water coastal wetlands. We investigated whether repeated treatments with Bti, applied as VectoBac
® WG over seven consecutive years, may affect non-target invertebrate communities in wetlands of the French Atlantic coast. Particular attention was devoted to invertebrates potentially used as food sources by shorebirds and wading birds., Invertebrates were sampled in the water and sediment of control and VectoBac® -treated saltmarsh pools between 2006 and 2012. Taxa abundance data were used to calculate community descriptors and to analyse the potential structural changes due to VectoBac® using the principal response curve method and similarity analysis. Physicochemical parameters were measured in the same pools so that homogeneity of the environmental conditions between the control and treated areas could be tested., We demonstrated that long-term use of VectoBac® WG in French Atlantic coastal wetlands had no influence on the temporal evolution of the taxonomic structure and taxa abundance of non-target aquatic invertebrate communities, which is highly driven by abiotic factors. In addition, over the long term, the amount of invertebrates that could be used as food resources by birds is maintained in VectoBac® -treated areas., Synthesis and applications. Reduced application rate and targeted spraying of VectoBac® WG in mosquito breeding sites minimize potential environmental impacts of Bacillus thuringiensis var. israelensis ( Bti). Even so, surveillance of its possible primary side effects is needed, which requires comparable control and treated areas. Indeed, systematic temporal trends and subtle differences in the range of variation of abiotic factors result in discrepancies between control and treated area in terms of invertebrate abundance, which could be wrongly attributed to VectoBac® . Management decisions and mitigation measures may therefore benefit from (i) extending surveillance to a time frame that allows for coverage of the immense temporal variation in taxa abundance and diversity and (ii) the inclusion of environmental variables in the monitoring of non-target animal communities potentially exposed to Bti. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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10. Pollution in mediterranean-climate rivers.
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López-Doval, Julio, Ginebreda, Antoni, Caquet, Thierry, Dahm, Clifford, Petrovic, Mira, Barceló, Damià, and Muñoz, Isabel
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WATER pollution ,POLLUTANTS ,AQUATIC ecology ,POPULATION biology ,INDUSTRIALIZATION - Abstract
This review examines information generated over the past decade on the pollution of rivers in regions with a mediterranean-type climate (med-climate). Pollution has clearly increased in the last 100 years and is correlated with the development of industry, agriculture and human population. Important efforts have been made in some med-climate countries in order to characterise the chemical status of rivers. In addition, the number of chemical substances detectable in mediterranean-climate rivers (med-rivers), as well as the limits of detection, have improved from the development of better analytical methods. New substances detected in rivers are gaining attention. We discuss available knowledge regarding real and potential effects of pollutants on the biota and ecosystems in med-rivers, taking into account natural environmental characteristics of these rivers. The extreme seasonal conditions in med-rivers add to the potential risk because these characteristics can enhance pollutant effects. Efforts and policies to prevent or reduce pollution effects on med-rivers are linked to the knowledge about pollution pressures associated with the degree of economic development. Aquatic communities in med-rivers are more sensitive to pollutants because they are exposed to strong natural and human stressors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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11. Population genetics of Lymnaea stagnalis experimentally exposed to cocktails of pesticides.
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Coutellec, Marie-Agnès, Besnard, Anne-Laure, and Caquet, Thierry
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POPULATION genetics ,LYMNAEA stagnalis ,COCKTAILS ,PESTICIDES ,FRESHWATER invertebrates ,PLANT protection - Abstract
Freshwater invertebrates may be regularly exposed to pesticides in agricultural landscapes, as water bodies such as ditches and ponds are the final recipient of many chemicals, through various transfer pathways. Local evolutionary impacts may hence be expected on populations, especially for species with a completely aquatic life cycle. We tested the hypothesis that exposure to combinations of pesticides used in crop protection programmes could increase the effect of random genetic drift in a non-target species, via demographic impacts. To do so, experimental populations of the freshwater snail Lymnaea stagnalis were created from a common genetic pool and exposed for three successive generations to treatments corresponding to two different crop protection plans (conventional and low pesticide input). Population genetic parameters were estimated in each generation on the basis of ten polymorphic microsatellite loci. Effects consistent with increased random genetic drift were observed for one sampling campaign performed in the third generation, i.e., decreased genetic variability and increased population differentiation in the group of populations exposed to the treatment programme whose demographic impact was the most effective on L. stagnalis. Otherwise, no clear pattern emerged and even opposed effects could be observed. All populations were found significantly inbred, mostly due to biparental inbreeding. Conversely, selfing was generally not significant, and did not express preferentially under high pesticide pressure. We conclude from this study that population genetics should be used very cautiously in the context of ecological risk assessment, especially when applied to natural populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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12. An integrated environmental approach to investigate biomarker fluctuations in the blue mussel Mytilus edulis L. in the Vilaine estuary, France.
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Farcy, Emilie, Burgeot, Thierry, Haberkorn, Hansy, Auffret, Michel, Lagadic, Laurent, Allenou, Jean-Pierre, Budzinski, Hélène, Mazzella, Nicolas, Pete, Romain, Heydorff, Micheline, Menard, Dominique, Mondeguer, Florence, and Caquet, Thierry
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MYTILUS edulis ,ALGAL toxins ,BIOMARKERS ,AQUATIC ecology ,FRESHWATER ecology ,ESTUARIES - Abstract
Estuarine areas represent complex and highly changing environments at the interface between freshwater and marine aquatic ecosystems. Therefore, the aquatic organisms living in estuaries have to face highly variable environmental conditions. The aim of this work was to study the influence of environmental changes from either natural or anthropogenic origins on the physiological responses of Mytilus edulis. Mussels were collected in the Vilaine estuary during early summer because this season represents a critical period of active reproduction in mussels and of increased anthropogenic inputs from agricultural and boating activities into the estuary. The physiological status of the mussel M. edulis was evaluated through measurements of a suite of biomarkers related to: oxidative stress (catalase, malondialdehyde), detoxication (benzopyrene hydroxylase, carboxylesterase), neurotoxicity (acetylcholinesterase), reproductive cycle (vitelline, condition index, maturation stages), immunotoxicity (hemocyte concentration, granulocyte percentage, phagocytosis, reactive oxygen species production, oxidative burst), and general physiological stress (lysosomal stability). A selection of relevant organic contaminant (pesticides, (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, polychlorobiphenyls) was measured as well as environmental parameters (water temperature, salinity, total suspended solids, turbidity, chlorophyll a, pheopigments) and mussel phycotoxin contamination. Two locations differently exposed to the plume of the Vilaine River were compared. Both temporal and inter-site variations of these biomarkers were studied. Our results show that reproduction cycle and environmental parameters such as temperature, organic ontaminants, and algal blooms could strongly influence the biomarker responses. These observations highlight the necessity to conduct integrated environmental approaches in order to better understand the causes of biomarker variations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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13. Structural and functional effects of conventional and low pesticide input crop-protection programs on benthic macroinvertebrate communities in outdoor pond mesocosms.
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Auber, Arnaud, Roucaute, Marc, Togola, Anne, and Caquet, Thierry
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PESTICIDES ,WHEAT ,GAMMARUS pulex ,PLANT protection ,AGRICULTURAL administration - Abstract
The impacts of current and alternative wheat crop protection programs were compared in outdoor pond mesocosms in a 10-month long study. Realistic exposure scenarios were built based upon the results of modelling of drift, drainage and runoff of pesticides successively applied under two environmental situations characteristics of drained soils of northern France. Each situation was associated to two crop protection programs ('Conventional' and 'Low-input') differing in the nature of pesticides used, number of treatments and application rate. Both programs induced significant direct negative effects on various invertebrate groups. Bifenthrin and cyprodynil were identified as the main responsible for these effects in conventional and low-input program, respectively. Indirect effects were also demonstrated especially following treatments with cyprodynil. Litter breakdown was significantly reduced in all treated mesocosms as the functional consequence of the decrease in the abundance of shredders (asellids, Gammarus pulex) illustrating the link between structural and functional effects of pesticides on macroinvertebrate communities. Recovery was observed for many taxa before the end of the study but not for the most sensitive non mobile taxa such as G. pulex. No influence of the agropedoclimatic situation on the effects was shown, suggesting than the main impacts were associated to inputs from drift. The results confirm that the proposed low-input program was less hazardous than the conventional program but the observed structural and functional impact of the low-input program suggest that further improvement of alternative crop protection programs is still needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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14. Parental exposure to pesticides and progeny reaction norm to a biotic stress gradient in the freshwater snail Lymnaea stagnalis.
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Coutellec, Marie-Agnès, Collinet, Marc, and Caquet, Thierry
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LYMNAEA stagnalis ,PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of pesticides ,XENOBIOTICS ,ANIMAL clutches ,HETEROGENEITY - Abstract
Human-induced environmental stress may lead to rapid evolutionary processes, and can affect the ability of natural populations to respond to other environmental change or stress. We used quantitative genetics tools, pesticide exposure and a gradient of biotic stress to investigate these questions in the freshwater snail Lymnaea stagnalis. The study focused on the genetic component of variance for life-history traits within populations, and the ability of different lines to respond differently to stress. The effect of parental exposure to a xenobiotic stress on the reaction norm of the progeny to another stress was also estimated (parental non-genetic effect). First, under laboratory conditions, inter-family variance suggested significant heritability for most traits. Second, under outdoor exposure to various pesticides, variation among families was significant for individual growth. Clutch size and hatching rate of the clutches laid in the laboratory after exposure showed similar results, and moreover, family interacted significantly with pesticides. Third, under a gradient of biotic stress (food and competition), inter-family variation was again significant for growth, and a significant interaction with biotic stress was observed for juvenile growth and ultimate size. Family heterogeneity and family × environment interactions indicate the possibility of differential evolutionary responses among lines, through different reaction norms. Stressful conditions did not affect the estimated heritability, and for pesticides, no transgenerational effect was detected on progeny growth in response to the biotic stress. Focused on short-term evolutionary responses, the present study illustrates a possible way of incorporating evolutionary approaches into ecotoxicological risk assessment procedures, for example, by accounting for inter-family variation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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15. Influence of isolation on the recovery of pond mesocosms from the application of an insecticide. I. Study design and planktonic community responses.
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Hanson, Mark L., Graham, David W., Babin, Emmanuelle, Azam, Didier, Coutellec, Marie-Agnes, Knapp, Charles W., Lagadic, Laurent, and Caquet, Thierry
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INSECTICIDES & the environment ,REPRODUCTIVE isolation ,PLANKTON populations ,POND ecology ,ROTIFERA ,ARTHROPODA ,WILDLIFE recovery - Abstract
The influence of relative isolation on the ecological recovery of freshwater outdoor mesocosm communities after an acute toxic stress was assessed in a 14-month-long study. A single concentration of deltamethrin was applied to 8 out of 16 outdoor 9-m
3 mesocosms to create a rapid decrease of the abundance of arthropods. To discriminate between external and internal recovery mechanisms, four treated and four untreated (control) mesocosms were covered with 1-mm mesh screen lids. The dynamics of planktonic communities were monitored in the four types of ponds. The abundance of many phytoplankton taxa increased after deltamethrin addition, but the magnitude of most increases was relatively small, probably due to low nutrient availability and the survival of rotifers. The greatest impact on zooplankton was seen in Daphniidae and, to a lesser extent, calanoid copepods. Recovery (defined as when statistical analysis failed to detect a difference in the abundance between the deltamethrin-treated ponds and corresponding control ponds for two consecutive sampling dates) of Daphniidae was observed in the water column 105 and 77 d after deltamethrin addition in open and covered mesocosms, respectively, and <42 d for both open and covered ponds at the surface of the sediments. Rotifers did not proliferate, probably because of the survival of predators (e.g., cyclopoid copepods). These results confirm that the recovery of planktonic communities after exposure to a strong temporary chemical stress mostly depends upon internal mechanisms (except for larvae of the insect Chaoborus sp.) and that recovery dynamics are controlled by biotic factors, such as the presence of dormant forms and selective survival of predators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2007
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16. Influence of isolation on the recovery of pond mesocosms from the application of an insecticide. II. Benthic macroinvertebrate responses.
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Caquet, Thierry, Hanson, Mark L., Roucaute, Marc, Graham, David W., and Lagadic, Laurent
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INSECTICIDES & the environment ,REPRODUCTIVE isolation ,BENTHIC animals ,POND ecology ,WILDLIFE recovery - Abstract
The immediate response and recovery of the macrobenthic communities of nonisolated and isolated freshwater outdoor 9 m
3 mesocosms following an acute stress caused by the addition of deltamethrin were studied over a 14-month period. To discriminate between internal and external recovery mechanisms, half of the treated ponds were covered by 1-mm mesh lids that restricted aerial recolonization. Both structural (abundance of the different taxonomic groups) and functional (litter breakdown) parameters were monitored. Insects were broadly reduced in numbers by deltamethrin addition. In general, noninsect groups were not affected or increased in abundance in deltamethrin-treated ponds, probably because of relative insensitivity to deltamethrin, reduced predation, and lower competition for food. No major change in litter breakdown rates were seen, probably because of functional redundancy among the macrobenthic community. Chironominae larvae recovered in open, treated mesocosms 62 d after deltamethrin addition and most insect groups recovered 84 d after the treatment date. However, the presence of lids significantly reduced insect recovery rate, suggesting that it largely depends on the immigration of winged forms (i.e., external recovery) from surrounding non- or less affected systems. These results indicate that the recovery time of macrobenthic communities in an affected natural pond would depend on spatial characteristics of the landscape and also the season that exposure occurs. Isolated ecosystems would display posttreatment insect recovery dynamics very different from highly connected ones, evolving toward alternate pseudoequilibrium states, possibly with lower biodiversity but with preserved functionality. Consequences for higher tier risk assessment of pesticides are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2007
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17. Endocrine disruption in aquatic pulmonate molluscs: few evidences, many challenges.
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Lagadic, Laurent, Coutellec, Marie-Agnès, and Caquet, Thierry
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GASTROPODA ,NEUROHORMONES ,PULMONATA ,BASOMMATOPHORA ,TRIBUTYLTIN ,LYMNAEA stagnalis ,ETHINYL estradiol ,NONYLPHENOL ,POLLUTION ,ESTROGEN -- Environmental aspects - Abstract
As compared to other groups of aquatic gastropods, documented examples of endocrine disruption in pulmonates are rather limited. This is quite surprising because the endocrine control of physiological functions has been extensively studied in these animals. In the model-species Lymnaea stagnalis, the neurohormonal regulation of reproduction has been thoroughly investigated, and the primary structure of several peptides and receptors involved in endocrine processes has been established. However, the use of this knowledge has been fairly limited in the context of ecotoxicology, to investigate the effects of endocrinedisrupting chemicals. The present review summarizes the main and more recent findings on the neuroendocrine control of reproduction in aquatic pulmonate snails (Basommatophora). It then comprehensively describes selected in vivo laboratory and semi-field studies which provide evidence for possible endocrine disrupting effects of estrogenic and androgenic test compounds [e.g., ethynylestradiol, methyltestosterone (MT)], and of environmental contaminants [e.g., cadmium (Cd), tributyltin (TBT), and nonylphenol (NP), pesticides]. Finally, challenging perspectives for future research are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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18. Response of water column microbial communities to sudden exposure to deltamethrin in aquatic mesocosms
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Knapp, Charles W., Caquet, Thierry, Hanson, Mark L., Lagadic, Laurent, and Graham, David W.
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PHYTOPLANKTON ,FUNGUS-bacterium relationships ,RNA ,ALGAL blooms - Abstract
Abstract: Sudden exposure of an aquatic system to an insecticide can have significant effects on populations other than susceptible organisms. Although this is intuitively obvious, little is actually known about how such exposure might affect bacterial communities and their relative metabolic activity in ecosystems. Here, we assessed small sub-unit (ssu)-RNA levels in open and shaded 9m
3 aquatic mesocosms (16 units – 2×2 factorial design in quadruplicate) to examine the effects of sudden addition of deltamethrin to the units. When deltamethrin was added, a cascade of bacterial then phytoplankton “blooms” occurred over time. The bacterial bloom, which most likely included organisms from the plastid/cyanobacterial phylogenetic guild, was almost immediate (within hours), whereas the phytoplankton (algal) bloom lagged by about 4days. This sequential response can be explained by an apparent sudden release of nutrients consequent to arthropod death that triggered a series of responses in the microbial loop. Interestingly, bacterial blooms were noted in both open and shaded mesocosms, whereas the algal bloom was only seen in open units, suggesting that both deltamethrin addition (and presumptive nutrient release) and an adequate light supply was required for the phytoplankton response. Overall, this work shows that microbial activities as reflected by ssu-rRNA levels can respond dramatically via apparently indirect effects following insecticide application. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]- Published
- 2005
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19. MULTILEVEL EFFECTS OF SUBLETHAL FENITROTHION EXPOSURE IN CHIRONOMUS RIPARIUS MG. (DIPTERA, CHIRONOMIDAE) LARVAE.
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Jinhee Choi, Caquet, Thierry, and Roche, Hélèe
- Subjects
FENITROTHION ,CHIRONOMUS ,LARVAE ,ACETYLCHOLINESTERASE ,ENVIRONMENTAL quality - Abstract
The effects of fenitrothion exposure on fourth-instar Chironomus riparius larvae were investigated on biochemical, physiological, and population-level parameters. Biochemical effects were investigated through measurements of acetylcholinesterase and cytosolic superoxide dismutase activities. Water content and dry weight of the larvae were used as physiological parameters, and the emergence rate of adults was used as a descriptor of population-level effects. Results showed that the response of most parameters exhibited a concentration-dependent relationship. Although biochemical parameters proved to be very sensitive, no direct relation was observed with effects at a higher level of biological organization. Perturbations of osmoregulation, as reflected by changes in water content of the larvae, were more directly related with emergence failure. This study demonstrates that the use of several biological parameters can provide complementary information about the effects of chemical exposure. Therefore, use of a multilevel approach in C. riparius seems to be a promising way to diagnose environmental quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Variability of Physicochemical and Biological Parameters between Replicated Outdoor Freshwater Lentic Mesocosms.
- Author
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Caquet, Thierry, Lagadic, Laurent, Monod, Gilles, Lacaze, Jean-Claude, and Couté, Alain
- Abstract
Micro- and mesocosms are frequently required in regulatory procedures of aquatic risk assessment for pesticides. However, many questions are still a matter of debate with regard to the use of these systems for environmental risk assessment, especially considering the inter-system variability of the measured parameters and its consequences on experimental design and data analysis. In this paper, variability of physico-chemical and biological parameters measured during two long-term experiments (8 to 9 months) in uncontaminated outdoor freshwater lentic mesocosms (8 m
3 ) is analysed. Consequences on the design of ecotoxicity tests in mesocosms and on data analysis are also addressed. Water temperature, pH, dissolved oxygen concentration and concentration of suspended solids exhibited a very low variability whereas nutrient concentrations displayed elevated levels of variability. Among biological parameters, those measured at the individual level were less variable than those measured at the community level. Functional descriptors frequently exhibited a lower inter-mesocosm variability than structural descriptors. Aggregation of data proved to significantly reduce inter-mesocosm variability. The results indicate that univariate statistical methods may be used for physico-chemical or species-level (e.g. biometric parameters) data which exhibit a moderate inter-mesocosm variability. The use of multivariate techniques is suggested for other levels of investigation. Nevertheless, variability is not sufficient to identify useful parameters. The sensitivity towards chemicals and ecological relevance of descriptors within the experimental context must also be considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. EFFECTS OF PHYSICAL (HYPOXIA, HYPEROXIA) AND CHEMICAL (POTASSIUM DICHROMATE, FENITROTHION) STRESS ON ANTIOXIDANT ENZYME ACTIVITIES IN CHIRONOMUS RIPARIUS MG. (DIPTERA, CHIRONOMIDAE) LARVAE: POTENTIAL BIOMARKERS.
- Author
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Jinhee Choi, Roche, Helénè, and Caquet, Thierry
- Subjects
HYPOXEMIA ,POTASSIUM ,FENITROTHION ,ANTIOXIDANTS ,BIOMARKERS ,SUPEROXIDE dismutase - Abstract
Effects of physical (hypoxia, hyperoxia) and chemical (potassium dichromate, fenitrothion) stress on antioxidant enzyme activities and hemoglobin content in Chironomus riparius Mg. (Diptera, Chironomidae) larvae were evaluated under laboratory conditions in order to identify pertinent biomarkers of stress. Hypoxia and hyperoxia caused an increase in Cu, Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD) and Mn-SOD activities and a simultaneous decrease in total peroxidase (Px) and glutathione peroxidase (GSHPx) activities. A parallel increase in hemoglobin concentration in the hemolymph was observed. The exposure to sublethal concentrations of both potassium dichromate and fenitrothion led to an increase in Cu, Zn-SOD and Mn-SOD activities and to a decrease in GSH-Px activity. Activation of catalase (CAT) was observed in the larvae exposed to high fenitrothion concentration (20µg/L). The response of SODs was rapid and sensitive to low chemical concentrations, but changes in CAT, Px, and GSH-Px were more specific and less sensitive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. EFFECTS OF FOMESAFEN, ALONE AND IN COMBINATION WITH AN ADJUVANT, ON PLANKTON COMMUNITIES IN FRESHWATER OUTDOOR POND MESOCOSMS.
- Author
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Caquet, Thierry, Deydier-Stephan, Laurence, Lacroix, Gérard, Le Rouzic, Bertrand, and Lescher-Moutoué, Françoise
- Subjects
HERBICIDES ,PLANKTON ,PESTICIDES ,TOXICITY testing ,GREEN algae - Abstract
Ecotoxicological effects of the diphenyl ether herbicide fomesafen, applied alone or in combination with the adjuvant Agral 90® (mixture of polyethoxylated derivatives of nonylphenol), were assessed on planktonic communities in 18-m³ outdoor mesocosms during a nine-month study. Four mesocosms were treated with fomesafen only (nominal concentration: 40 µg/L), four were treated with the mixture fomesafen--Agral 90 (nominal concentration: 40 µg/L and 90 µg/L, respectively), and four were kept as the controls. Five treatments were performed every three weeks from April 18, 2000. Mean (± standard error [SE]) values of fomesafen concentration in water of 62.5 (±5.3) and 19.4 (±7.6) µg/L were measured at the end of the treatment period in fomesafen- and mixture-treated mesocosms, respectively. Fomesafen, either alone or in mixture with Agral 90, had a significant positive effect on the abundance and biovolume of Cyanobacteria, Cryptophyceae, Dinophyceae, and Bacillariophyceae. Chlorophyceae were inhibited by the herbicide and laboratory toxicity tests confirmed that green algae were more sensitive toward fomesafen than other algal classes. A positive effect of treatments on phytoplankton taxonomic diversity also was observed, indicating that, like natural disturbances of intermediate strength, xenobiotics sometimes may enhance the diversity of algal communities. Fomesafen alone did not have any clear effect on zooplankton. Abundance of calanoid copepods was reduced significantly in the mixture-treated ponds, suggesting either a direct effect of the adjuvant and/or an enhancement of herbicide toxicity by Agral 90. The abundance of other zooplanktonic herbivorous groups increased due to a reduced competition for food for herbivorous species and a higher availability of preys for predators. No algal bloom was observed in the treated ponds, presumably because of grazing pressure and the low availability of nutrients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Ecological segregation of two species of Hydropsyche (Trichoptera: Hydropsychidae) in a European second-order stream (Essonne, France)
- Author
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Agasse, Florence, Caquet, Thierry, and Sieglstetter, Robert
- Subjects
ENTOMOLOGY ,RIVER ecology - Abstract
Life-history patterns and food habits are described for two sympatric species of Hydropsyche (H. pellucidula and H. contubernalis) sampled for 15 months in a second-order stream, the Essonne (France). Both species showed univoltine life cycles with remarkable differences in winter. H. contubernalis overwintered mainly in the 4th or 5th larvalinstar; whereas, the more abundant H. pellucidula overwintered in the 2nd or 3rd larval instar. The main larval growth periods of the twospecies were also different, and this could be due to ecological segregation, which allows both species to share a similar ecological niche. The two species shared the same food habits throughout all larvalinstars; however, they both changed their food habits as they passedfrom one instar to another, and earlier instars were more predatory than the older ones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
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