11 results on '"Cargnelutti, Bruno"'
Search Results
2. Temporal shifts in landscape connectivity for an ecosystem engineer, the roe deer, across a multiple-use landscape.
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Martin, Jodie, Vourc’h, Gwenaël, Bonnot, Nadège, Cargnelutti, Bruno, Chaval, Yannick, Lourtet, Bruno, Goulard, Michel, Hoch, Thierry, Plantard, Olivier, Hewison, A. J. Mark, and Morellet, Nicolas
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ROE deer ,ENVIRONMENTAL engineering ,HERBIVORES ,HABITATS ,DEER hunting - Abstract
Context: Routine movements of large herbivores, often considered as ecosystem engineers, impact key ecological processes. Functional landscape connectivity for such species influences the spatial distribution of associated ecological services and disservices.Objectives: We studied how spatio-temporal variation in the risk-resource trade-off, generated by fluctuations in human activities and environmental conditions, influences the routine movements of roe deer across a heterogeneous landscape, generating shifts in functional connectivity at daily and seasonal time scales.Methods: We used GPS locations of 172 adult roe deer and step selection functions to infer landscape connectivity. In particular, we assessed the influence of six habitat features on fine scale movements across four biological seasons and three daily periods, based on variations in the risk-resource trade-off.Results: The influence of habitat features on roe deer movements was strongly dependent on proximity to refuge habitat, i.e. woodlands. Roe deer confined their movements to safe habitats during daytime and during the hunting season, when human activity is high. However, they exploited exposed open habitats more freely during night-time. Consequently, we observed marked temporal shifts in landscape connectivity, which was highest at night in summer and lowest during daytime in autumn. In particular, the onset of the autumn hunting season induced an abrupt decrease in landscape connectivity.Conclusions: Human disturbance had a strong impact on roe deer movements, generating pronounced spatio-temporal variation in landscape connectivity. However, high connectivity at night across all seasons implies that Europe’s most abundant and widespread large herbivore potentially plays a key role in transporting ticks, seeds and nutrients among habitats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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3. Is a proactive mum a good mum? A mother's coping style influences early fawn survival in roe deer.
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Monestier, Chloé, Morellet, Nicolas, Gaillard, Jean-Michel, Cargnelutti, Bruno, Vanpé, Cécile, and Hewison, A. J. Mark
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ROE deer ,FAWNS ,PARENTAL behavior in animals ,ANIMAL behavior ,HABITATS - Abstract
Individual differences in behavior may strongly shape life-history trajectories. However, few empirical studies to date have investigated the link between behavioral traits and fitness, especially in wild populations. We measured the impact of coping style in female roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) on early survival of their offspring. Specifically, we expected offspring of proactive mothers, which should be more mobile and aggressive, to survive better than those of reactive females, which should be more passive and react less in stressful contexts. To test this prediction, we accounted for confounding effects of variation in early survival linked to habitat heterogeneity, as we also expected bed-site selection to impact fawn survival. Fawn survival was highly dependent on the interaction between habitat use and the coping style of the mother. As expected, fawns of proactive mothers survived better in open habitats. However, unexpectedly, fawns of reactive mothers had the highest survival in closed habitats. Our findings provide clear evidence that interindividual differences in the coping style of the mother can markedly impact early offspring survival and, thereby, female fitness, in wild populations of mammals. Moreover, we provide evidence that fitness consequences of copying styles are habitat-dependent, providing a possible mechanism for the maintenance of within-population variation in behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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4. Interindividual variability in habitat use: evidence for a risk management syndrome in roe deer?
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Bonnot, Nadège, Verheyden, Hélène, Blanchard, Pierrick, Cote, Julien, Debeffe, Lucie, Cargnelutti, Bruno, Klein, François, Hewison, A. J. Mark, and Morellet, Nicolas
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PREDATION ,ANIMAL behavior ,ANIMAL psychology ,COMPARATIVE psychology ,HABITATS - Abstract
The way an individual reacts to the risk of predation or disturbance may have important consequences for its immediate and future survival. Risk is likely perceived differently by individuals in relation to among-individual differences in correlated behavioral traits, that is, syndromes or personalities. Given that animals can avoid the risk of predation/disturbance through modification of their habitat use, we might expect individuals of differing behavioral types to adopt contrasting tactics of habitat use when faced with risky or stressful situations. We studied the relationship between habitat use and among-individual variation in behavioral profile in a population of roe deer. We hypothesized that an individual's habitat use tactics should be related to their capacity to cope with risky situations. In particular, we predicted that more reactive (risk-averse) roe deer, with relatively high behavioral response and high body temperature at capture, long flight distances and which were more vigilant during feeding, should use riskier open habitat less, particularly when risk is high. We found that although the use of open habitat during the day was negatively correlated with the indices of reactivity at capture, it was also positively correlated with indices of reactivity while foraging in open habitat. Furthermore, most of the behavioral parameters we measured were intercorrelated and moderately repeatable, potentially indexing personality traits. We conclude that there is substantial interindividual variability in how individuals manage risky situations which imposes constraints on how they are able to exploit high-risk habitats, suggesting the existence of a risk management syndrome in this large herbivore. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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5. Parasite abundance contributes to condition-dependent dispersal in a wild population of large herbivore.
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Debeffe, Lucie, Morellet, Nicolas, Verheyden‐Tixier, Hélène, Hoste, Hervé, Gaillard, Jean‐Michel, Cargnelutti, Bruno, Picot, Denis, Sevila, Julie, and Hewison, A. J. Mark
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HERBIVORES ,PARASITES ,HABITATS ,PHILOPATRY ,BODY mass index ,REPRODUCTION - Abstract
Parasite abundance has been shown to have major consequences for host fitness components such as survival and reproduction. However, although natal dispersal is a key life history trait, whether an individual's decision to disperse or not is influenced by the abundance of parasites it carries remains mostly unknown. Current and opposing hypotheses suggest that infected individuals should either be philopatric to avoid the energetic costs of dispersal (condition dependence) or disperse to escape from heavily parasitised habitats. From intensive monitoring of a roe deer population inhabiting a multi-use and spatially heterogeneous agricultural landscape, we evaluated the link between an individual's parasite abundance and its propensity to disperse, while accounting for confounding effects of body mass. Dispersal propensity generally decreased with both increasing nematode abundance and with decreasing body mass. Within the dispersing segment of the population, individuals with high nematode abundance left their natal home range later in the season than less parasitised deer. These results clearly show that parasite abundance is an important component of condition-dependent dispersal in large herbivores. However, unexpectedly, three individuals that were both heavily parasitised and of low body mass dispersed. We suggest that this 'leave it' response to high parasite levels in the natal habitat could represent a last ditch attempt to improve reproductive prospects, constituting a form of emergency life history strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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6. Habitat use under predation risk: hunting, roads and human dwellings influence the spatial behaviour of roe deer.
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Bonnot, Nadège, Morellet, Nicolas, Verheyden, Hélène, Cargnelutti, Bruno, Lourtet, Bruno, Klein, François, and Hewison, A. J. Mark
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WILDLIFE management ,HUMAN-animal relationships ,HABITATS ,PREDATION ,HUNTING ,RESOURCE allocation - Abstract
Wildlife populations are subjected to increasing pressure linked to human activities, which introduce multiple stressors. Recently, in addition to direct effects, it has been shown that indirect (non-lethal) effects of predation risk are predominant in many populations. Predation risk is often structured in space and time, generating a heterogeneous 'landscape of fear' within which animals can minimize risks by modifying their habitat use. Furthermore, for ungulates, resource quality seems to be positively correlated with human-related sources of risk. We studied the trade-off between access to resources of high-quality and risk-taking by contrasting habitat use of roe deer during daytime with that during nighttime for 94 roe deer in a hunted population. Our first hypothesis was that roe deer should avoid human disturbance by modifying their habitat use during daytime compared to nighttime. Our results supported this, as roe deer mainly used open fields during nighttime, but used more forested habitats during daytime, when human disturbance is higher. Moreover, we found that diel patterns in habitat use were influenced by hunting disturbance. Indeed, the roe deer decreased their use of high-crops during daytime, an important source of cover and food, during the hunting season. The proximity of roads and dwellings also affected habitat use, since roe deer used open fields during daytime to a greater extent when the distance to these sources of disturbance was higher. Hence, our results suggest that roe deer resolve the trade-off between the acquisition of high-quality resources and risk avoidance by modifying their habitat use between day and night. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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7. Landscape fragmentation generates spatial variation of diet composition and quality in a generalist herbivore.
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Abbas, Frial, Morellet, Nicolas, Hewison, A., Merlet, Joël, Cargnelutti, Bruno, Lourtet, Bruno, Angibault, Jean-Marc, Daufresne, Tanguy, Aulagnier, Stéphane, and Verheyden, Hélène
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FRAGMENTED landscapes ,ROE deer ,HABITATS ,AGRICULTURAL intensification ,FORAGING behavior ,SPATIAL variation ,HERBIVORES - Abstract
Forest fragmentation may benefit generalist herbivores by increasing access to various substitutable food resources, with potential consequences for their population dynamics. We studied a European roe deer ( Capreolus capreolus) population living in an agricultural mosaic of forest, woodlots, meadows and cultivated crops. We tested whether diet composition and quality varied spatially across the landscape using botanical analyses of rumen contents and chemical analyses of the plants consumed in relation to landscape metrics. In summer and non-mast winters, roe deer ate more cultivated seeds and less native forest browse with increasing availability of crops in the local landscape. This spatial variation resulted in contrasting diet quality, with more cell content and lower lignin and hemicellulose content (high quality) for individuals living in more open habitats. The pattern was less marked in the other seasons when diet composition, but not diet quality, was only weakly related to landscape structure. In mast autumns and winters, the consumption of acorns across the entire landscape resulted in a low level of differentiation in diet composition and quality. Our results reflect the ability of generalist species, such as roe deer, to adapt to the fragmentation of their forest habitat by exhibiting a plastic feeding behavior, enabling them to use supplementary resources available in the agricultural matrix. This flexibility confers nutritional advantages to individuals with access to cultivated fields when their native food resources are depleted or decline in quality (e.g. during non-mast years) and may explain local heterogeneities in individual phenotypic quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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8. Inferring the effects of landscape structure on roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) movements using a step selection function.
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Coulon, Aurélie, Morellet, Nicolas, Goulard, Michel, Cargnelutti, Bruno, Angibault, Jean-Marc, and Hewison, A. J. Mark
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LANDSCAPE ecology ,ROE deer ,ANIMAL locomotion ,AGRICULTURE ,HABITATS - Abstract
In this study, we sought to understand how landscape structure affects roe deer movements within their home-range in a heterogeneous and fragmented agricultural system of south-western France. We analysed the movements of 20 roe deer fitted with GPS collars which recorded their locations every 2-6 h over several months (mean = 9 months). Based on empirical observations and previous studies of roe deer habitat use, we hypothesised that roe deer should avoid buildings and roads, move preferentially along valley bottoms and through the more wooded areas of the landscape. To test these hypotheses we paired each observed movement step with 10 random ones. Using conditional logistic regression, we modelled a step selection function, which represents the probability of selecting a given step as a function of these landscape variables. The selectedmodel indicated thatmovements were influenced by all the tested landscape features, but not always in the predicted direction: our results suggested that roe deer tend to avoid buildings, roads, valley bottoms and possibly the more wooded areas (although the latter result should be interpreted with caution, as it may be influenced by a bias in the rate of GPS fix acquisition in woods). The distances to buildings and to roads were the most influential variables in the model, suggesting that the avoidance of potential sources of disturbancemay be a key factor in determining ranging behaviour of roe deer in human dominated landscapes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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9. Testing Global Positioning System Performance for Wildlife Monitoring Using Mobile Collars and Known Reference Points.
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Cargnelutti, Bruno, Coulon, Aurélie, Hewison, A. J. Mark, Goulard, Michel, Angibault, Jean-Marc, and Morellet, Nicolas
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WILDLIFE monitoring , *GLOBAL Positioning System , *MAMMALS , *HABITATS , *WILDLIFE management - Abstract
To determine the spatial resolution of Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver data, rigorous testing is essential. We tested performance of the Lotek 3300 GPS collar for medium-sized mammals (Lotek Engineering, Inc., Newmarket, ON, Canada). To mimic real wildlife monitoring situations, we performed both static (stationary receiver) and mobile tests, placing the receiver collar on a dog. We compared fix locations of the mobile receiver with the actual trajectory described by a portable Trimble high-precision GPS. We determined performance in relation to habitat type and leaf cover. Location error was habitat-dependent, with the best results in open habitat and much poorer ones in forest, particularly coniferous-dominated forest. For both static and mobile tests, location accuracy was higher when the number of satellites contacted was high and when the residual positional dilution of precision (PDOP) value was low. However, location error was highly variable, even for a given PDOP value and a given number of satellites contacted. Finally, mobile collars performed less well than their static counterparts, presumably because of frequent changes of GPS position and orientation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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10. GPS approach to study fine-scale site use by wild red deer during active and inactive behaviors.
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Adrados, Christophe, Verheyden-Tixier, Helene, Cargnelutti, Bruno, Pepin, Dominique, and Janeau, Georges
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HABITAT selection ,GLOBAL Positioning System ,MAMMALS ,HABITATS ,RED deer - Abstract
Reports on the use of Differential Global Positioning System technology to study fine-scale habitat selection of wild mammals relative to environmental parameters. Requirements for studying habitat selection; Description of the study area; Sampling of active and inactive locations of wild red deer.
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- 2003
11. Boldness-mediated habitat use tactics and reproductive success in a wild large herbivore.
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Bonnot, Nadège C., Goulard, Michel, Hewison, A.J. Mark, Cargnelutti, Bruno, Lourtet, Bruno, Chaval, Yannick, and Morellet, Nicolas
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HERBIVORES , *ANIMAL reproduction , *ANIMAL behavior , *ANIMAL ecology , *HABITATS - Abstract
The balance between resource acquisition and risk avoidance should vary according to personality type, with potential knock-on effects for fitness. Although previous studies have suggested a link between boldness and fitness components, little evidence is available on the behavioural mechanisms mediating this relationship in the wild. Because habitat use is the outcome of the trade-off between the costs and benefits associated with using each habitat type, we evaluated between-individual differences in habitat use of 64 GPS-collared female roe deer, Capreolus capreolus , using multinomial logit mixed models. To investigate whether deer differed in their habitat use tactics in relation to their personality type and their annual reproductive success, we assessed the link between individual habitat use patterns, boldness (measured as the strength of behavioural responsiveness to handling) and annual reproductive success (measured by the presence/absence of fawns at heel during autumn). Although daily and seasonal variations in the risk–resource landscapes clearly drove patterns of habitat use, individuals adopted contrasting habitat use tactics depending on their position along the shy–bold gradient and their reproductive status. Shy individuals occupied safer woodland more frequently, even at night when risk is lower. In contrast, bold individuals were better able to exploit rich open habitats. When this included mature autumn crops, these females weaned more offspring. Finally, irrespective of personality type, females that used meadows more often also achieved higher annual reproductive success. Overall, we demonstrate that individuals express divergent habitat use tactics as a function of their ability to avoid exposure to risk and their annual reproductive success. Highlights • We measured habitat use, boldness and reproductive success in 64 female roe deer. • Spatiotemporal variations in the risk-resource trade-off shape deer habitat use. • The way individuals use their environment also depends on their personality type. • Differences in habitat use between personalities are linked to reproductive success. • Individual habitat use tactics mediate the personality – fitness link in the wild. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
- Full Text
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