134 results on '"Eraud, Cyril"'
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2. Prevalence and genetic diversity of avian haemosporidian parasites in wild bird species of the order Columbiformes
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Schumm, Yvonne R., Bakaloudis, Dimitris, Barboutis, Christos, Cecere, Jacopo G., Eraud, Cyril, Fischer, Dominik, Hering, Jens, Hillerich, Klaus, Lormée, Hervé, Mader, Viktoria, Masello, Juan F., Metzger, Benjamin, Rocha, Gregorio, Spina, Fernando, and Quillfeldt, Petra
- Published
- 2021
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3. Demographic and evolutionary consequences of hunting of wild birds.
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Grzegorczyk, Emilienne, Caizergues, Alain, Eraud, Cyril, Francesiaz, Charlotte, Le Rest, Kévin, and Guillemain, Matthieu
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FOWLING ,WILDLIFE management ,LEISURE ,BIRD populations ,BODY size ,FOREST birds - Abstract
Hunting has a long tradition in human evolutionary history and remains a common leisure activity or an important source of food. Herein, we first briefly review the literature on the demographic consequences of hunting and associated analytical methods. We then address the question of potential selective hunting and its possible genetic/evolutionary consequences. Birds have historically been popular models for demographic studies, and the huge amount of census and ringing data accumulated over the last century has paved the way for research about the demographic effects of harvesting. By contrast, the literature on the evolutionary consequences of harvesting is dominated by studies on mammals (especially ungulates) and fish. In these taxa, individuals selected for harvest often have particular traits such as large body size or extravagant secondary sexual characters (e.g. antlers, horns, etc.). Our review shows that targeting individuals according to such genetically heritable traits can exert strong selective pressures and alter the evolutionary trajectory of populations for these or correlated traits. Studies focusing on the evolutionary consequences of hunting in birds are extremely rare, likely because birds within populations appear much more similar, and do not display individual differences to the same extent as many mammals and fishes. Nevertheless, even without conscious choice by hunters, there remains the potential for selection through hunting in birds, for example by genetically inherited traits such as personality or pace‐of‐life. We emphasise that because so many bird species experience high hunting pressure, the possible selective effect of harvest in birds and its evolutionary consequences deserves far more attention, and that hunting may be one major driver of bird evolutionary trajectories that should be carefully considered in wildlife management schemes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Feather stable isotopes (δ2Hf and δ13Cf) identify the Sub-Saharan wintering grounds of turtle doves from Europe
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Marx, Melanie, Schumm, Yvonne R., Kardynal, Kevin J., Hobson, Keith A., Rocha, Gregorio, Zehtindjiev, Pavel, Bakaloudis, Dimitris, Metzger, Benjamin, Cecere, Jacopo G., Spina, Fernando, Cianchetti-Benedetti, Marco, Frahnert, Sylke, Voigt, Christian C., Lormée, Hervé, Eraud, Cyril, and Quillfeldt, Petra
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- 2022
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5. Where do thrushes migrating to France come from? Within-France distribution and temporal changes over 70 years
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Lahournat, Maxime, Jiguet, Frédéric, Villers, Alexandre, Eraud, Cyril, and Henry, Pierre-Yves
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- 2021
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6. Using the R package popharvest to assess the sustainability of offtake in birds.
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Johnson, Fred A., Eraud, Cyril, Francesiaz, Charlotte, Zimmerman, Guthrie S., and Koneff, Mark D.
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SUSTAINABILITY , *SOCIAL values , *NULL hypothesis , *MANAGEMENT philosophy - Abstract
The R package popharvest was designed to help assess the sustainability of offtake in birds when only limited demographic information is available. In this article, we describe some basics of harvest theory and then discuss several considerations when using the different approaches in popharvest to assess whether observed harvests are unsustainable. Throughout, we emphasize the importance of distinguishing between the scientific and policy aspects of managing offtake. The principal product of popharvest is a sustainable harvest index (SHI), which can indicate whether the harvest is unsustainable but not the converse. SHI is estimated based on a simple, scalar model of logistic population growth, whose parameters may be estimated using limited knowledge of demography. Uncertainty in demography leads to a distribution of SHI values and it is the purview of the decision‐maker to determine what amounts to an acceptable risk when failing to reject the null hypothesis of sustainability. The attitude toward risk, in turn, will likely depend on the decision‐maker's objective(s) in managing offtake. The management objective as specified in popharvest is a social construct, informed by biology, but ultimately it is an expression of social values that usually vary among stakeholders. We therefore suggest that any standardization of criteria for management objectives in popharvest will necessarily be subjective and, thus, hard to defend in diverse decision‐making situations. Because of its ease of use, diverse functionalities, and a minimal requirement of demographic information, we expect the use of popharvest to become widespread. Nonetheless, we suggest that while popharvest provides a useful platform for rapid assessments of sustainability, it cannot substitute for sufficient expertise and experience in harvest theory and management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. The role of cultivated versus wild seeds in the diet of European turtle doves (Streptopelia turtur) across European breeding and African wintering grounds.
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Young, Rebecca E., Dunn, Jenny C., Vaughan, Ian P., Mallord, John W., Drake, Lorna E., Orsman, Chris J., Ka, Moussa, Diallo, Mamadou B., Sarr, Malang, Lormée, Hervé, Eraud, Cyril, Kiss, Orsolya, Marchbank, Angela, and Symondson, William O. C.
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- 2024
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8. Post-Fledging Movements, Home Range, and Survival of Juvenile Eurasian Collared-Doves in Western France
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Eraud, Cyril, Jacquet, Anne, and Legagneux, Pierre
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- 2011
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9. Investigating the association between diet and infection with Trichomonas gallinae in the European turtle dove (Streptopelia turtur).
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Young, Rebecca E., Dunn, Jenny C., Vaughan, Ian P., Mallord, John W., Orsman, Chris J., Ka, Moussa, Diallo, Mamadou B., Sarr, Malang, Lormée, Hervé, Eraud, Cyril, Kiss, Orsolya, Thomas, Rebecca C., Hamer, Keith C., Goodman, Simon J., and Symondson, William O. C.
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- 2024
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10. Cold Tolerance and Sex-Dependent Hypothermia May Explain Winter Sexual Segregation in a Farmland Bird
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Powolny, Thibaut, Bretagnolle, Vincent, Dupoué, Andréaz, Lourdais, Olivier, and Eraud, Cyril
- Published
- 2016
11. Nesting success and productivity of a declining European turtle dove (Streptopelia turtur) population in western France.
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Eraud, Cyril and Lormée, Hervé
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TURTLEDOVE ,TURTLE populations ,BIRD nests ,TURTLES ,MIGRATORY animals ,COLUMBIDAE ,DECIDUOUS forests ,SUCCESS - Abstract
The European Turtle Dove Streptopelia turtur is a trans‐Saharan migratory species that has been declining for decades. This study reports nesting habitat, nest‐site characteristics, nesting success (38.6%) and productivity (2.40 young per pair per season) of European Turtle Doves radiotracked in a deciduous forest of western France. A matrix population model based on our results suggests that the average productivity reported would need to be increased by about 0.18 additional young per pair to achieve a population growth rate equal to one. However, elasticity analysis suggests that increasing adult survival would have the highest impact on population growth compared with increased productivity or first‐year survival. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. Contrasted patterns of genetic differentiation across eight bird species in the Lesser Antilles
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Khimoun, Aurélie, Arnoux, Emilie, Martel, Guillaume, Pot, Alexandre, Eraud, Cyril, Condé, Béatriz, Loubon, Maxime, Théron, Franck, Covas, Rita, Faivre, Bruno, and Garnier, Stéphane
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- 2016
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13. Vegetation structure and inter-individual distance affect intake rate and foraging efficiency in a granivorous forager, the Eurasian Skylark Alauda arvensis
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Powolny, Thibaut, Eraud, Cyril, Masson, Jean-Daniel, and Bretagnolle, Vincent
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- 2015
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14. Large-scale geographic variation in iridescent structural ornaments of a long-distance migratory bird
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Legagneux, Pierre, Clark, Robert G., Guillemain, Matthieu, Eraud, Cyril, Théry, Marc, and Bretagnolle, Vincent
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- 2012
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15. Weed seeds, not grain, contribute to the diet of wintering skylarks in arable farmlands of Western France
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Eraud, Cyril, Cadet, Emilie, Powolny, Thibaut, Gaba, Sabrina, Bretagnolle, François, and Bretagnolle, Vincent
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- 2015
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16. Dual emergence of Usutu virus in common blackbirds, Eastern France, 2015
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Lecollinet, Sylvie, Blanchard, Yannick, Manson, Christine, Lowenski, Steeve, Laloy, Eve, Quenault, Helene, Touzain, Fabrice, Lucas, Pierrick, Eraud, Cyril, Bahuon, Celine, Zientara, Stephan, Beck, Cecile, and Decors, Anouk
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Health - Abstract
To the Editor: Usutu virus (USUV) is a mosquito-borne flavivirus amplified in an enzootic cycle involving passeriform and strigiform birds as reservoir hosts and Culex mosquitos as vectors (1). Although [...]
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- 2016
17. Survival Cost of an Early Immune Soliciting in Nature
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Eraud, Cyril, Jacquet, Anne, and Faivre, Bruno
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- 2009
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18. The Presence of Females Modulates the Expression of a Carotenoid-Based Sexual Signal
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Gautier, Patrick, Barroca, Marco, Bertrand, Sophie, Eraud, Cyril, Gaillard, Maria, Hamman, Michael, Motreuil, Sébastien, Sorci, Gabriele, and Faivre, Bruno
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- 2008
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19. The Crop Milk: A Potential New Route for Carotenoid-Mediated Parental Effects
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Eraud, Cyril, Dorie, Adrien, Jacquet, Anne, and Faivre, Bruno
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- 2008
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20. Evidence for density-dependent habitat occupancy at varying scales in an expanding bird population
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Gadenne, Hélène, Cornulier, Thomas, Eraud, Cyril, Barbraud, Jean-Claude, and Barbraud, Christophe
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- 2014
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21. Levels of genetic differentiation and gene flow between four populations of the Scaly-naped Pigeon, Patagioenas squamosa: implications for conservation.
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Cambrone, Christopher, Cézilly, Frank, Wattier, Rémi, Eraud, Cyril, and Bezault, Etienne
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GENE flow ,MITOCHONDRIAL DNA ,NUCLEAR DNA ,CLIMATE extremes ,PIGEONS - Abstract
Island-endemic columbid species are particularly vulnerable to environmental degradation, extreme climatic events, and interactions with exotic species. The situation might be even more critical in the case of exploited species, where legal hunting and poaching can severely affect population dynamics. Here we document for the first time the genetic structure of the Scaly-naped Pigeon, Patagioenas squamosa, a Caribbean-endemic columbid species of cynegetic interest, over a large part of its range. Using both mitochondrial DNA and nuclear markers (microsatellites), we investigated gene flow, genetic diversity, and genetic structure among four islands populations originating from Puerto-Rico, Guadeloupe, Martinique and Barbados. We found evidence for a significant genetic differentiation only between the Barbados and the three other populations, consistent with the fact that the Barbados population originated from a few captive individuals escaped from a rooftop aviary in Bridgetown about 100 years ago. Given the absence of genetic differentiation between Puerto Rico and the French Antilles, our results suggest that, apart from Barbados, the species may mainly consist of a single large, homogeneous population. We discuss the relevance of our findings in relation to management and conservation issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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22. Is hunting nonintentionally selective? A test using game bird capture‐dead recoveries.
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Grzegorczyk, Emilienne, Bézier, Léa, Le‐Rest, Kévin, Caizergues, Alain, Francesiaz, Charlotte, Champagnon, Jocelyn, Guillemain, Matthieu, and Eraud, Cyril
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GAME & game-birds ,FOWLING ,HUNTING ,BIRD banding ,WILDLIFE management - Abstract
Selective hunting has various impacts that need to be considered for the conservation and management of harvested populations. The consequences of selective harvest have mostly been studied in trophy hunting and fishing, where selection of specific phenotypes is intentional. Recent studies, however, show that selection can also occur unintentionally. With at least 52 million birds harvested each year in Europe, it is particularly relevant to evaluate the selectivity of hunting on this taxon. Here, we considered 211,806 individuals belonging to 7 hunted bird species to study unintentional selectivity in harvest. Using linear mixed models, we compared morphological traits (mass, wing, and tarsus size) and body condition at the time of banding between birds that were subsequently recovered from hunting during the same year as their banding, and birds that were not recovered. We did not find any patterns showing systematic differences between recovery categories, among our model species, for the traits we studied. Moreover, when a difference existed between recovery categories, it was so small that its biological relevance can be challenged. Hunting of birds in Europe therefore does not show any form of strong selectivity on the morphological and physiological traits that we studied and should hence not lead to any change of these traits either by plastic or by evolutionary response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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23. Phenotypic variation of Forest Thrushes Turdus lherminieri in Guadeloupe: evidence for geographic differentiation at fine spatial scale
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Arnoux, Emilie, Eraud, Cyril, Thomas, Alban, Cavallo, François, Garnier, Stéphane, and Faivre, Bruno
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- 2013
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24. Group size modulates time budget and foraging efficiency in captive Skylarks, Alauda arvensis
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Powolny, Thibaut, Eraud, Cyril, and Bretagnolle, Vincent
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- 2012
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25. Breeding mute swan habitat selection when accounting for detectability: a plastic behaviour consistent with rapidly expanding populations
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Gayet, Guillaume, Eraud, Cyril, Benmergui, Maurice, Broyer, Joël, Mesleard, François, Fritz, Hervé, and Guillemain, Matthieu
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- 2011
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26. On the efficiency of using song playback during call count surveys of Red-legged partridges (Alectoris rufa)
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Jakob, Christiane, Ponce-Boutin, Françoise, Besnard, Aurélien, and Eraud, Cyril
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- 2010
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27. Carotenoids in nestling Montagu’s harriers: variations according to age, sex, body condition and evidence for diet-related limitations
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Sternalski, Audrey, Mougeot, François, Eraud, Cyril, Gangloff, Benoît, Villers, Alexandre, and Bretagnolle, Vincent
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- 2010
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28. Assessing rates of parasite coinfection and spatiotemporal strain variation via metabarcoding: Insights for the conservation of European turtle doves Streptopelia turtur.
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Thomas, Rebecca C., Dunn, Jenny C., Dawson, Deborah A., Hipperson, Helen, Horsburgh, Gavin J., Morris, Antony J., Orsman, Chris, Mallord, John, Grice, Philip V., Hamer, Keith C., Eraud, Cyril, Hervé, Lormée, and Goodman, Simon J.
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TURTLEDOVE ,TURTLE conservation ,MIXED infections ,RARE birds ,COLUMBIDAE ,PARASITES ,TURTLES - Abstract
Understanding the frequency, spatiotemporal dynamics and impacts of parasite coinfections is fundamental to developing control measures and predicting disease impacts. The European turtle dove (Streptopelia turtur) is one of Europe's most threatened bird species. High prevalence of infection by the protozoan parasite Trichomonas gallinae has previously been identified, but the role of this and other coinfecting parasites in turtle dove declines remains unclear. Using a high‐throughput sequencing approach, we identified seven strains of T. gallinae, including two novel strains, from ITS1/5.8S/ITS2 ribosomal sequences in turtle doves on breeding and wintering grounds, with further intrastrain variation and four novel subtypes revealed by the iron‐hydrogenase gene. High spatiotemporal turnover was observed in T. gallinae strain composition, and infection was prevalent in all populations (89%–100%). Coinfection by multiple Trichomonas strains was rarer than expected (1% observed compared to 38.6% expected), suggesting either within‐host competition, or high mortality of coinfected individuals. In contrast, coinfection by multiple haemosporidians was common (43%), as was coinfection by haemosporidians and T. gallinae (90%), with positive associations between strains of T. gallinae and Leucocytozoon suggesting a mechanism such as parasite‐induced immune modulation. We found no evidence for negative associations between coinfections and host body condition. We suggest that longitudinal studies involving the recapture and investigation of infection status of individuals over their lifespan are crucial to understand the epidemiology of coinfections in natural populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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29. Feather stable isotopes (δ2Hf and δ13Cf) identify the Sub-Saharan wintering grounds of turtle doves from Europe.
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Marx, Melanie, Schumm, Yvonne R., Kardynal, Kevin J., Hobson, Keith A., Rocha, Gregorio, Zehtindjiev, Pavel, Bakaloudis, Dimitris, Metzger, Benjamin, Cecere, Jacopo G., Spina, Fernando, Cianchetti-Benedetti, Marco, Frahnert, Sylke, Voigt, Christian C., Lormée, Hervé, Eraud, Cyril, and Quillfeldt, Petra
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STABLE isotopes ,TURTLEDOVE ,COLUMBIDAE ,BIRD conservation ,TURTLE conservation - Abstract
Conservation of migratory birds requires knowledge of breeding and nonbreeding ranges and the connections between them. European turtle doves (Streptopelia turtur) are Palearctic-African long-distance migrants with wintering areas in the Sub-Saharan belt that are classed as vulnerable due to strong population declines. However, detailed non-breeding locations of individuals from different migratory flyways are unknown. To identify wintering regions of turtle doves, we measured stable isotopes of feathers grown on the wintering grounds and used a dual-isotope (hydrogen (δ
2 Hf ) and carbon (δ13 Cf )) probabilistic assignment to analyse origins of individuals migrating through the western and central/eastern flyways. The most probable wintering areas for turtle dove samples from both flyways were in the western and central Sub-Sahara. However, we found differences in δ2 Hf and δ13 Cf values between turtle doves following different migratory routes (western vs central/eastern flyway). This result suggests a higher likelihood of origins in the central Sub-Sahara for central and eastern migrants, while turtle doves using the western flyway originated primarily in the western Sub-Sahara, highlighting the importance of both regions for the future conservation of turtle doves from European breeding populations. The establishment of migratory connectivity of populations requires sampling from birds from the European as well as Asian continent; however, we provide important results that can be used to test hypotheses regarding population declines resulting from factors experienced over the full annual cycle for some populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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30. popharvest : An R package to assess the sustainability of harvesting regimes of bird populations.
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Eraud, Cyril, Devaux, Tiphaine, Villers, Alexandre, Johnson, Fred A., and Francesiaz, Charlotte
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BIRD populations , *MONTE Carlo method , *SUSTAINABILITY , *BIRD mortality , *POPULATION dynamics , *SET functions - Abstract
Bird harvest for recreational purposes or as a source for food is an important activity worldwide. Assessing or mitigating the impact of these additional sources of mortality on bird populations is therefore crucial issue. The sustainability of harvest levels is however rarely documented, because knowledge of their population dynamics remains rudimentary for many bird species. Some helpful approaches using limited demographic data can be used to provide initial assessment of the sustainable use of harvested bird populations, and help adjusting harvest levels accordingly. The Demographic Invariant Method (DIM) is used to detect overharvesting. In complement, the Potential Take Level (PTL) approach may allow setting a level of take with regard to management objectives and/or to assess whether current harvest levels meet these objectives. Here, we present the R package popharvest that implements these two approaches in a simple and straightforward way. The package provides users with a set of flexible functions whose arguments can be adapted to existing knowledge about population dynamics. Also, popharvest enables users to test scenarios or propagate uncertainty in demographic parameters to the assessment of sustainability through easily programming Monte Carlo simulations. The simplicity of the package makes it a useful toolbox for wildlife managers or policymakers. This paper provides them with backgrounds about the DIM and PTL approaches and illustrates the use of popharvest's functionalities in this context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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31. Assessing the sustainability of harvest of the European Turtle-dove along the European western flyway.
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LORMÉE, HERVÉ, BARBRAUD, CHRISTOPHE, PEACH, WILL, CARBONERAS, CARLES, LEBRETON, JEAN DOMINIQUE, MORENO-ZARATE, LARA, BACON, LEO, and ERAUD, CYRIL
- Abstract
Summary: With a decline exceeding 30% over three generations, the once-common European Turtle-dove is now considered globally threatened by IUCN. As a legal game species in 10 European countries, the recent International Single Species Action Plan for this species highlighted the need to carry out an assessment of the sustainability of current levels of hunting. In 2013–2014, the Western European population was estimated at 1.3–2.1 million pairs, and the hunting bag in the same region to be 1.1 million birds. Using the Demographic Invariant Method, we assessed whether current levels of hunting harvest within Europe constitute overexploitation of the western flyway European Turtle-dove population. We calculated the maximum growth rate λ
max that a population might achieve in the absence of any additive mortality. Then we estimated the potential maximum harvestable population fraction (P) allowed by excess population growth. We explored a wide range of plausible scenarios relating to assumed demographic rates, geographic scope of the flyway and management objectives. λmax was estimated to lie between 1.551 and 1.869. Current levels of hunting along the western flyway are more than double the sustainable fraction (P) under all suitably conservative scenarios, and only fall below this threshold under the most restrictive assumptions. We conclude that current levels of legal hunting along the western flyway are unlikely to be sustainable. Reducing uncertainty associated with assessments of the sustainability of turtle dove hunting will require improved information on (in order of decreasing importance) current levels of hunting, adult survival, age structure and population size. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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32. Habitat fragmentation, not habitat loss, drives the prevalence of blood parasites in a Caribbean passerine.
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Pérez‐Rodríguez, Antón, Khimoun, Aurélie, Ollivier, Anthony, Eraud, Cyril, Faivre, Bruno, and Garnier, Stéphane
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PASSERIFORMES ,HABITAT destruction ,BIRD habitats ,BLOOD parasites ,BIRD diversity ,FOREST degradation - Abstract
Habitat destruction due to human land‐use activities is well recognized as a central threat to biodiversity. However, there is still debate about the relative influence of its two components, habitat loss and habitat fragmentation, mostly because few studies have been able to disentangle their respective effects. We studied mechanisms by which habitat destruction might influence the prevalence of vector‐transmitted haemosporidian blood parasites of the genera Plasmodium and Haemoproteus infecting the Lesser Antillean bullfinch Loxigilla noctis on the Caribbean islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique. Starting from a large set of environmental descriptors (including metrics reflecting habitat loss, habitat fragmentation and landscape heterogeneity; as well as other variables not linked to habitat destruction, such as climatic conditions), we used PLS regression analyses to determine which variables were driving parasite prevalence on the islands. Our results showed that variables related to forest destruction were much more influential than other factors for all parasites analyzed on both islands. Remarkably, the effects documented were almost exclusively due to forest fragmentation, as opposed to habitat loss. This positive effect of forest fragmentation on blood parasite prevalence is proposed to happen through its effects on insect vectors and/or host biology. Increased understanding of the role of habitat fragmentation as a driver of parasitic diseases can help limiting the risk of emergence and proliferation of wildlife pathogenic outbreaks and zoonosis through informed landscape planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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33. MtDNA genetic diversity and structure of Eurasian Collared Dove (Streptopelia decaocto).
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Bagi, Zoltán, Dimopoulos, Evangelos Antonis, Loukovitis, Dimitrios, Eraud, Cyril, and Kusza, Szilvia
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COLLARED dove ,SPECIES diversity ,MITOCHONDRIAL DNA ,CYTOCHROME oxidase ,HAPLOTYPES - Abstract
The Eurasian Collared Dove (Streptopelia decaocto) is one of the most successful biological invaders among terrestrial vertebrates. However, little information is available on the genetic diversity of the species. A total of 134 Eurasian Collared Doves from Europe, Asia and the Caribbean (n = 20) were studied by sequencing a 658-bp length of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) cytochrome oxidase I (COI). Fifty-two different haplotypes and relatively high haplotype and nucleotide diversities (Hd±SD = 0.843±0.037 and π±SD = 0.026±0.013) were detected. Haplotype Ht1 was particularly dominant: it included 44.03% of the studied individuals, and contained sequences from 75% of the studied countries. Various analyses (F
ST , AMOVA, STRUCTURE) distinguished 2 groups on the genetic level, designated ‘A’ and ‘B’. Two groups were also separated in the median-joining network and the maximum likelihood tree. The results of the neutrality tests were negative (Fu FS = -25.914; Tajima D = -2.606) and significantly different from zero (P≤0.001) for group A, whereas both values for group B were positive (Fu FS = 1.811; Tajima D = 0.674) and not significant (P>0.05). Statistically significant positive autocorrelation was revealed among individuals located up to 2000 km apart (r = 0.124; P = 0.001). The present results provide the first information on the genetic diversity and structure of the Eurasian Collared Dove, and can thereby serve as a factual and comparative basis for similar studies in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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34. Seed depletion and landscape structure affect aggregative response in two wintering passerine birds.
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Powolny, Thibaut, Eraud, Cyril, LeRest, Kévin, and Bretagnolle, Vincent
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Capsule: Seed abundance but also seed depletion during winter modifies habitat use and aggregation behaviour of Eurasian Sky LarkAlauda arvensis and Meadow PipitAnthus pratensis .Aims: To investigate the effect of seed abundance on the density of two passerine birds, the Eurasian Sky Larks and the Meadow Pipit, at an agricultural landscape scale during winter.Methods: Bird counts as well as seed density measurements were carried out in winter to quantify the aggregative response of farmland birds to seed abundance from November to March.Results: Seed resources varied by a factor of ten between crop types, but declined so sharply over the winter that seed abundance was low and similar among crop types by late winter. Sky Larks selected for higher seed density plots, but only at the end of winter when the resources were the lowest. Conversely, Meadow Pipits did not show any aggregative response to seed abundance.Conclusion: These results show that an uptake of seed-rich habitats in agricultural landscape would be very beneficial for wintering granivorous birds, by fulfilling the late winter ‘hungry gap’. The inclusion of seed mixtures in habitats that attract high densities of birds and retain seeds until late winter is of primary interest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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35. Landscape genetic analyses reveal fine-scale effects of forest fragmentation in an insular tropical bird.
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Khimoun, Aurélie, Peterman, William, Eraud, Cyril, Faivre, Bruno, Navarro, Nicolas, and Garnier, Stéphane
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BIRDS ,GENE flow ,SETOPHAGA ,FRAGMENTED landscapes ,TROPICAL forests ,BIRD habitats ,LAND cover - Abstract
Within the framework of landscape genetics, resistance surface modelling is particularly relevant to explicitly test competing hypotheses about landscape effects on gene flow. To investigate how fragmentation of tropical forest affects population connectivity in a forest specialist bird species, we optimized resistance surfaces without a priori specification, using least-cost ( LCP) or resistance ( IBR) distances. We implemented a two-step procedure in order (i) to objectively define the landscape thematic resolution (level of detail in classification scheme to describe landscape variables) and spatial extent (area within the landscape boundaries) and then (ii) to test the relative role of several landscape features (elevation, roads, land cover) in genetic differentiation in the Plumbeous Warbler ( Setophaga plumbea). We detected a small-scale reduction of gene flow mainly driven by land cover, with a negative impact of the nonforest matrix on landscape functional connectivity. However, matrix components did not equally constrain gene flow, as their conductivity increased with increasing structural similarity with forest habitat: urban areas and meadows had the highest resistance values whereas agricultural areas had intermediate resistance values. Our results revealed a higher performance of IBR compared to LCP in explaining gene flow, reflecting suboptimal movements across this human-modified landscape, challenging the common use of LCP to design habitat corridors and advocating for a broader use of circuit theory modelling. Finally, our results emphasize the need for an objective definition of landscape scales (landscape extent and thematic resolution) and highlight potential pitfalls associated with parameterization of resistance surfaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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36. Genomic evidence of demographic fluctuations and lack of genetic structure across flyways in a long distance migrant, the European turtle dove.
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Calderón, Luciano, Campagna, Leonardo, Wilke, Thomas, Lormee, Hervé, Eraud, Cyril, Dunn, Jenny C., Rocha, Gregorio, Zehtindjiev, Pavel, Bakaloudis, Dimitrios E., Metzger, Benjamin, Cecere, Jacopo G., Marx, Melanie, and Quillfeldt, Petra
- Subjects
TURTLEDOVE ,BIRD populations ,CLIMATOLOGY ,MIGRATION flyways ,BIRD evolution ,BIRDS ,GENETICS ,BIRD migration - Abstract
Background: Understanding how past climatic oscillations have affected organismic evolution will help predict the impact that current climate change has on living organisms. The European turtle dove, Streptopelia turtur, is a warm-temperature adapted species and a long distance migrant that uses multiple flyways to move between Europe and Africa. Despite being abundant, it is categorized as vulnerable because of a long-term demographic decline. We studied the demographic history and population genetic structure of the European turtle dove using genomic data and mitochondrial DNA sequences from individuals sampled across Europe, and performing paleoclimatic niche modelling simulations. Results: Overall our data suggest that this species is panmictic across Europe, and is not genetically structured across flyways. We found the genetic signatures of demographic fluctuations, inferring an effective population size (Ne) expansion that occurred between the late Pleistocene and early Holocene, followed by a decrease in the Ne that started between the mid Holocene and the present. Our niche modelling analyses suggest that the variations in the Ne are coincident with recent changes in the availability of suitable habitat. Conclusions: We argue that the European turtle dove is prone to undergo demographic fluctuations, a trait that makes it sensitive to anthropogenic impacts, especially when its numbers are decreasing. Also, considering the lack of genetic structure, we suggest all populations across Europe are equally relevant for conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Reduced inflammation in expanding populations of a neotropical bird species.
- Author
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Bailly, Juliette, Garnier, Stéphane, Khimoun, Aurélie, Arnoux, Emilie, Eraud, Cyril, Goret, Jean-Yves, Luglia, Thomas, Gaucher, Philippe, and Faivre, Bruno
- Subjects
BIRD diseases ,NATURAL immunity ,TURDUS ,HAEMOSPORIDA ,HAPTOGLOBINS - Abstract
The loss of regulating agents such as parasites is among the most important changes in biotic interactions experienced by populations established in newly colonized areas. Under a relaxed parasite pressure, individuals investing less in costly immune mechanisms might experience a selective advantage and become successful colonizers as they re-allocate resources to other fitness-related traits. Accordingly, a refinement of the evolution of increased competitive ability ( EICA) hypothesis proposed that immunity of invasive populations has evolved toward a reduced investment in innate immunity, the most costly component of immunity, and an increased humoral immunity that is less costly. Biogeographical approaches comparing populations between native and expansion ranges are particularly relevant in exploring this issue, but remain very scarce. We conducted a biogeographical comparison between populations of Spectacled Thrush ( Turdus nudigenis) from the native area (South America) and from the expansion range (Caribbean islands). First, we compared haemosporidian prevalence and circulating haptoglobin (an acute-phase protein produced during inflammation). Second, we challenged captive birds from both ranges with Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharides ( LPS) and measured postchallenge haptoglobin production and body mass change. Birds from the expansion range showed lower haemosporidian prevalence and lower levels of haptoglobin than birds from the native range. In addition, the inflammation elicited by LPS injection and its associated cost in terms of body mass loss were lower in birds from the expansion range than in birds from the native range. In accordance with the enemy release hypothesis, our results suggest that range expansion is associated with a reduced infection risk. Our study also supports the hypothesis that individuals from newly established populations have evolved mechanisms to dampen the inflammatory response and are in accordance with one prediction of the refined EICA hypothesis, proposed to understand biological invasions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Habitat specialization predicts genetic response to fragmentation in tropical birds.
- Author
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Khimoun, Aurélie, Eraud, Cyril, Ollivier, Anthony, Arnoux, Emilie, Rocheteau, Vincent, Bely, Marine, Lefol, Emilie, Delpuech, Martin, Carpentier, Marie‐Laure, Leblond, Gilles, Levesque, Anthony, Charbonnel, Anaïs, Faivre, Bruno, and Garnier, Stéphane
- Subjects
- *
HABITATS , *BIODIVERSITY , *SENSITIVITY analysis , *HYPOTHESIS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *FOREST landscape design - Abstract
Habitat fragmentation is one of the most severe threats to biodiversity as it may lead to changes in population genetic structure, with ultimate modifications of species evolutionary potential and local extinctions. Nonetheless, fragmentation does not equally affect all species and identifying which ecological traits are related to species sensitivity to habitat fragmentation could help prioritization of conservation efforts. Despite the theoretical link between species ecology and extinction proneness, comparative studies explicitly testing the hypothesis that particular ecological traits underlies species-specific population structure are rare. Here, we used a comparative approach on eight bird species, co-occurring across the same fragmented landscape. For each species, we quantified relative levels of forest specialization and genetic differentiation among populations. To test the link between forest specialization and susceptibility to forest fragmentation, we assessed species responses to fragmentation by comparing levels of genetic differentiation between continuous and fragmented forest landscapes. Our results revealed a significant and substantial population structure at a very small spatial scale for mobile organisms such as birds. More importantly, we found that specialist species are more affected by forest fragmentation than generalist ones. Finally, our results suggest that even a simple habitat specialization index can be a satisfying predictor of genetic and demographic consequences of habitat fragmentation, providing a reliable practical and quantitative tool for conservation biology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Turtle Dove Streptopelia turtur migration routes and wintering areas revealed using satellite telemetry.
- Author
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Lormee, Hervé, Boutin, Jean-Marie, Pinaud, David, Bidault, Herve, and Eraud, Cyril
- Abstract
Satellite telemetry of two European Turtle DovesStreptopelia turturconfirmed the broad patterns suggested by earlier work using geologgers but also revealed that they migrated by night and used four distinct stopover and two wintering sites. Winter habitat used by one bird covered less than 100 km2per site, much smaller than previously assumed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Sex-Related Differences in the Trade-Off between Foraging and Vigilance in a Granivorous Forager.
- Author
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Powolny, Thibaut, Bretagnolle, Vincent, Aguilar, Astrid, and Eraud, Cyril
- Subjects
GRANIVORES ,SPATIOTEMPORAL processes ,FOOD safety ,FORAGING behavior ,ANIMAL behavior ,CAMOUFLAGE (Biology) - Abstract
The relationship between intake rate and food density can provide the foundation for models that predict the spatiotemporal distribution of organisms across a range of resource densities. The functional response, describing the relationship between resource density and intake rate is often interpreted mechanistically as the relationships between times spend searching and handling. While several functional response models incorporate anti-predator vigilance (defined here as an interruption of feeding or some other activity to visually scan the environment, directed mainly towards detecting potential predators), the impacts of environmental factors influencing directly anti-predator vigilance remains unclear. We examined the combined effects of different scenarios of predation risk and food density on time allocation between foraging and anti-predator vigilance in a granivorous species. We experimentally exposed Skylarks to various cover heights and seed densities, and measured individual time budget and pecking and intake rates. Our results indicated that time devoted to different activities varied as a function of both seed density and cover height. Foraging time increased with seed density for all cover heights. Conversely, an increased cover height resulted in a decreased foraging time. Contrary to males, the decreased proportion of time spent foraging did not translate into a foraging disadvantage for females. When vegetation height was higher, females maintained similar pecking and intake rates compared to intermediate levels, while males consistently decreased their energy gain. This difference in anti-predator responses suggests a sexually mediated strategy in the food-safety trade-off: when resource density is high a females would adopt a camouflage strategy while an escape strategy would be adopted by males. In other words, males would leave risky-areas, whereas females would stay when resource density is high. Our results suggest that increased predation risk might generate sexually mediated behavioural responses that functional response models should perhaps better consider in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Effects of the February 2012 cold spell on terrestrial birds wintering in France.
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Lormée, Hervé, Ferrand, Yves, Bastat, Claudine, Coreau, Damien, Gossmann, François, Trolliet, Bertrand, Roux, Denis, Eraud, Cyril, and Boutin, Jean-Marie
- Subjects
WINTERING of birds ,LAPWINGS ,ANIMAL species ,SCOLOPAX ,BIRD mortality - Abstract
We document the mortality of terrestrial bird species wintering in France as a result of the 2012 February cold spell. We describe the range of species affected and how some of them reacted to the cold spell in term of movement and variation in body mass. Mortality records concerned 1,791 individuals from 42 species. Among terrestrial birds, Northern Lapwings Vanellus vanellus, Eurasian Woodcocks Scolopax rusticola and thrush species suffered the most from the cold spell. Among casualties, 56% of birds starved to death and 8.4% were predated. Collisions with vehicles accounted for 23.7% of deaths for all species, and reached 50% for Lapwings. Location of mortality records suggested that Lapwings and Woodcocks moved en masse towards the south and southwest of France to escape from the cold spell. Body mass of thrushes, Lapwings and Woodcocks birds was rapidly depleted because birds could not access food resources. On average, birds which were 30% lighter than birds weighed at the same period during normal winters had reached a lethal body mass. The results of this enquiry highlight the impact of such cold-weather events and the need, in particular for game bird species, to promote standardised enquiries on mortality when severe winter events occur. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Innate Immunity Correlates with Host Fitness in Wild Boar (Sus scrofa) Exposed to Classical Swine Fever.
- Author
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Rossi, Sophie, Doucelin, Anaïs, Le Potier, Marie-Frédérique, Eraud, Cyril, and Gilot-Fromont, Emmanuelle
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NATURAL immunity ,WILD boar ,CLASSICAL swine fever ,SERUM ,VIRAL antibodies ,BLOODBORNE infections - Abstract
Constitutive humoral immunity (CHI) is thought to be a first-line of protection against pathogens invading vertebrate hosts. However, clear evidence that CHI correlates with host fitness in natural conditions is still lacking. This study explores the relationship between CHI, measured using a haemagglutination-haemolysis assay (HAHL), and resistance to classical swine fever virus (CSFV) among wild boar piglets. The individual dynamics of HAHL during piglet growth was analysed, using 423 serum samples from 92 piglets repeatedly captured in the absence of CSFV (in 2006) within two areas showing contrasting food availability. Natural antibody levels increased with age, but, in the youngest piglets antibody levels were higher in individuals from areas with the highest food availability. Complement activity depended on natural antibody levels and piglets' body condition. In the presence of CSFV (i.e., in 2005 within one area), serum samples from piglets that were repeatedly captured were used to assess whether piglet HAHL levels affected CSFV status at a later capture. The correlation between CHI and resistance to CSFV was tested using 79 HAHL measures from 23 piglets captured during a CSFV outbreak. Both natural antibodies and complement activity levels measured at a given time correlated negatively to the subsequent probability of becoming viremic. Finally, capture-mark-recapture models showed that piglets with medium/high average complement activity, independently of their age, were significantly less at risk of becoming viremic and more likely to develop a specific immune response than piglets with low complement activity. Additionally, piglets with high average complement activity showed the highest survival prospects. This study provides evidence linking CHI to individual fitness within a natural mammal population. The results also highlight the potential of HAHL assays to explore the dynamics and co-evolution between wildlife mammal hosts and blood-borne parasites interacting with the CHI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Migration Routes and Staging Areas of Trans-Saharan Turtle Doves Appraised from Light-Level Geolocators.
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Eraud, Cyril, Rivière, Marcel, Lormée, Hervé, Fox, James W., Ducamp, Jean-Jacques, and Boutin, Jean-Marie
- Subjects
- *
TURTLEDOVE , *STAGING areas (Birds) , *BIRD migration , *BIRD conservation , *BIOTIC communities , *POPULATION ecology , *BIRD behavior - Abstract
The identification of migration routes, wintering grounds and stopover sites are crucial issues for the understanding of the Palearctic-African bird migration system as well as for the development of relevant conservation strategies for trans-Saharan migrants. Using miniaturized light-level geolocators we report a comprehensive and detailed year round track of a granivorous trans-Saharan migrant, the European Turtle Dove (Streptopelia turtur). From five recovered loggers, our data provide new insights on migratory journeys and winter destinations of Turtle Doves originating from a breeding population in Western France. Data confirm that Turtle Doves wintered in West Africa. The main wintering area encompassed Western Mali, the Inner Delta Niger and the Malian/Mauritanian border. Some individuals also extended their wintering ranges over North Guinea, North-West of Burkina Faso and the Ivory-Coast. Our results reveal that all individuals did not spend the winter period at a single location; some of them experienced a clear eastward shift of several hundred kilometres. We also found evidence for a loop migration pattern, with a post-breeding migration flyway lying west of the spring route. Finally, we found that on their way back to breeding grounds Turtle Doves needed to refuel after crossing the Sahara desert. Contrary to previous suggestions, our data reveal that birds used stopover sites for several weeks, presumably in Morocco and North Algeria. This later finding is a crucial issue for future conservation strategies because environmental conditions on these staging areas might play a pivotal role in population dynamics of this declining species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Effect of Restricted Preen-Gland Access on Maternal Self Maintenance and Reproductive Investment in Mallards.
- Author
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Giraudeau, Mathieu, Czirják, Gábor Á., Duval, Camille, Bretagnolle, Vincent, Eraud, Cyril, McGraw, Kevin J., and Heeb, Philipp
- Subjects
MALLARD ,ANTI-infective agents ,BIRD behavior ,CAROTENOIDS ,LYSOZYMES ,UROPYGIAL gland ,PATHOGENIC microorganisms ,AVIAN anatomy ,ANIMAL diseases - Abstract
Background: As egg production and offspring care are costly, females should invest resources adaptively into their eggs to optimize current offspring quality and their own lifetime reproductive success. Parasite infections can influence maternal investment decisions due to their multiple negative physiological effects. The act of preening - applying oils with antimicrobial properties to feathers - is thought to be a means by which birds combat pathogens and parasites, but little is known of how preening during the reproductive period (and its expected disease-protecting effects) influences maternal investment decisions at the level of the egg. Methodology/Principal Findings: Here, we experimentally prevented female mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) from accessing their preen gland during breeding and monitored female immunoresponsiveness (e.g., plasma lysozyme concentration) as well as some egg traits linked to offspring quality (e.g., egg mass, yolk carotenoid content, and albumen lysozyme levels). Females with no access to their preen gland showed an increase in plasma lysozyme level compared to control, normally preening females. In addition, preen-gland-restricted females laid significantly lighter eggs and deposited higher carotenoid concentrations in the yolk compared to control females. Albumen lysozyme activity did not differ significantly between eggs laid by females with or without preen gland access. Conclusion/Significance: Our results establish a new link between an important avian self-maintenance behaviour and aspects of maternal health and reproduction. We suggest that higher yolk carotenoid levels in eggs laid by preen-gland-restricted females may serve to boost health of offspring that would hatch in a comparatively microbe-rich environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Survival of Turtle Doves Streptopelia turtur in relation to western Africa environmental conditions.
- Author
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ERAUD, CYRIL, BOUTIN, JEAN-MARIE, RIVIERE, MARCEL, BRUN, JACQUES, BARBRAUD, CHRISTOPHE, and LORMEE, HERVE
- Subjects
TURTLEDOVE ,BIODIVERSITY ,WINTER ,FOOD production ,BIRD population estimates ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,ANIMAL behavior ,ANIMAL wintering ,WILDLIFE management - Abstract
The article discusses the study which aims to investigate the relationships between overwinter survival rates and surrogates for food availability such as rainfall and primary production indices during the same winter. It will also evaluate the proximate estimation of food availability on cereal production for sub-Saharan countries. Researchers have assessed annual variation in local survival rates of adult Turtle Doves breeding in western France and further examined whether survival was related to variation in environmental conditions experienced on their sub-Saharan wintering quarter. The study discovers the population dynamics of Turtle Doves in response to environmental conditions experienced on their wintering grounds.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Competition for resources modulates cell-mediated immunity and stress hormone level in nestling collared doves (Streptopelia decaocto)
- Author
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Eraud, Cyril, Trouvé, Colette, Dano, Stéphanie, Chastel, Olivier, and Faivre, Bruno
- Subjects
- *
IMMUNOREGULATION , *COLLARED dove , *CORTICOSTERONE , *EGGS - Abstract
Abstract: Competitive stress imposed by hatching asynchrony may affect developmental trajectories of offsprings by regulating resource allocation between growth and other fitness-related traits. For instance, the down-regulation of immunity is a commonly observed phenomenon under stressful conditions. However, physiological mechanisms that regulate resources allocation to growth and immune functions in response to competition for resources, as well as inter-sexual differences in physiological strategies, are still poorly investigated. To partially fill this gap, we first conducted a descriptive study on chicks of the collared dove (Streptopelia decaocto), a species producing two chicks per brood. Our results show that first hatchlings (seniors) were bigger, showed lower baseline corticosterone levels (CORT) and showed a higher cell-mediated immunoresponsiveness (CMI) than late hatchlings (juniors). However, when controlling for body size, only CMI remained weaker in junior chicks suggesting differences in strategies of resource allocation between siblings. Interestingly, CORT in juniors increased with increasing within-brood hierarchy. But, while within-brood variation in CMI followed the opposite pattern of variation in CORT, we found no evidence that inter-individual variation in CMI was directly related to CORT. In addition hatching-rank related differences in body size, CMI and CORT was similar between sexes. To ensure that the lower phenotypic value expressed by juniors was not fully related to a lower quality of the late-laid egg, we experimentally suppressed the competitive stress experienced by juniors by removing the first-laid egg (i.e. the egg normally producing a senior chick). In the absence of their brood mates, juniors were bigger, had lower levels of CORT and showed a higher CMI than juniors raised in two-brood chicks, suggesting that body size, CMI and CORT in juniors were modulated by the competitive stress. Overall, this study suggests that juniors respond to within-brood competition by elevating CORT and down-regulating CMI. In this context, the role of CORT, as a mechanism regulating physiological strategies related to growth and immunocompetence is discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Environmental stress affects the expression of a carotenoid-based sexual trait in male zebra finches.
- Author
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Eraud, Cyril, Devevey, Godefroy, Gaillard, Maria, Prost, Josiane, Sorci, Gabriele, and Faivre, Bruno
- Subjects
- *
ZEBRA finch , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of temperature , *CAROTENOIDS , *THERMOBIOLOGY , *GENOTYPE-environment interaction , *ANIMAL sexual behavior , *EXPERIMENTAL biology , *EFFECT of cold on birds - Abstract
Abiotic factors including thermal stress are suggested to exert constrains on sexual ornaments through trade-offs between sexual displays and physiological functions related to self-maintenance. Given the health properties of carotenoid pigments, carotenoid-based ornaments offer a relevant context in which to investigate the effect of environmental stress, such as ambient temperature, on the production and maintenance of secondary sexual traits and, also, to explore the proximate mechanisms shaping their expression. In this study, we exposed male zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata) to environmental stress by exposing them to two temperature regimes (6 and 26°C) over a 4 week period. Simultaneously, half of the males in each temperature group were supplemented with carotenoids, whereas the other half were not. The expression of a carotenoid-based sexual trait (bill colour) and the amount of circulating carotenoids were assessed before and at the end of the experiment. Carotenoid-supplemented males developed a redder bill, but the effect of supplementation was reduced under cold exposure. However, we found evidence that birds facing a cold stress were carotenoid limited, since supplemented males developed redder bills than the non-supplemented ones. Interestingly, while cold-exposed and non-supplemented males developed duller bills, they circulated a higher amount of carotenoids at the end of the experiment compared to the pre-experimental values. Together, these results suggest that ambient temperature might contribute to the modulation of the expression of carotenoid-based ornaments. Our findings suggest that carotenoids are a limiting resource under cold exposure and that they might be prioritized for self-maintenance at the expense of the ornament. The physiological functions related to self-maintenance that might have benefited from carotenoid saving are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Spatial dynamics of an invasive bird species assessed using robust design occupancy analysis: the case of the Eurasian collared dove ( Streptopelia decaocto) in France.
- Author
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Eraud, Cyril, Boutin, Jean-Marie, Roux, Denis, and Faivre, Bruno
- Subjects
- *
COLLARED dove , *STREPTOPELIA , *COLUMBIDAE , *ENVIRONMENTAL sciences , *LAND settlement , *ANIMAL populations , *ANIMAL ecology , *WILDLIFE management - Abstract
Aim The study of the spatial dynamics of invasive species is a key issue in invasion ecology. While mathematical models are useful for predicting the extent of population expansions, they are not suitable for measuring and characterizing spatial patterns of invasion unless the probability of detection is homogeneous across the distribution range. Here, we apply recently developed statistical approaches incorporating detection uncertainty to characterize the spatial dynamics of an invasive bird species, the Eurasian collared dove ( Streptopelia decaocto). Location France. Methods Data on presence/absence of doves were recorded from 1996 to 2004 over 1045 grid cells (28 × 20 km) covering the entire country. Each grid cell included five point counts spaced along a route, which was visited twice a year, allowing for an estimation of detection probability. Each route was assigned to one of six geographical regions. We used robust design occupancy analysis to assess spatial and temporal variation in parameters related to the spatial dynamics of the species. These parameters included occupancy rate, colonization and local extinction probabilities. Our inference approach was based on the selection of the most parsimonious model among competitive models parametrized with conditional probabilities. Results The probability of detecting the presence of doves on a given route was high. However, we found evidence to incorporate detection uncertainty in inference processes about spatial dynamics, since detection probability was neither perfect (i.e. it was < 1), nor constant over space and time. Results showed a clear positive trend in occupancy rate over the study period, increasing from 55% in 1996 to 76% in 2004. In addition, occupancy rate differed among regions (range: 37–79%) and further analysis showed that colonization probability by region was positively related to occupancy rate. Finally, local extinction probability was lower than colonization probability and showed a tendency to decrease over the study period. Main conclusions Our results emphasize the importance of estimating detection probabilities in order to draw proper inferences about the spatial and temporal dynamics of the invasion pattern of the collared dove. In contrast to the perceived spatial dynamics from national atlas surveys, we provide evidence that the range of this species is currently increasing in France. Other results, such as regional specificity in colonization probabilities and time variation in local extinction are consistent with expectations from invasion and metapopulation theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Sex-ratio of Skylark Alauda arvensis broods in relation to timing of breeding.
- Author
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Eraud, Cyril, Lallemand, Joelle, and Lormee, Herve
- Abstract
The article presents a study on the relationship between sex-ratio and timing of breeding of Skylark Alauda arvensis. Skylarks are territorial and ground-nesting birds with breeding seasons on April to early August. Investigations of sex-ratio variation were made according to the timing of breeding and differences in biometrics between sexes were investigated using broods with both sexes. Ninety-nine nestlings from 28 broods were used in the investigation. Results showed that sex combination between broods were different in various laying periods. Male broods were produced during the first half of the season while female broods were produced in the second half. Also, sexual differences affected the nestling size.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Factors affecting population dynamics of Eurasian woodcocks wintering in France: assessing the efficiency of a hunting-free reserve
- Author
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Duriez, Olivier, Eraud, Cyril, Barbraud, Christophe, and Ferrand, Yves
- Subjects
- *
EUROPEAN woodcock , *BIRD migration , *HUNTING , *NATURE conservation - Abstract
The Eurasian woodcock Scolopax rusticola is a migratory bird of major importance for hunting, which is susceptible to habitat loss and the stochastic effects of severe winter weather. Conservation issues mostly concerned regulation of hunting, but the efficiency of hunting-free reserves has never been investigated. We studied causes of mortality and survival probabilities of 98 radio-tagged woodcocks in a reserve with no hunting and in an adjoining hunting area in Brittany (France). Predation, mostly by mammalian predators on fields at night, was similar among adults and yearlings, while hunting mortality was more important in yearlings. Overall winter survival probabilities were 0.86±SE 0.07 in adults and 0.63±SE 0.07 in yearlings. Survival probabilities of both age classes increased as birds spent more time in the reserve. Equality of predation in both reserve and hunting areas suggests an additive mortality due to hunting over the winter. Population matrix models predicted that such low survival probabilities cannot sustain long term viable populations. These results call for caution in the harvesting of woodcock populations wintering in western France and could be a forewarning of a decline. The regulation of hunting by setting bag limits or reducing the length of shooting seasons, or the creation of reserves might be appropriate tools for the sustainable management of woodcock populations. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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