76 results on '"Azémar F"'
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2. Test of some ecological concepts on the longitudinal distribution of zooplankton along a lowland water course
- Author
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Le Coz, Maïwen, Chambord, S., Meire, P., Maris, T., Azémar, F., Ovaert, J., Buffan-Dubau, E., Kromkamp, J. C., Sossou, A. C., Prygiel, J., Spronk, G., Lamothe, S., Ouddane, B., Rabodonirina, S., Net, S., Dumoulin, D., Peene, J., Souissi, S., and Tackx, M.
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
3. Zooplankton distribution and community structure as a function of environmental variables in the Niger River and its tributaries in Niger
- Author
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Souley Adamou, H, primary, Alhou, B, additional, Tackx, M, additional, and Azémar, F, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Zooplankton distribution and community structure as a function of environmental variables in the Niger River and its tributaries in Niger.
- Author
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Souley Adamou, H, Alhou, B, Tackx, M, and Azémar, F
- Subjects
ZOOPLANKTON ,COPEPODA ,ROTIFERA ,FISH communities ,CHLOROPHYLL ,CRUSTACEA - Abstract
The Niger River and its main tributaries (Sirba, Tapoa and Mékrou) in Niger were sampled during high and low water flow with the objectives of (1) comparing the taxonomic structure, diversity and abundance of the zooplankton community (rotifers, copepods, crustaceans) along the river and (2) determining which environmental or biological factors influence the distribution of the zooplankton communities most strongly. The impact of the tributaries at high-flow was also evaluated. Rotifers (32 taxa) were the most abundant and diverse followed by Cladocerans (13 taxa) and Copepods (three taxa). The mean number of taxa (16.5 and 17.6, respectively), the Shannon-Weaver diversity index (2.7 and 2.8, respectively) and the evenness (0.7 and 0.7, respectively) did not vary significantly between the high- or low-flow periods, or along the length of the Niger River and its tributaries. The mean zooplankton abundance was highest during low-flow periods (40 × 10
3 ± 45 × 103 ind. m−3 ) but showed no specific spatial pattern. During high-flow sampling, the mean zooplankton abundance (3 × 103 ± 2 × 103 ind. m–3 ) increased progressively downstream. RDA analysis showed that rotifers are associated with high conductivity and NO2 − concentrations, copepods with chlorophyll a, while cladocerans were abundant when conductivity, chlorophyll a and NO2 − concentrations were low. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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5. Response of zooplankton to improving water quality in the Scheldt estuary (Belgium)
- Author
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Mialet, B., Gouzou, J., Azémar, F., Maris, T., Sossou, C., Toumi, N., Van Damme, S., Meire, P., and Tackx, M.
- Published
- 2011
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6. Spatial spring distribution of the copepod Eurytemora affinis (Copepoda, Calanoida) in a restoring estuary, the Scheldt (Belgium)
- Author
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Mialet, B., Azémar, F., Maris, T., Sossou, C., Ruiz, P., Lionard, M., Van Damme, S., Lecerf, A., Muylaert, K., Toumi, N., Meire, P., and Tackx, M.
- Published
- 2010
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7. Rotifers in the Niger River, Niger: diversity and abundance in relation to environmental parameters
- Author
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Souley Adamou, H, primary, Alhou, B, additional, Tackx, M, additional, and Azémar, F, additional
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- 2021
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8. Grazing by meso- and microzooplankton on phytoplankton in the upper reaches of the Schelde estuary (Belgium/The Netherlands)
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Lionard, M., Azémar, F., Boulêtreau, S., Muylaert, K., Tackx, M., and Vyverman, W.
- Published
- 2005
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9. Looking for general trends in trophic interactions among estuarine micro- and mesozooplankton
- Author
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Azémar, F., Boulêtreau, S., Lionard, M., Muylaert, K., Vyverman, W., Meire, P., and Tackx, M.
- Published
- 2007
10. Parents d'enfant prématuré : quel devenir sur la première année de vie ?
- Author
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Pavoine, S., Azémar, F., Rajon, A.M., and Raynaud, J.P.
- Published
- 2004
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11. Zooplankton in the Schelde estuary, Belgium and The Netherlands. Spatial and temporal patterns
- Author
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Tackx, Micky L. M., de Pauw, Nathalie, van Mieghem, Riet, Azémar, F., Hannouti, Abdelhacq, van Damme, Stefan, Fiers, Frank, Daro, Nanette, and Meire, Patrick
- Published
- 2004
12. Are zooplankton communities structured by taxa ecological niches or by hydrological features?
- Author
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Le Coz, M., primary, Chambord, S., additional, Souissi, S., additional, Meire, P., additional, Ovaert, J., additional, Buffan-Dubau, E., additional, Prygiel, J., additional, Azémar, F., additional, Sossou, A.C., additional, Lamothe, S., additional, Julien, F., additional, Ouddane, B., additional, Net, S., additional, Dumoulin, D., additional, and Tackx, M., additional
- Published
- 2018
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13. Test of some ecological concepts on the longitudinal distribution of zooplankton along a lowland water course
- Author
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Le Coz, M., Chambord, S., Meire, P., Maris, T., Azémar, F., Ovaert, J., Buffan-Dubau, E., Kromkamp, J.C., Sossou, A.C., Prygiel, J., Spronk, G., Lamothe, S., Ouddane, B., Rabodonirina, S., Net, S., Dumoulin, D., Peene, J., Souissi, S., Tackx, M., Le Coz, M., Chambord, S., Meire, P., Maris, T., Azémar, F., Ovaert, J., Buffan-Dubau, E., Kromkamp, J.C., Sossou, A.C., Prygiel, J., Spronk, G., Lamothe, S., Ouddane, B., Rabodonirina, S., Net, S., Dumoulin, D., Peene, J., Souissi, S., and Tackx, M.
- Abstract
The distribution of zooplankton communities from the source to the mouth of a lowland water course, the Scheldt, was used to test some concepts on the longitudinal distribution of organisms along both estuarine (Remane’s diversity concept) and riverine reaches (River Continuum Concept (RCC), Riverine Ecosystem Synthesis (RES)). Substantial zooplankton densities were found in both April and June samples all along the water course, and not only in the lower reaches as suggested by the RCC. Based on the zooplankton communities, and using hierarchical classifications and Generalized Linear Model, several successive zones influenced by different physical and chemical variables and trophic conditions could be distinguished along the Scheldt, in agreement with the RES model: the non-tidal riverine, the tidal freshwater, the tidal salinity gradient, and the marine zones. Over the entire freshwater reach, rotifers were numerically dominant during both samplings; crustaceans became more abundant in June than in April, specifically in the downstream reaches. Highest total zooplankton abundance and diversity were found in the tidal freshwater reach, lowest in the brackish water reach, in accordance with Remane’s concept. An influence of the tributaries on zooplankton communities is suggested, directly by import or dilution of zooplankton communities or through changing environmental conditions.
- Published
- 2017
14. Zooplankton resting stages in the Scheldt estuary: is the CRC Lippenbroek a zooplankton refuge?
- Author
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Azémar, F., Mehraz, S., Maris, T., Van Pelt, D., and Glippa, O.
- Published
- 2016
15. Mesozooplankton affinities in a recovering freshwater estuary
- Author
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Chambord, S., Maris, T., Colas, F., van Engeland, T., Sossou, A.-C., Azémar, F., Le Coz, M., Cox, T., Buisson, L., Souissi, S., Meire, P., Tackx, M., Chambord, S., Maris, T., Colas, F., van Engeland, T., Sossou, A.-C., Azémar, F., Le Coz, M., Cox, T., Buisson, L., Souissi, S., Meire, P., and Tackx, M.
- Abstract
Water quality of the Scheldt estuary (Belgium/The Netherlands) has considerably improved in recent years, especially in the upstream, freshwater reaches. Within the zooplankton community, the copepod Eurytemora affinis, typically abundant in brackish water and quasi-absent from freshwater before 2007, has since substantially developed in the latter, where it now represents 90% of the crustacean mesozooplankton community. Simultaneously, cyclopoid copepod abundance has greatly decreased, while cladoceran abundance did not change. The study aim was: 1) to verify if the zooplankton community described for the period 2007–2009 by Mialet et al. (2011) has stabilized until present, and 2) to look for the environmental conditions favouring E. affinis development and causing changes in the upstream freshwater zooplankton community. The 2002–2012 temporal evolution of the zooplankton distribution at three stations in the upstream freshwater Scheldt estuary was analyzed. Water quality remained better after 2007 than before, and some factors revealed continuous improvement in annual mean concentrations (e.g. increase in O2, decrease in BOD5 and NH4-N concentration). The increase in oxygen and the decrease in NH4-N concentration, together with low discharge during summer were the main environmental factors explaining the development and timing of E. affinis in the upstream freshwater reach. In this reach, E. affinis maximal abundance is shifted to higher temperatures (summer) compared to its typical maximum spring abundance peak in the brackish zone of the Scheldt estuary and in most temperate estuaries. The changes in zooplankton community followed a temporal and spatial gradient induced by the spatio-temporal evolution of water quality improvement. The most downstream station (3) allowed E. affinis development (oxygen concentration > 4 mg L-1; NH4-N concentration < 2 mg L-1, d
- Published
- 2016
16. Couples sérodifférents dont l’homme est infecté par le VIH et Assistance médicale à la procréation : le désir d’enfant et la grossesse aux prises avec la réalité de la maladie
- Author
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Hopker Azemar, F., Daudin, M., and Bujan, L.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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17. Zooplankton distribution across the brackish and freshwater zone of the Scheldt estuary
- Author
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Azémar, F., Fiers, F., and Tackx, M.
- Subjects
Belgium, Schelde R ,Fresh water ,Brackish water ,Acanthocyclops robustus ,Brachionus calyciflorus ,Rotifera ,Distribution ,Zooplankton ,Acartia tonsa ,Cyclopidae ,Abundance ,Calanoida ,Species diversity ,Eurytemora affinis (Poppe, 1880) - Abstract
Zooplankton diversity and distribution in the brackish and freshwater zone of the Scheldt is studied, as a continuation of preceeding studies carried out in the periods 1967-1669 and 1995-1997. We report on species diversity and abundancy of the zooplankters, collected on a monthly basis, in 20 sampling sites along the salinity gradient. Calanoids occur mainly in the brackish part, with Eurytemora affinis, Acartia tonsa and Eudiaptomus gracilis as the dominant species. In the freshwater region, rotifers (i.e. Brachionus calyciflorus, Keratella quadrata, among others), cyclopids (i.e. Acanthocyclops robustus, Cyclops vicinus) and cladocerans (Daphnia longispina, Bosmina longirostris...) are the dominant zooplankters. In addition, we report the presence of several species which were not detected in the former studies, such as the rotifers Brachionus leydigi var. quadratus, Notholca labis, Platyias quadricornis, Euchlanis dilatata, Gastropus hyptopus, Testudinella patina, Polyarthra dolichoptera and Trichotria sp. ; the cladocerans Acroperus harpae and Biapertura affinis, and the harparticoid Bryocamptus (Bryocamptus) minutus.
- Published
- 2004
18. Zooplankton in the Schelde estuary, Belgium and the Netherlands: long-term trends in spring populations
- Author
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Tackx, M., Azémar, F., Boulêtreau, S., De Pauw, N., Bakker, K., Sautour, B., Gasparini, S., Soetaert, K.E.R., van Damme, S., Meire, P., Tackx, M., Azémar, F., Boulêtreau, S., De Pauw, N., Bakker, K., Sautour, B., Gasparini, S., Soetaert, K.E.R., van Damme, S., and Meire, P.
- Abstract
A compilation of available data in between 1967 and 2002 on spring zooplankton abundance was made for the brackish and the freshwater zone of the Schelde estuary. The general picture is a significant increase of 1–2 orders of magnitude in abundance for Rotifera, Copepoda and Branchiopoda (mainly Cladocera) in the freshwater zone, while zooplankton abundance in the brackishwater zone remained more constant. Possible natural and management related causes for this increase in zooplankton abundance are briefly discussed. [KEYWORDS: Schelde estuary ; zooplankton ; long-term], A compilation of available data in between 1967 and 2002 on spring zooplankton abundance was made for the brackish and the freshwater zone of the Schelde estuary. The general picture is a significant increase of 1–2 orders of magnitude in abundance for Rotifera, Copepoda and Branchiopoda (mainly Cladocera) in the freshwater zone, while zooplankton abundance in the brackishwater zone remained more constant. Possible natural and management related causes for this increase in zooplankton abundance are briefly discussed. [KEYWORDS: Schelde estuary ; zooplankton ; long-term]
- Published
- 2005
19. Looking for general trends in trophic interactions among estuarine micro- and mesozooplankton
- Author
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Azémar, F., primary, Boulêtreau, S., additional, Lionard, M., additional, Muylaert, K., additional, Vyverman, W., additional, Meire, P., additional, and Tackx, M., additional
- Published
- 2006
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20. The use of puppets in the education of diabetic children
- Author
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Couvaras, O., primary, Ser, N., additional, Azémar, F., additional, Raynal, F., additional, Pouydemange, M., additional, Vallès, D., additional, and Ghisolfi, J., additional
- Published
- 1994
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21. Education days: a special opportunity for support and communication with diabetic children and their families
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Couvaras, O., primary, Ser, N., additional, Azémar, F., additional, Raynal, F., additional, Pouydemange, M., additional, Valles, D., additional, and Ghisolfi, J., additional
- Published
- 1994
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22. Large-scale and High-resolution Flood Risk Model for Japan
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Assteerawatt Anongnart, Tsaknias Dimosthenis, Azemar Frederic, Ghosh Sourima, and Hilberts Arno
- Subjects
Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Japan has experienced several catastrophic flood events causing extensive damage to property and the national economy due to its topography, geography, and climate. Steep and short rivers, frequent typhoons and torrential rains, extremely high concentration of people and assets in flood-prone areas, and intensive human intervention subject the country to frequent flood disasters. Risk Management Solutions (RMS) has developed a stochastic inland flood model as part of its Japan Typhoon Model to assess flood risk due to typhoon for the (re)insurance industry. The RMS flood risk model consists of i) a precipitation-driven flood hazard module, ii) a building-level exposure module, iii) a component-based vulnerability module and iv) a financial module. The flood model is driven by 105,000 years of continuously simulated precipitation accounting for typhoon and non-typhoon precipitation. Rainfall-runoff and routing models, fluvial- and pluvial-inundation models, and probabilistic defence failures are included in the flood hazard module to obtain a realistic view of flood risk. By combining a large, country-level stochastic dataset with a high-resolution grid (~40m) for flood inundation modeling, and building level exposure data and hundreds of unique component-based vulnerability types, a comprehensive view of flood risk is provided on both local and aggregate levels, The financial module accounts for insured risk from different financial contracts.
- Published
- 2016
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23. Rainfall during multiyear La Niñas caused the decline of social wasps in Northeastern Amazonia.
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Dejean A, Rossi V, Compin A, Corbara B, Carpenter JM, Orivel J, Petitclerc F, Burban B, and Azémar F
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- 2024
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24. Foraging by predatory ants: A review.
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Dejean A, Orivel J, Cerdá X, Azémar F, Corbara B, and Touchard A
- Abstract
In this review, we show that predatory ants have a wide range of foraging behavior, something expected given their phylogenetic distance and the great variation in their colony size, life histories, and nesting habitats as well as prey diversity. Most ants are central-place foragers that detect prey using vision and olfaction. Ground-dwelling species can forage solitarily, the ancestral form, but generally recruit nestmates to retrieve large prey or a group of prey. Typically, ants are omnivorous, but some species are strict predators preying on detritivorous invertebrates or arthropod eggs, while those specialized on termites or other ants often have scouts that localize their target and then trigger a raid. They can use compounds that ease this task, including chemical insignificance, mimicry, and venoms triggering submissive behavior. Army ants include 8 Dorylinae and some species from other subfamilies, all having wingless queens and forming raids. Dorylinae from the Old World migrate irregularly to new nesting sites. The foraging of most New World species that prey on the brood of other ants is regulated by their biological cycle that alternates between a "nomadic phase" when the colony relocates between different places and a "stationary phase" when the colony stays in a bivouac constituting a central place. Among arboreal ants, dominant species forage in groups, detecting prey visually, but can use vibrations, particularly when associated with myrmecophytes. Some species of the genera Allomerus and Azteca use fungi to build a gallery-shaped trap with small holes under which they hide to ambush prey., (© 2024 The Author(s). Insect Science published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences.)
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- 2024
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25. Carrion insects living within the bones of large mammals: insect conservation and forensic entomology implications.
- Author
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Beaumont C, Cabon F, Larquier C, Azémar F, Braet Y, and Pelozuelo L
- Subjects
- Animals, France, Spain, Feeding Behavior physiology, Diptera physiology, Diptera anatomy & histology, Forensic Entomology, Bone and Bones anatomy & histology, Insecta physiology, Mammals
- Abstract
Succession patterns of carrion insects on large mammal's carrion has been widely studied, notably to estimate the post-mortem interval in forensic investigations as accurately as possible. However, little attention has been paid to the carrion insects living inside these bones once a carcass is skeletonized. One very recent study documented flies emerging from pig carcasses, and only scarce authors reported the presence of other carrion insects taking advantage of the bone marrow. We, thus, aimed to (1) estimate the frequency of inner-bone space colonization by carrion insects, with particular attention to bone-skipper flies; (2) identify the insects living inside the carrion bones; and (3) determine whether or not carrion insects found within the bones can successfully exit the bones and complete their development. We extensively sampled 185 large mammals' bones collected from twelve vulture feeding stations and four isolated carcasses in southwest France and northern Spain. Sampled bones were opened, and the insects found inside were identified. For two bones, foramen, i.e., the holes providing a natural entrance and exit to the bone's inner cavity, was monitored with a camera to assess the insect's putative exit. We describe the entomofauna, i.e., the set of insect species, living within the bones, and illustrate insects' ability to exit the bones for their subsequent development and maturity. These results are discussed in the framework of carrion insect conservation and forensic entomology perspectives., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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26. Urbanization and Water Containers Influence the Mosquito Community with Consequences for Aedes aegypti.
- Author
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Talaga S, Compin A, Azémar F, Leroy C, and Dejean A
- Subjects
- Animals, Urbanization, Water, Mosquito Vectors, Cities, Aedes, Zika Virus Infection, Zika Virus
- Abstract
We aimed to determine how the degree of urbanization in a Neotropical city influences Aedes aegypti (L.), a pantropical vector of urban yellow fever, dengue, Zika and Chikungunia, via other mosquito species, whether they are competitors or predators, native to the area or invasive. We conducted experiments twice a month during one year in the city of Kourou, French Guiana, on three sites characterized by increasing percentages of imperviousness (i.e., 0.65%, 33.80% and 86.60%). These sites were located in a ≈5 ha forest fragment, a residential area with gardens, and in the older part of the city, respectively, and correspond to slightly, moderately and highly urbanized sites. There, we monitored twice a month during one year a total of 108 mosquito communities inhabiting four types of containers (i.e., a tank bromeliad, dry stumps of bamboo, ovitraps and car tires) installed in a random block design. In the tanks of the bromeliad, likely due to the acidity of the water, the immatures of native mosquito species prevailed, particularly Wyeomyia pertinans (Williston) in the slightly urbanized site. The general pattern was very similar in the three other types of containers where Limatus durhamii Théobald dominated in the slightly urbanized site, so that the abundance of Ae. aegypti immatures was low compared to those of native species. Yet, Ae. aegypti strongly dominated in the two more urbanized sites. These findings open up perspectives for vector management, including the conservation and/or the augmentation of natural enemies through modifications to landscape features., (© 2023. Sociedade Entomológica do Brasil.)
- Published
- 2024
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27. Mutualistic interactions between ants and fungi: A review.
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Dejean A, Azémar F, Naskrecki P, Tindo M, Rossi V, Faucher C, and Gryta H
- Abstract
The large amount of dead plant biomass caused by the final extinction events triggered a fungi proliferation that mostly differentiated into saprophytes degrading organic matter; others became parasites, predators, likely commensals, and mutualists. Among the last, many have relationships with ants, the most emblematic seen in the Neotropical myrmicine Attina that cultivate Basidiomycota for food. Among them, leaf-cutting, fungus-growing species illustrate an ecological innovation because they grow fungal gardens from fresh plant material rather than arthropod frass and plant debris. Myrmecophytes shelter "plant-ants" in hollow structures, the domatia, whose inner walls are lined with thin-walled Ascomycota hyphae that, in certain cases, are eaten by the ants, showing a form of convergence. Typically, these Ascomycota have antibacterial properties illustrating cases of farming for protection. Ant gardens, or mutualistic associations between certain ant species and epiphytes, shelter endophytic fungi that promote the growth of the epiphytes. Because the cell walls of certain Ascomycota hyphae remain sturdy after the death of the mycelium, they form resistant fibers used by ants to reinforce their constructions (e.g., galleries, shelters for tended hemipterans, and carton nests). Thus, we saw cases of "true" fungal agriculture involving planting, cultivating, and harvesting Basidiomycota for food with Attina. A convergence with "plant-ants" feeding on Ascomycota whose antibacterial activity is generally exploited (i.e., farming for protection). The growth of epiphytes was promoted by endophytic fungi in ant gardens. Finally, farming for structural materials occurred with, in one case, a leaf-cutting, fungus-growing ant using Ascomycota fibers to reinforce its nests., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (© 2023 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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28. Long-term phytoplankton dynamics in the Zeeschelde estuary (Belgium) are driven by the interactive effects of de-eutrophication, altered hydrodynamics and extreme weather events.
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Amadei Martínez L, Sabbe K, Dasseville R, Daveloose I, Verstraete T, D'hondt S, Azémar F, Sossou AC, Tackx M, Maris T, Meire P, and Vyverman W
- Subjects
- Humans, Phytoplankton, Estuaries, Belgium, Hydrodynamics, Biomass, Eutrophication, Extreme Weather, Diatoms
- Abstract
We studied how changing human impacts affected phytoplankton dynamics in the freshwater and brackish tidal reaches of the Zeeschelde estuary (Belgium) between 2002 and 2018. Until the early 2000s, the Zeeschelde was heavily polluted due to high wastewater discharges. By 2008, water quality had improved, resulting in lower nutrient concentrations and higher oxygen levels. Since 2009, however, increased dredging activities resulted in altered hydrodynamics and increased suspended sediment concentration. The combined effects of these environmental changes were reflected in three marked transitions in phytoplankton community composition. Assemblages were dominated by Thalassiosirales and green algae (especially Scenedesmaceae) until 2003. The period 2003-2011 was characterized by the wax and wane of the centric diatoms Actinocyclus and Aulacoseira, while in the period 2012-2018 Thalassiosirales and Cyanobacteria became dominant, the latter mainly imported from the tributaries. Phytoplankton biomass increased sharply in 2003, after which there was a gradual decline until 2018. By 2018, the timing of the growing season had advanced with about one month compared to the start of the study, probably as a consequence of climate warming and intensified zooplankton grazing pressure. Our study shows that de-eutrophication (during the 2000s) and morphological interventions in the estuary (in the 2010s) were dominant drivers of phytoplankton dynamics but that the main shifts in community composition were triggered by extreme weather events, suggesting significant resistance of autochthonous communities to gradual changes in the environment., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2023
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29. Host-tree selection by the ant garden-initiating arboreal ponerine Neoponera goeldii.
- Author
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Dejean A, Rossi V, Azémar F, Compin A, Petitclerc F, Talaga S, and Corbara B
- Subjects
- Animals, Trees, Gardens, Behavior, Animal, Ants
- Published
- 2023
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30. Breaking the silence: how shedding light on the bone-skipper fly Thyreophora cynophila (Diptera: Piophilidae) demonstrated it still has a large distribution area in the Pyrenees mountains, France.
- Author
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Azémar F, Cazaban F, and Pelozuelo L
- Abstract
Background: Thyreophora cynophila (Panzer, 1798) is an iconic species of the European entomofauna. This winter-flying necrophagous fly was considered long extinct in Europe, before being discovered in Spain in 2010 and re-discovered in France in 2020, with a unique locality in Saint-Paul-de-Jarrat (Ariège, southern France)., New Information: After bringing this species to the attention of people that are active in nature during the winter, including hunters, skilled naturalists, nature lovers and professional naturalists, we gathered seven new occurrence data for this species at six locations on the French flanks of the Pyrenees mountains. Those data considerably extend the known distribution of the species in Europe and allows mapping the first approximate extent of occurrence for this species in France., (Frédéric Azémar, Frédéric Cazaban, Laurent Pelozuelo.)
- Published
- 2020
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31. An uneasy alliance: a nesting association between aggressive ants and equally fierce social wasps.
- Author
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Servigne P, Orivel J, Azémar F, Carpenter J, Dejean A, and Corbara B
- Subjects
- Aggression, Animals, French Guiana, Territoriality, Trees, Ants physiology, Nesting Behavior, Wasps physiology
- Abstract
Although the Neotropical territorially dominant arboreal ant Azteca chartifex Forel is very aggressive towards any intruder, its populous colonies tolerate the close presence of the fierce polistine wasp Polybia rejecta (F.). In French Guiana, 83.33% of the 48 P. rejecta nests recorded were found side by side with those of A. chartifex. This nesting association results in mutual protection from predators (i.e., the wasps protected from army ants; the ants protected from birds). We conducted field studies, laboratory-based behavioral experiments and chemical analyses to elucidate the mechanisms allowing the persistence of this association. Due to differences in the cuticular profiles of the two species, we eliminated the possibility of chemical mimicry. Also, analyses of the carton nests did not reveal traces of marking on the envelopes. Because ant forager flows were not perturbed by extracts from the wasps' Dufour's and venom glands, we rejected any hypothetical action of repulsive chemicals. Nevertheless, we noted that the wasps "scraped" the surface of the upper part of their nest envelope using their mandibles, likely removing the ants' scent trails, and an experiment showed that ant foragers were perturbed by the removal of their scent trails. This leads us to use the term "erasure hypothesis." Thus, this nesting association persists thanks to a relative tolerance by the ants towards wasp presence and the behavior of the wasps that allows them to "contain" their associated ants through the elimination of their scent trails, direct attacks, "wing-buzzing" behavior and ejecting the ants., (© 2018 Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences.)
- Published
- 2020
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32. Highly modular pattern in ant-plant interactions involving specialized and non-specialized myrmecophytes.
- Author
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Dejean A, Azémar F, Petitclerc F, Delabie JHC, Corbara B, Leroy C, Céréghino R, and Compin A
- Subjects
- Animals, Host Specificity, Symbiosis, Ants physiology, Ecosystem, Plant Physiological Phenomena
- Abstract
Because Tachia guianensis (Gentianaceae) is a "non-specialized myrmecophyte" associated with 37 ant species, we aimed to determine if its presence alters the ant guild associated with sympatric "specialized myrmecophytes" (i.e., plants sheltering a few ant species in hollow structures). The study was conducted in a hilly zone of a neotropical rainforest where two specialized myrmecophytes grow at the bottom of the slopes, another at mid-slope, and a fourth on the hilltops. Tachia guianensis, which occurred everywhere, had its own guild of associated ant species. A network analysis showed that its connections with the four other myrmecophytes were rare and weak, the whole resulting in a highly modular pattern of interactions with one module (i.e., subnetwork) per myrmecophyte. Three ant species parasitized three out of the four specialized myrmecophytes (low nestedness noted), but were not or barely associated with T. guianensis that therefore did not influence the parasitism of specialized myrmecophytes.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. An arboreal spider protects its offspring by diving into the water of tank bromeliads.
- Author
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Hénaut Y, Corbara B, Azémar F, Céréghino R, Dézerald O, and Dejean A
- Subjects
- Animals, Birds, Diving, Female, Mexico, Trees, Water, Bromeliaceae chemistry, Spiders classification
- Abstract
Cupiennius salei (Ctenidae) individuals frequently live in association with tank bromeliads, including Aechmea bracteata, in Quintana Roo (Mexico). Whereas C. salei females without egg sacs hunt over their entire host plant, females carrying egg sacs settle above the A. bracteata reservoirs they have partially sealed with silk. There they avoid predators that use sight to detect their prey, as is known for many bird species. Furthermore, if a danger is more acute, these females dive with their egg sacs into the bromeliad reservoir. An experiment showed that this is not the case for males or females without egg sacs. In addition to the likely abundance of prey found therein, the potential of diving into the tank to protect offspring may explain the close association of this spider with bromeliads. These results show that, although arboreal, C. salei evolved a protective behavior using the water of tank bromeliads to protect offspring., (Copyright © 2018 Académie des sciences. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Ants impact the composition of the aquatic macroinvertebrate communities of a myrmecophytic tank bromeliad.
- Author
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Dejean A, Compin A, Leponce M, Azémar F, Bonhomme C, Talaga S, Pelozuelo L, Hénaut Y, and Corbara B
- Subjects
- Animals, Forests, Invertebrates physiology, Mexico, Water, Ants physiology, Bromeliaceae chemistry
- Abstract
In an inundated Mexican forest, 89 out of 92 myrmecophytic tank bromeliads (Aechmea bracteata) housed an associated ant colony: 13 sheltered Azteca serica, 43 Dolichoderus bispinosus, and 33 Neoponera villosa. Ant presence has a positive impact on the diversity of the aquatic macroinvertebrate communities (n=30 bromeliads studied). A Principal Component Analysis (PCA) showed that the presence and the species of ant are not correlated to bromeliad size, quantity of water, number of wells, filtered organic matter or incident radiation. The PCA and a generalized linear model showed that the presence of Azteca serica differed from the presence of the other two ant species or no ants in its effects on the aquatic invertebrate community (more predators). Therefore, both ant presence and species of ant affect the composition of the aquatic macroinvertebrate communities in the tanks of A. bracteata, likely due to ant deposition of feces and other waste in these tanks., (Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Aquatic life in Neotropical rainforest canopies: Techniques using artificial phytotelmata to study the invertebrate communities inhabiting therein.
- Author
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Dejean A, Petitclerc F, Azémar F, Pélozuelo L, Talaga S, Leponce M, and Compin A
- Subjects
- Animals, Biodiversity, French Guiana, Plants, Trees, Tropical Climate, Water, Aquatic Organisms, Invertebrates, Rainforest
- Abstract
In Neotropical rainforest canopies, phytotelmata ("plant-held waters") shelter diverse aquatic macroinvertebrate communities, including vectors of animal diseases. Studying these communities is difficult because phytotelmata are widely dispersed, hard to find from the ground and often inaccessible. We propose here a method for placing in tree crowns "artificial phytotelmata" whose size and shape can be tailored to different research targets. The efficacy of this method was shown while comparing the patterns of community diversity of three forest formations. We noted a difference between a riparian forest and a rainforest, whereas trees alongside a dirt road cutting through that rainforest corresponded to a subset of the latter. Because rarefied species richness was significantly lower when the phytotelmata were left for three weeks rather than for six or nine weeks, we recommend leaving the phytotelmata for twelve weeks to permit predators and phoretic species to fully establish themselves., (Copyright © 2017 Académie des sciences. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Hollow Internodes Permit a Neotropical Understory Plant to Shelter Multiple Mutualistic Ant Species, Obtaining Protection and Nutrient Provisioning (Myrmecotrophy).
- Author
-
Dejean A, Petitclerc F, Compin A, Azémar F, Corbara B, Delabie JHC, and Leroy C
- Subjects
- Animals, French Guiana, Ants physiology, Gentianaceae anatomy & histology, Gentianaceae physiology, Symbiosis
- Abstract
The Neotropical understory plant Tachia guianensis (Gentianaceae)-known to shelter the colonies of several ant species in its hollow trunks and branches-does not provide them with food rewards (e.g., extrafloral nectar). We tested whether these ants are opportunistic nesters or whether mutualistic relationships exist as for myrmecophytes or plants sheltering ant colonies in specialized hollow structures in exchange for protection from enemies and/or nutrient provisioning (myrmecotrophy). We noted 37 ant species sheltering inside T. guianensis internodes, three of them accounting for 43.5% of the cases. They protect their host plants from leaf-cutting ant defoliation and termite damage because individuals devoid of associated ants suffered significantly more attacks. Using the stable isotope
15 N, we experimentally showed that the tested ant species furnish their host plants with nutrients. Therefore, a mutualism exists. However, because it is associated with numerous ant species, T. guianensis can be considered a nonspecialized myrmecophyte.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The predatory behavior of the Neotropical social wasp Polybia rejecta.
- Author
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Dejean A, Rodríguez-Pérez H, Carpenter JM, Azémar F, and Corbara B
- Subjects
- Animals, Cues, Feeding Behavior, Female, Male, Nesting Behavior, Social Facilitation, Visual Perception physiology, Predatory Behavior physiology, Wasps physiology
- Abstract
We experimentally studied the predatory behavior of Polybia rejecta (Vespidae, Polistinae, Epiponini) towards 2-88 mm-long insects attracted to a UV light trap. Foragers, which began to hunt at 6:30, selected 4-14 mm-long prey insects. Prey detection by sight by hovering wasps was confirmed using decoys. After the wasps landed and walked along a sinuous path, prey were detected by contact or from a distance (1-3cm). This was followed by seizure, stinging (contrarily to most other known cases), prey manipulation and retrieval. Prey that flew off might be caught in flight. The prey load, representing 30.7% of a forager's weight, was optimized by capturing up to six small prey or two medium-sized prey successively (both of which might be consumed in situ). The foragers cut off the wings of larger prey or cut them into two pieces and returned to gather the second piece. The handling time increased exponentially with the weight of the prey. Partial loading (i.e., retrieving a load much inferior to the maximum possible) was likely related to social facilitation, a form of nest-based recruitment that was demonstrated through the experimental elimination of local enhancement by removing foragers (both mechanisms favor the exploitation of favorable patches)., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Ant-lepidopteran associations along African forest edges.
- Author
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Dejean A, Azémar F, Libert M, Compin A, Hérault B, Orivel J, Bouyer T, and Corbara B
- Subjects
- Africa, Animals, Behavior, Animal, Biological Evolution, Larva, Silk physiology, Ants physiology, Butterflies physiology, Symbiosis
- Abstract
Working along forest edges, we aimed to determine how some caterpillars can co-exist with territorially dominant arboreal ants (TDAAs) in tropical Africa. We recorded caterpillars from 22 lepidopteran species living in the presence of five TDAA species. Among the defoliator and/or nectarivorous caterpillars that live on tree foliage, the Pyralidae and Nymphalidae use their silk to protect themselves from ant attacks. The Notodontidae and lycaenid Polyommatinae and Theclinae live in direct contact with ants; the Theclinae even reward ants with abundant secretions from their Newcomer gland. Lichen feeders (lycaenid; Poritiinae), protected by long bristles, also live among ants. Some lycaenid Miletinae caterpillars feed on ant-attended membracids, including in the shelters where the ants attend them; Lachnocnema caterpillars use their forelegs to obtain trophallaxis from their host ants. Caterpillars from other species live inside weaver ant nests. Those of the genus Euliphyra (Miletinae) feed on ant prey and brood and can obtain trophallaxis, while those from an Eberidae species only prey on host ant eggs. Eublemma albifascia (Erebidae) caterpillars use their thoracic legs to obtain trophallaxis and trophic eggs from ants. Through transfer bioassays of last instars, we noted that herbivorous caterpillars living in contact with ants were always accepted by alien conspecific ants; this is likely due to an intrinsic appeasing odor. Yet, caterpillars living in ant shelters or ant nests probably acquire cues from their host colonies because they were considered aliens and killed. We conclude that co-evolution with ants occurred similarly in the Heterocera and Rhopalocera.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The dynamics of ant mosaics in tropical rainforests characterized using the Self-Organizing Map algorithm.
- Author
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Dejean A, Azémar F, Céréghino R, Leponce M, Corbara B, Orivel J, and Compin A
- Subjects
- Animals, Cameroon, Ecosystem, Magnoliopsida growth & development, Population Dynamics, Rainforest, Tropical Climate, Algorithms, Ants physiology, Trees growth & development
- Abstract
Ants, the most abundant taxa among canopy-dwelling animals in tropical rainforests, are mostly represented by territorially dominant arboreal ants (TDAs) whose territories are distributed in a mosaic pattern (arboreal ant mosaics). Large TDA colonies regulate insect herbivores, with implications for forestry and agronomy. What generates these mosaics in vegetal formations, which are dynamic, still needs to be better understood. So, from empirical research based on 3 Cameroonian tree species (Lophira alata, Ochnaceae; Anthocleista vogelii, Gentianaceae; and Barteria fistulosa, Passifloraceae), we used the Self-Organizing Map (SOM, neural network) to illustrate the succession of TDAs as their host trees grow and age. The SOM separated the trees by species and by size for L. alata, which can reach 60 m in height and live several centuries. An ontogenic succession of TDAs from sapling to mature trees is shown, and some ecological traits are highlighted for certain TDAs. Also, because the SOM permits the analysis of data with many zeroes with no effect of outliers on the overall scatterplot distributions, we obtained ecological information on rare species. Finally, the SOM permitted us to show that functional groups cannot be selected at the genus level as congeneric species can have very different ecological niches, something particularly true for Crematogaster spp., which include a species specifically associated with B. fistulosa, nondominant species and TDAs. Therefore, the SOM permitted the complex relationships between TDAs and their growing host trees to be analyzed, while also providing new information on the ecological traits of the ant species involved., (© 2015 Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. A cuckoo-like parasitic moth leads African weaver ant colonies to their ruin.
- Author
-
Dejean A, Orivel J, Azémar F, Hérault B, and Corbara B
- Subjects
- Animals, Ants physiology, Cameroon, Female, Gabon, Host-Parasite Interactions, Larva physiology, Male, Nesting Behavior physiology, Ovum physiology, Parasites physiology, Reproduction physiology, Ants parasitology, Feeding Behavior physiology, Moths physiology, Predatory Behavior physiology
- Abstract
In myrmecophilous Lepidoptera, mostly lycaenids and riodinids, caterpillars trick ants into transporting them to the ant nest where they feed on the brood or, in the more derived "cuckoo strategy", trigger regurgitations (trophallaxis) from the ants and obtain trophic eggs. We show for the first time that the caterpillars of a moth (Eublemma albifascia; Noctuidae; Acontiinae) also use this strategy to obtain regurgitations and trophic eggs from ants (Oecophylla longinoda). Females short-circuit the adoption process by laying eggs directly on the ant nests, and workers carry just-hatched caterpillars inside. Parasitized colonies sheltered 44 to 359 caterpillars, each receiving more trophallaxis and trophic eggs than control queens. The thus-starved queens lose weight, stop laying eggs (which transport the pheromones that induce infertility in the workers) and die. Consequently, the workers lay male-destined eggs before and after the queen's death, allowing the colony to invest its remaining resources in male production before it vanishes.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. How territoriality and host-tree taxa determine the structure of ant mosaics.
- Author
-
Dejean A, Ryder S, Bolton B, Compin A, Leponce M, Azémar F, Céréghino R, Orivel J, and Corbara B
- Subjects
- Animals, Models, Biological, Population Dynamics, Social Behavior, Tropical Climate, Ants physiology, Territoriality, Trees
- Abstract
Very large colonies of territorially dominant arboreal ants (TDAAs), whose territories are distributed in a mosaic pattern in the canopies of many tropical rainforests and tree crop plantations, have a generally positive impact on their host trees. We studied the canopy of an old Gabonese rainforest (ca 4.25 ha sampled, corresponding to 206 "large" trees) at a stage just preceding forest maturity (the Caesalpinioideae dominated; the Burseraceae were abundant). The tree crowns sheltered colonies from 13 TDAAs plus a co-dominant species out of the 25 ant species recorded. By mapping the TDAAs' territories and using a null model co-occurrence analysis, we confirmed the existence of an ant mosaic. Thanks to a large sampling set and the use of the self-organizing map algorithm (SOM), we show that the distribution of the trees influences the structure of the ant mosaic, suggesting that each tree taxon attracts certain TDAA species rather than others. The SOM also improved our knowledge of the TDAAs' ecological niches, showing that these ant species are ecologically distinct from each other based on their relationships with their supporting trees. Therefore, TDAAs should not systematically be placed in the same functional group even when they belong to the same genus. We conclude by reiterating that, in addition to the role played by TDAAs' territorial competition, host trees contribute to structuring ant mosaics through multiple factors, including host-plant selection by TDAAs, the age of the trees, the presence of extrafloral nectaries, and the taxa of the associated hemipterans.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Reciprocal protection from natural enemies in an ant-wasp association.
- Author
-
Le Guen R, Corbara B, Rossi V, Azémar F, and Dejean A
- Subjects
- Aggression, Animals, Birds, French Guiana, Nesting Behavior, Predatory Behavior, Trees, Ants physiology, Symbiosis, Wasps physiology
- Abstract
We show that in French Guiana the large carton nests of Azteca chartifex, a territorially-dominant arboreal dolichoderine ant, are protected from bird attacks when this ant lives in association with Polybia rejecta, an epiponine social wasp. Because A. chartifex colonies are well known for their ability to divert army ant raids from the base of their host tree so that they protect their associated wasps from these raids, there is a reciprocal benefit for these two partners, permitting us to call this association a mutualism. We also show that P. rejecta nests are significantly less often attacked by birds than are those of two compared epiponine social wasp species. Furthermore, experimentation using a standardized protocol demonstrated the significantly higher aggressiveness of P. rejecta compared to seven other wasp species. We conclude that the efficacious protection of its associated ant nests is likely due to the extreme aggressiveness of P. rejecta., (Copyright © 2015 Académie des sciences. Published by Elsevier SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. A Tank Bromeliad Favors Spider Presence in a Neotropical Inundated Forest.
- Author
-
Hénaut Y, Corbara B, Pélozuelo L, Azémar F, Céréghino R, Herault B, and Dejean A
- Subjects
- Animals, Ants classification, Biodiversity, Climate, Forests, Mexico, Spiders growth & development, Ants growth & development, Bromeliaceae growth & development, Climate Change, Droughts, Floods, Spiders classification
- Abstract
Tank bromeliads are good models for understanding how climate change may affect biotic associations. We studied the relationships between spiders, the epiphytic tank bromeliad, Aechmea bracteata, and its associated ants in an inundated forest in Quintana Roo, Mexico, during a drought period while, exceptionally, this forest was dry and then during the flooding that followed. We compared spider abundance and diversity between 'Aechmea-areas' and 'control-areas' of the same surface area. We recorded six spider families: the Dipluridae, Ctenidae, Salticidae, Araneidae, Tetragnathidae and Linyphiidae among which the funnel-web tarantula, Ischnothele caudata, the only Dipluridae noted, was the most abundant. During the drought period, the spiders were more numerous in the Aechmea-areas than in the control-areas, but they were not obligatorily associated with the Aechmea. During the subsequent flooding, the spiders were concentrated in the A. bracteata patches, particularly those sheltering an ant colony. Also, a kind of specificity existed between certain spider taxa and ant species, but varied between the drought period and subsequent flooding. We conclude that climatic events modulate the relationship between A. bracteata patches and their associated fauna. Tank bromeliads, previously considered only for their ecological importance in supplying food and water during drought, may also be considered refuges for spiders during flooding. More generally, tank bromeliads have an important role in preserving non-specialized fauna in inundated forests.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. An invasive ant species able to counterattack marabunta raids.
- Author
-
Dejean A, Azémar F, and Roux O
- Subjects
- Animals, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry, Hydrocarbons chemistry, Recognition, Psychology, Species Specificity, Aggression physiology, Ants physiology, Predatory Behavior physiology
- Abstract
In the Neotropics where it was introduced, the invasive ant Pheidole megacephala counterattacked raids by the army ants Eciton burchellii or E. hamatum. The Eciton workers that returned to their bivouac were attacked and spread-eagled and most of them killed by their outgoing colony mates. Little by little the zone where returning and outgoing Eciton workers encountered one another moved away from the Pheidole nest which was no longer attacked, so that most of the colony was spared. Using a water-based technique rounded out by bioassays, we show that Pheidole compounds were transferred onto the Eciton cuticle during the counterattacks, so that outgoing workers do not recognize returning colony mates, likely perceived as potential prey. Because P. megacephala is an introduced African species, this kind of protection, which cannot be the result of coevolutive processes, corresponds to a kind of by-product due to its aggressiveness during colony defence., (Copyright © 2014 Académie des sciences. Published by Elsevier SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Altruism during predation in an assassin bug.
- Author
-
Dejean A, Revel M, Azémar F, and Roux O
- Subjects
- Animals, Body Size, Insecta metabolism, Nymph, Predatory Behavior physiology, Reduviidae physiology, Social Behavior
- Abstract
Zelus annulosus is an assassin bug species mostly noted on Hirtella physophora, a myrmecophyte specifically associated with the ant Allomerus decemarticulatus known to build traps on host tree twigs to ambush insect preys. The Z. annulosus females lay egg clutches protected by a sticky substance. To avoid being trapped, the first three instars of nymphs remain grouped in a clutch beneath the leaves on which they hatched, yet from time to time, they climb onto the upper side to group ambush preys. Long-distance prey detection permits these bugs to capture flying or jumping insects that alight on their leaves. Like some other Zelus species, the sticky substance of the sundew setae on their forelegs aids in prey capture. Group ambushing permits early instars to capture insects that they then share or not depending on prey size and the hunger of the successful nymphs. Fourth and fifth instars, with greater needs, rather ambush solitarily on different host tree leaves, but attract siblings to share large preys. Communal feeding permits faster prey consumption, enabling small nymphs to return sooner to the shelter of their leaves. By improving the regularity of feeding for each nymph, it likely regulates nymphal development, synchronizing molting and subsequently limiting cannibalism.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Selective feeding of bdelloid rotifers in river biofilms.
- Author
-
Mialet B, Majdi N, Tackx M, Azémar F, and Buffan-Dubau E
- Subjects
- Animals, Bacteriochlorophylls metabolism, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, France, Rotifera growth & development, Rotifera metabolism, beta Carotene metabolism, Animal Feed, Biofilms growth & development, Cyanobacteria physiology, Diatoms physiology, Pigments, Biological analysis, Rotifera microbiology
- Abstract
In situ pigment contents of biofilm-dwelling bdelloid rotifers of the Garonne River (France) were measured by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and compared with pigment composition of surrounding biofilm microphytobenthic communities. Among pigments that were detected in rotifers, the presence of carotenoids fucoxanthin and myxoxanthophyll showed that the rotifers fed on diatoms and cyanobacteria. Unexpectedly, while diatoms strongly dominated microphytobenthic communities in terms of biomass, HPLC results hinted that rotifers selectively ingested benthic filamentous cyanobacteria. In doing so, rotifers could daily remove a substantial fraction (up to 28%) of this cyanobacterial biomass. The possibility that the rotifers hosted symbiotic myxoxanthophyll-containing cyanobacteria was examined by localisation of chlorophyll fluorescence within rotifers using confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). CLSM results showed an even distribution of quasi-circular fluorescent objects (FO) throughout rotifer bodies, whereas myxoxanthophyll is a biomarker pigment of filamentous cyanobacteria, so the hypothesis was rejected. Our results also suggest that rotifers converted β-carotene (provided by ingested algae) into echinenone, a photoprotective pigment. This study, which is the first one to detail in situ pigment contents of rotifers, clearly shows that the role of cyanobacteria as a food source for meiobenthic invertebrates has been underestimated so far, and deserves urgent consideration.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. When attempts at robbing prey turn fatal.
- Author
-
Dejean A, Corbara B, Azémar F, and Carpenter JM
- Subjects
- Animals, Feeding Behavior physiology, Insecta physiology, Wasps physiology, Ants physiology, Predatory Behavior physiology
- Abstract
Because group-hunting arboreal ants spread-eagle insect prey for a long time before retrieving them, these prey can be coveted by predatory flying insects. Yet, attempting to rob these prey is risky if the ant species is also an effective predator. Here, we show that trying to rob prey from Azteca andreae workers is a fatal error as 268 out of 276 potential cleptobionts (97.1 %) were captured in turn. The ant workers hunt in a group and use the "Velcro®" principle to cling firmly to the leaves of their host tree, permitting them to capture very large prey. Exceptions were one social wasp, plus some Trigona spp. workers and flies that landed directly on the prey and were able to take off immediately when attacked. We conclude that in this situation, previously captured prey attract potential cleptobionts that are captured in turn in most of the cases.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. "Freshwater killer whales": beaching behavior of an alien fish to hunt land birds.
- Author
-
Cucherousset J, Boulêtreau S, Azémar F, Compin A, Guillaume M, and Santoul F
- Subjects
- Animals, Diet, Europe, Isotope Labeling, Behavior, Animal physiology, Birds physiology, Catfishes physiology, Fresh Water, Introduced Species, Predatory Behavior physiology, Whale, Killer physiology
- Abstract
The behavioral strategies developed by predators to capture and kill their prey are fascinating, notably for predators that forage for prey at, or beyond, the boundaries of their ecosystem. We report here the occurrence of a beaching behavior used by an alien and large-bodied freshwater predatory fish (Silurus glanis) to capture birds on land (i.e. pigeons, Columbia livia). Among a total of 45 beaching behaviors observed and filmed, 28% were successful in bird capture. Stable isotope analyses (δ(13)C and δ(15)N) of predators and their putative prey revealed a highly variable dietary contribution of land birds among individuals. Since this extreme behavior has not been reported in the native range of the species, our results suggest that some individuals in introduced predator populations may adapt their behavior to forage on novel prey in new environments, leading to behavioral and trophic specialization to actively cross the water-land interface.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The ecology and feeding habits of the arboreal trap-jawed ant Daceton armigerum.
- Author
-
Dejean A, Delabie JH, Corbara B, Azémar F, Groc S, Orivel J, and Leponce M
- Subjects
- Animals, Ecology, Hemiptera physiology, Predatory Behavior physiology, Ants physiology, Feeding Behavior physiology
- Abstract
Here we show that Daceton armigerum, an arboreal myrmicine ant whose workers are equipped with hypertrophied trap-jaw mandibles, is characterized by a set of unexpected biological traits including colony size, aggressiveness, trophobiosis and hunting behavior. The size of one colony has been evaluated at ca. 952,000 individuals. Intra- and interspecific aggressiveness were tested and an equiprobable null model used to show how D. armigerum colonies react vis-à-vis other arboreal ant species with large colonies; it happens that D. armigerum can share trees with certain of these species. As they hunt by sight, workers occupy their hunting areas only during the daytime, but stay on chemical trails between nests at night so that the center of their home range is occupied 24 hours a day. Workers tend different Hemiptera taxa (i.e., Coccidae, Pseudococcidae, Membracidae and Aethalionidae). Through group-hunting, short-range recruitment and spread-eagling prey, workers can capture a wide range of prey (up to 94.12 times the mean weight of foraging workers).
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Rotating disk electrodes to assess river biofilm thickness and elasticity.
- Author
-
Boulêtreau S, Charcosset JY, Gamby J, Lyautey E, Mastrorillo S, Azémar F, Moulin F, Tribollet B, and Garabetian F
- Subjects
- Electrochemistry, Biofilms, Electrodes, Rivers microbiology
- Abstract
The present study examined the relevance of an electrochemical method based on a rotating disk electrode (RDE) to assess river biofilm thickness and elasticity. An in situ colonisation experiment in the River Garonne (France) in August 2009 sought to obtain natural river biofilms exhibiting differentiated architecture. A constricted pipe providing two contrasted flow conditions (about 0.1 and 0.45 m s(-1) in inflow and constricted sections respectively) and containing 24 RDE was immersed in the river for 21 days. Biofilm thickness and elasticity were quantified using an electrochemical assay on 7 and 21 days old RDE-grown biofilms (t(7) and t(21), respectively). Biofilm thickness was affected by colonisation length and flow conditions and ranged from 36 ± 15 μm (mean ± standard deviation, n = 6) in the fast flow section at t(7) to 340 ± 140 μm (n = 3) in the slow flow section at t(21). Comparing the electrochemical signal to stereomicroscopic estimates of biofilms thickness indicated that the method consistently allowed (i) to detect early biofilm colonisation in the river and (ii) to measure biofilm thickness of up to a few hundred μm. Biofilm elasticity, i.e. biofilm squeeze by hydrodynamic constraint, was significantly higher in the slow (1300 ± 480 μm rpm(1/2), n = 8) than in the fast flow sections (790 ± 350 μm rpm(1/2), n = 11). Diatom and bacterial density, and biofilm-covered RDE surface analyses (i) confirmed that microbial accrual resulted in biofilm formation on the RDE surface, and (ii) indicated that thickness and elasticity represent useful integrative parameters of biofilm architecture that could be measured on natural river assemblages using the proposed electrochemical method., (Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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