13 results on '"Rome Q"'
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2. Caste differentiation and seasonal changes inVespa velutina(Hym.: Vespidae) colonies in its introduced range
- Author
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Rome, Q., primary, Muller, F. J., additional, Touret-Alby, A., additional, Darrouzet, E., additional, Perrard, A., additional, and Villemant, C., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Vespa velutina (frelon asiatique) : un nouvel hyménoptère en France
- Author
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Schwartz, C., primary, Villemant, C., additional, Rome, Q., additional, and Muller, F., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Caste differentiation and seasonal changes in Vespa velutina (Hym.: Vespidae) colonies in its introduced range.
- Author
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Rome, Q., Muller, F. J., Touret‐Alby, A., Darrouzet, E., Perrard, A., and Villemant, C.
- Subjects
- *
VESPA (Genus) , *INSECT societies , *INSECT nests , *INTRODUCED insects , *STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
Since its introduction in France 10 years ago, the yellow-legged hornet, Vespa velutina, has rapidly spread to neighbouring countries (Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Italy and Germany). It showed efficient social traits facilitating its invasive success. Only scarce and incomplete natural history studies were known from its native distribution area. Studying the biology of this species in its invasive distribution range was thus a prerequisite to the implementation of efficient control methods in a near future. During a 3-year field survey, we collected 77 nests to investigate several of the species' key colony characteristics. Our results enabled us to accurately quantify each of the castes and to better understand their synchronicity throughout the season. Our study showed that mature nests are able to produce up to 13 000 individuals and that the size of mature nests is correlated to the number of individuals produced. This correlation enables the inference of one characteristic from the other. Furthermore, each mature nest can produce up to several hundreds of potential founder queens, a crucial datum in the light of today's unregulated spring queen trapping control campaigns. In addition, nest dissections enabled to record the incidence of nest relocation for the first time in this species. Results are discussed with regards to what is known in other Vespidae species, with a focus on Vespula species that are known to be invasive in many other countries worldwide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Identificatie informatieblad hoornaars en wespen
- Author
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Rome, Q., Muller, F., Villemant, C., Rome, Q., Muller, F., and Villemant, C.
- Abstract
Identificatieblad met soorten wespen en hoornaars. Mogelijke punten van verwisseling tussen de insecten.
6. Economic costs of the invasive Yellow-legged hornet on honey bees.
- Author
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Requier F, Fournier A, Pointeau S, Rome Q, and Courchamp F
- Subjects
- Animals, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, France, Introduced Species, Bees, Wasps
- Abstract
Biological invasions have ecological impacts worldwide with potential massive economic costs. Among other ecosystem services such as nitrogen cycle, carbon sequestration and primary production, invasive alien species are particularly known to impact pollination. By predating honey bees (Apis mellifera), the invasive Yellow-legged hornet (Vespa velutina nigrithorax) increases the mortality risk of European bee colonies; however, little is known about its economic costs. We developed an analytic process combining large-scale field data, niche modelling techniques and agent-based models to spatially assess the ecological and economic impacts of the Yellow-legged hornet on honey bees and beekeeping in France. In particular, we estimated (i) the hornet-related risk of bee colony mortality, (ii) the economic cost of colony loss for beekeepers and (iii) the economic impact of livestock replacement compared to honey revenues at regional and national scales. We estimated an overall density of 1.08 hornet nest/km
2 in France, based on the field record of 1260 nests over a searched area of 28,348 km2 . However, this predator density was heterogeneously spread out across the country as well as the distribution of managed honey bee colonies. Overall, this hornet-related risk of bee colony mortality could reach up to 29.2 % of the beekeepers' livestock at national scale each year in high predation scenario. This national cost could reach as much as € 30.8 million per year due to colony loss, which represents for beekeepers an economic impact of livestock replacement of 26.6 % of honey revenues. Our results suggest non-negligible ecological and economic impacts of the invasive Yellow-legged hornet on honey bees and beekeeping activities. Moreover, this study meets the urgent need for more numerous and accurate economic estimations, necessary to calculate the impact of biological invasions on biodiversity and human goods, with a view to enhance policies of biodiversity conservation., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors reported no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Contrasting patterns from two invasion fronts suggest a niche shift of an invasive predator of native bees.
- Author
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Verdasca MJ, Carvalheiro L, Aguirre Gutierrez J, Granadeiro JP, Rome Q, Puechmaille SJ, Rebelo R, and Rebelo H
- Subjects
- Bees, Animals, Introduced Species, Europe, Europe, Eastern, Ecosystem, Wasps
- Abstract
Background: The accuracy of predictions of invasive species ranges is dependent on niche similarity between invasive and native populations and on our ability to identify the niche characteristics. With this work we aimed to compare the niche dynamics of two genetically related invasive populations of Vespa velutina (an effective predator of honeybees and wild pollinators), in two distinct climatic regions, one in central Europe and another one in the north-western Iberian Peninsula, and hence to identify uninvaded regions susceptible to invasion., Methods: Niche dynamics and shifts of V. velutina were assessed by comparing the environmental niches of the native and of the two invasive populations, using climatic, topographic and land use variables. We also ran reciprocal distribution models using different algorithms and records from both native and invasive ranges to compare model predictions and estimate which regions are at a greater risk of being invaded., Results: An apparent niche shift was detected in the population of the NW of Iberian Peninsula, where the species is living under environmental conditions different from the native niche. In central Europe, large suitable areas remain unoccupied. The fact that both invasive populations are well established, despite occupying environmentally distinct regions indicates that V. velutina has a high ability to successfully invade different environmental envelopes from those existing in its native range. For example, in north-western Iberian Peninsula the species is now thriving out of its native niche limits. Moreover, the large extent of still unoccupied environmental space with similar conditions to those used by the species in its native range suggests that there is still a large area of central and eastern Europe that can be potentially invaded by the species., Competing Interests: The authors declare there are no competing interests., (©2022 Verdasca et al.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Science communication is needed to inform risk perception and action of stakeholders.
- Author
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Requier F, Fournier A, Rome Q, and Darrouzet E
- Subjects
- Animals, Bees, Biodiversity, Humans, Risk Assessment, Introduced Species, Wasps
- Abstract
Stakeholders are critical environmental managers in human-dominated landscapes. In some contexts, stakeholders can be forced to personally act following their own observations and risk perception instead of science recommendation. In particular, biological invasions need rapid control actions to reduce potential socio-ecological impacts, while science-based risk assessments are rather complex and time-delayed. Although they can lead to important detrimental effects on biodiversity, potential time-delayed disconnections between stakeholders' action and science recommendations are rarely studied. Using the case study of western European beekeepers controlling the invasive Asian hornet Vespa velutina nigrithorax for its suspected impact on honey bee colonies, we analysed mechanisms underlying personal actions of stakeholders and how they evolved in science disconnection. Personal actions of stakeholders were causal-effect linked with their risk observation but disconnected to time-delayed science predictions and recommendations. Unfortunately, these science-disconnected actions also led to dramatic impacts on numerous species of the local entomofauna. These results highlight the need to improve mutual risk communication between science and action in the early-stages of management plans to improve the sustainably of stakeholders' practices., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest No conflict of interest was reported by the authors., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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9. Can species distribution models really predict the expansion of invasive species?
- Author
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Barbet-Massin M, Rome Q, Villemant C, and Courchamp F
- Subjects
- Animals, China, Europe, Climate, Introduced Species, Models, Biological, Wasps physiology
- Abstract
Predictive studies are of paramount importance for biological invasions, one of the biggest threats for biodiversity. To help and better prioritize management strategies, species distribution models (SDMs) are often used to predict the potential invasive range of introduced species. Yet, SDMs have been regularly criticized, due to several strong limitations, such as violating the equilibrium assumption during the invasion process. Unfortunately, validation studies-with independent data-are too scarce to assess the predictive accuracy of SDMs in invasion biology. Yet, biological invasions allow to test SDMs usefulness, by retrospectively assessing whether they would have accurately predicted the latest ranges of invasion. Here, we assess the predictive accuracy of SDMs in predicting the expansion of invasive species. We used temporal occurrence data for the Asian hornet Vespa velutina nigrithorax, a species native to China that is invading Europe with a very fast rate. Specifically, we compared occurrence data from the last stage of invasion (independent validation points) to the climate suitability distribution predicted from models calibrated with data from the early stage of invasion. Despite the invasive species not being at equilibrium yet, the predicted climate suitability of validation points was high. SDMs can thus adequately predict the spread of V. v. nigrithorax, which appears to be-at least partially-climatically driven. In the case of V. v. nigrithorax, SDMs predictive accuracy was slightly but significantly better when models were calibrated with invasive data only, excluding native data. Although more validation studies for other invasion cases are needed to generalize our results, our findings are an important step towards validating the use of SDMs in invasion biology.
- Published
- 2018
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10. Invasive species: Bee-hawking hornet already in line of fire.
- Author
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Rome Q and Villemant C
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Introduced Species, Pollination, Wasps physiology
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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11. Can parasites halt the invader? Mermithid nematodes parasitizing the yellow-legged Asian hornet in France.
- Author
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Villemant C, Zuccon D, Rome Q, Muller F, Poinar GO Jr, and Justine JL
- Abstract
Since its introduction in France 10 years ago, the yellow-legged Asian bee-hawking hornet Vespa velutina has rapidly spread to neighboring countries (Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Italy, and Germany), becoming a new threat to beekeeping activities. While introduced species often leave behind natural enemies from their original home, which benefits them in their new environment, they can also suffer local recruitment of natural enemies. Three mermithid parasitic subadults were obtained from V. velutina adults in 2012, from two French localities. However, these were the only parasitic nematodes reported up to now in Europe, in spite of the huge numbers of nests destroyed each year and the recent examination of 33,000 adult hornets. This suggests that the infection of V. velutina by these nematodes is exceptional. Morphological criteria assigned the specimens to the genus Pheromermis and molecular data (18S sequences) to the Mermithidae, due to the lack of Pheromermis spp. sequences in GenBank. The species is probably Pheromermis vesparum, a parasite of social wasps in Europe. This nematode is the second native enemy of Vespa velutina recorded in France, after a conopid fly whose larvae develop as internal parasitoids of adult wasps and bumblebees. In this paper, we provide arguments for the local origin of the nematode parasite and its limited impact on hornet colony survival. We also clarify why these parasites (mermithids and conopids) most likely could not hamper the hornet invasion nor be used in biological control programs against this invasive species.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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12. Geographic variation of melanisation patterns in a hornet species: genetic differences, climatic pressures or aposematic constraints?
- Author
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Perrard A, Arca M, Rome Q, Muller F, Tan J, Bista S, Nugroho H, Baudoin R, Baylac M, Silvain JF, Carpenter JM, and Villemant C
- Subjects
- Animals, Climate, Genetic Variation, Geography, Haplotypes, Microsatellite Repeats, Species Specificity, Wasps anatomy & histology, Wasps metabolism, Melanins metabolism, Wasps genetics
- Abstract
Coloration of stinging insects is often based on contrasted patterns of light and black pigmentations as a warning signal to predators. However, in many social wasp species, geographic variation drastically modifies this signal through melanic polymorphism potentially driven by different selective pressures. To date, surprisingly little is known about the geographic variation of coloration of social wasps in relation to aposematism and melanism and to genetic and developmental constraints. The main objectives of this study are to improve the description of the colour variation within a social wasp species and to determine which factors are driving this variation. Therefore, we explored the evolutionary history of a polymorphic hornet, Vespa velutina Lepeletier, 1836, using mitochondrial and microsatellite markers, and we analysed its melanic variation using a colour space based on a description of body parts coloration. We found two main lineages within the species and confirmed the previous synonymy of V. auraria Smith, 1852, under V. velutina, differing only by the coloration. We also found that the melanic variation of most body parts was positively correlated, with some segments forming potential colour modules. Finally, we showed that the variation of coloration between populations was not related to their molecular, geographic or climatic differences. Our observations suggest that the coloration patterns of hornets and their geographic variations are determined by genes with an influence of developmental constraints. Our results also highlight that Vespa velutina populations have experienced several convergent evolutions of the coloration, more likely influenced by constraints on aposematism and Müllerian mimicry than by abiotic pressures on melanism.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Aggressions and size-related fecundity of queenless workers in the ant Cataglyphis cursor.
- Author
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Clémencet J, Rome Q, Fédérici P, and Doums C
- Subjects
- Animals, Ants anatomy & histology, Body Size, Female, Male, Oviposition, Parthenogenesis, Social Behavior, Aggression, Ants physiology, Fertility
- Abstract
In social hymenoptera, the reproductive division of labor is often linked to differences in individual body size with the reproductive caste (the queen) being larger than the workers. Likewise, the reproductive potential may vary with size within the worker caste and could affect the evolution of worker size in social insects. Here, we tested the relationship between worker size and reproductive potential in the facultative parthenogenetic ant Cataglyphis cursor. Colonies are headed by a multiply mated queen, but workers can produce gynes (virgin queens) and workers by thelytokous parthenogenesis after the queen's death. We observed the behaviour of workers (n = 357) until the production of gynes (212 h over 3 months) in an orphaned colony (mated queen not present). The size of workers was measured, and their paternal lineage determined using six microsatellite markers, to control for an effect of patriline. Larger workers were more likely to reproduce and lay more eggs indicating that individual level selection could take place. However, paternal lineage had no effect on the reproductive potential and worker size. From the behavioural and genetic data, we also show for the first time in this species, evidence of aggressive interactions among workers and a potential for nepotism to occur in orphaned colonies, as the five gynes produced belonged to a single paternal lineage.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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