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Registros recuperados: 68
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A digital atlas to link ontogenic shifts in fish spatial distribution to the environment of the eastern English Channel. Dab, Limanda limanda as a case-study ArchiMer
Martin, Corinne; Vaz, Sandrine; Koubbi, Philippe; Meaden, Geoff; Engelhard, Georg H.; Lauria, Valentina; Gardel, Laure; Coppin, Franck; Delavenne, Juliette; Dupuis, Ludovic; Ernande, Bruno; Foveau, Aurelie; Lelievre, Stephanie; Morin, Jocelyne; Warembourg, Caroline; Carpentier, Andre.
The eastern English Channel, which connects the Atlantic Ocean to the North Sea through the Dover Strait, is an area where numerous and often conflicting human activities take place. A cross-border multidisciplinary project called CHARM was initiated to provide knowledge and tools for planners and decision-makers to durably manage the shared marine living resources. One such tool was an atlas of fish spatial distributions and modelled habitats, which was used here to investigate ontogenic and seasonal shifts in fish spatial distribution and habitat through a case-study, the dab Limanda limanda. Survey data for several life-history stages (eggs, larvae, coastal nurseries, < and > 1 year old) and seasons were used to map spatial patterns (using...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Pleuronectidae; Limanda limanda; Eastern Channel; Spatial distribution; Modelling; Kriging; Ichthyoplankton; Trawl; CUFES.
Ano: 2010 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00008/11942/8646.pdf
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A new application of principal response curves for summarizing abrupt and cyclic shifts of communities over space ArchiMer
Auber, Arnaud; Travers-trolet, Morgane; Villanueva, Ching-maria; Ernande, Bruno.
There is a growing need to easily describe and synthesize the dynamics of ecosystems’ components in space and time. Most multivariate analyses provide ordination diagrams or biplots that are too cluttered to allow simple reading and are unfamiliar to most users. To overcome such difficulties, a novel application of principal response curves (PRCs) is proposed. Principal response curves are traditionally used to assess treatment effects on community structure measured repeatedly over time. In this new application, the tested factor and the repeated-observation axis are replaced by time and space, respectively. The georeferencing of sampling sites permits to produce an easy-to-read map that summarizes both the temporal dynamics of the community and the...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Fish communities; Multivariate analyses; Partial redundancy analysis; Spatial management tools; Spatio-temporal dynamics.
Ano: 2017 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00413/52478/53266.pdf
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Bases génétiques et plasticité de la croissance et de la survie chez l'huître creuse, Crassostrea gigas ArchiMer
Ernande, Bruno; Boudry, Pierre; Heurtebise, Serge; Haure, Joel; Martin, Jean-louis.
Growth and survival are the two most interesting characters for oyster farming as they determine the biomass produced in the farms (growth x survival). Thus, a selection program aiming at improving these two characters could be of a great help. However, the oyster, as a sessile organism, is influenced by environmental variability (spatial and temporal) either natural or caused by the used oyster culture methods. Submitted to this variability, oysters must have evolved so as to adapt (short term) to this environmental variability.
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Crassostrea gigas; Huîtres; Croissance; Plasticité; Génétique.
Ano: 2001 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/2001/acte-3279.pdf
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Benthic and fish aggregation inside an offshore wind farm: Which effects on the trophic web functioning? ArchiMer
Raoux, Aurore; Tecchio, Samuele; Pezy, Jean-philippe; Lassalle, Geraldine; Degraer, Steven; Wilhelmsson, Dan; Cachera, Marie; Ernande, Bruno; Le Guen, Camille; Haraldsson, Matilda; Grangere, Karine; Le Loc'H, Francois; Dauvin, Jean-claude; Niquil, Nathalie.
As part of the energy transition, the French government is planning the construction of three offshore wind farms in Normandy (Bay of Seine and eastern part of the English Channel, north-western France) in the next years. These offshore wind farms will be integrated into an ecosystem already facing multiple anthropogenic disturbances such as maritime transport, fisheries, oyster and mussel farming, and sediment dredging. Currently no integrated, ecosystem-based study on the effects of the construction and exploitation of offshore wind farms exists, where biological approaches generally focused on the conservation of some valuable species or groups of species. Complementary trophic web modelling tools were applied to the Bay of Seine ecosystem (to the 50...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Marine renewable energies; Reef effect; Wind farm; Ecopath with Ecosim; Ecosystem-based approach.
Ano: 2017 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00347/45843/46723.pdf
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Benthic-pelagic couplings as key determinants of food web structure along environmental gradients ArchiMer
Lefebvre, Sebastien; Giraldo, Carolina; Kopp, Dorothee; Cresson, Pierre; Travers-trolet, Morgane; Ernande, Bruno.
Trophic relationships play a crucial role in shaping community structure and ecological functions in marine ecosystems. Studying food-web variation along environmental gradients is still in its infancy and provides new insights in understanding how abiotic variables shape species interactions. In epicontinental seas, benthic-pelagic couplings modify predator-prey relationships and lead to entangled trophic networks. Here, we  assumed that depth affects benthic-pelagic couplings’ strength and we investigated depth-related changes in the feeding patterns of fish in the whole English Channel (EC) used as a case study. Gut content and stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes of 33 fish species were collected between 5-100 m depth in 2009 and in 2014. Samples from...
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Ano: 2018 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00455/56634/58370.pdf
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Body size-trophic position relationship in marine fish depends on biological and spatial scales ArchiMer
Kopp, Dorothee; Lefebvre, Sebastien; Villanueva, Ching-maria; Ernande, Bruno.
-Food web structure can be partly characterized by species' trophic level - In marine fish, trophic level appears positively correlated to individual body size at the community scale (Jennings et al 2001) -Trophic level may change across sizes but also taxa, seasons, and habitats -Very few studies have addressed how size-dependence of trophic position varies in space, i.e. according to habitat, and whether observed community-scale patterns hold at the level of species or guilds.
Tipo: Text
Ano: 2012 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00163/27396/25627.pdf
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Can fish morphology determine its diet? ArchiMer
Chambord, Sophie; Villanueva, Ching-maria; Ernande, Bruno; Lefebvre, Sébastien.
Biodiversity is a concept that covers a lot of issues that can elucidate diversity-related functional roles to understand ecological ecosystem functioning. Biodiversity can shape ecosystem structure and functioning especially if we focus on predator-prey interactions. Moreover, the mechanisms governing prey-predator relationships will shape the emergent food web structure just as individuals’ characteristics determine the emergent demographic structure of a population. We determined the trophic ecology of fish species in the eastern English Channel by combining gut-content and geomorphometric analyses. We inferred the mechanisms of resource utilisation by Atlantic seabass and plaice by coupling measured geomorphometric determinants of prey-predator...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Biodiversity; Predator-prey interaction; Eastern English Channel Stomach content analysis Geomorphometry Fish.
Ano: 2010 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00143/25416/23567.pdf
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Can fisheries-induced evolution shift reference points for fisheries management? ArchiMer
Heino, Mikko; Baulier, Loic; Boukal, David S.; Ernande, Bruno; Johnston, Fiona D.; Mollet, Fabian M.; Pardoe, Heidi; Therkildsen, Nina O.; Uusi-heikkila, Silva; Vainikka, Anssi; Arlinghaus, Robert; Dankel, Dorothy J.; Dunlop, Erin S.; Eikeset, Anne Maria; Enberg, Katja; Engelhard, Georg; Jorgensen, Christian; Laugen, Ane; Matsumura, Shuichi; Nussle, Sebastien; Urbach, Davnah; Whitlock, Rebecca; Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D.; Dieckmann, Ulf.
Biological reference points are important tools for fisheries management. Reference points are not static, butmay change when a population's environment or the population itself changes. Fisheries-induced evolution is one mechanism that can alter population characteristics, leading to "shifting" reference points by modifying the underlying biological processes or by changing the perception of a fishery system. The former causes changes in "true" reference points, whereas the latter is caused by changes in the yardsticks used to quantify a system's status. Unaccounted shifts of either kind imply that reference points gradually lose their intended meaning. This can lead to increased precaution, which is safe, but potentially costly. Shifts can also occur in...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Biological reference points; Fisheries-induced evolution; Fisheries management; Population dynamics; Precautionary approach; Uncertainty.
Ano: 2013 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00151/26228/24302.pdf
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Cause or consequence? Exploring the role of phenotypic plasticity and genetic polymorphism in the emergence of phenotypic spatial patterns of the European eel ArchiMer
Mateo, Maria; Lambert, Patrick; Tetard, Stephane; Castonguay, Martin; Ernande, Bruno; Drouineau, Hilaire.
The European eel (Anguilla anguilla), and generally, temperate eels, are relevant species for studying adaptive mechanisms to environmental variability because of their large distribution areas and their limited capacity of local adaptation. In this context, GenEveel, an individual-based optimization model, was developed to explore the role of adaptive phenotypic plasticity and genetic-dependent habitat selection, in the emergence of observed spatial life-history traits patterns for eels. Results suggest that an interaction of genetically and environmentally controlled growth may be the basis for genotype-dependent habitat selection, whereas plasticity plays a role in changes in life-history traits and demographic attributes. Therefore, this suggests that...
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Ano: 2017 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00360/47095/47018.pdf
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CHARM : Atlas des Habitats des Ressources Marines de la Manche Orientale ArchiMer
Carpentier, Andre; Coppin, Franck; Dauvin, Jean-claude; Desroy, Nicolas; Dewarumez, Jean-marie; Eastwood, Paul D.; Ernande, Bruno; Harrop, Stuart; Kemp, Zarine; Koubbi, Philippe; Williams, Nigel Leader; Lefebvre, Alain; Lemoine, Michel; Loots, Christophe; S. Martin, Corinne; Meaden, Geoff J.; Ryan, Nick; Tan, Lei; Vaz, Sandrine; Walkey, Mike.
INTRODUCTION: The Dover Strait (Figure 1) connects the North Sea to the English Channel. Here, northern France and South-East England are at their closest. This narrow corridor, one of the world's busiest straits for maritime shipping, is a key economic area for numerous activities, such as leisure and tourism, international ports and shipping, plus the exploitation of living or abiotic marine resources. This area is a significant resource for fisheries because many commercial fish species are abundant there, but also because of the presence of nursery and spawning areas and migratory routes linked to specific environmental characteristics. The vulnerability of these resources, which are subjected to strong anthropogenic pressures, has brought together...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Survey; Landings; Larvae; Eastern channel; Benthos; Fish; Sig; Policy analysis; Species protection; Habita protection; Protected areas; Marine biodiversity conservation.
Ano: 2005 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/2005/rapport-2350.pdf
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Complementarity and discriminatory power of genotype and otolith shape in describing the fine-scale population structure of an exploited fish, the common sole of the Eastern English Channel ArchiMer
Randon, Marine; Le Pape, Olivier; Ernande, Bruno; Mahé, Kelig; Volckaert, Filip A. M.; Petit, Eric; Lassalle, Gilles; Le Berre, Thomas; Réveillac, Elodie.
Marine organisms show population structure at a relatively fine spatial scale, even in open habitats. The tools commonly used to assess subtle patterns of connectivity have diverse levels of resolution and can complement each other to inform on population structure. We assessed and compared the discriminatory power of genetic markers and otolith shape to reveal the population structure on evolutionary and ecological time scales of the common sole (Solea solea), living in the Eastern English Channel (EEC) stock off France and the UK. First, we genotyped fish with Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms to assess population structure at an evolutionary scale. Then, we tested for spatial segregation of the subunits using otolith shape as an integrative tracer of life...
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Ano: 2020 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00658/77009/78266.pdf
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Conséquences génétiques de la production de larves d'huîtres en écloserie : étude des processus de dérive et de sélection ArchiMer
Taris, Nicolas; Sauvage, Christopher; Batista, Frederico; Baron, Sophie; Ernande, Bruno; Haffray, Pierrick; Boudry, Pierre.
Previous studies have shown heritable variation in larval developmental traits in the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas. In order to study the genetic consequences of production of oyster larvae in hatcheries, two factors, specific to hatcheries, were examined: the effect of discarding the smallest larvae (i.e. culling) and the effect of temperature (20°C versus 26°C). A mixed-family approach was used in order to infer the genetic composition of larval populations and family assignment, limiting possible environmental bias and allowing the study of a relatively large number of families using a limited number of larval tanks. Our results show that three multiplexed highly polymorphic microsatellite markers are a powerful tool for family assignment and,...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Hatchery; Genetic diversity; Selection domestication; Larvae; Crassostrea gigas; Ecloserie; Diversité génétique; Sélection domestication; Larve; Crassostrea gigas.
Ano: 2006 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/2006/acte-1505.pdf
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Depth gradient on the resource use of a fish community from a semi-enclosed sea ArchiMer
Giraldo, Carolina; Ernande, Bruno; Cresson, Pierre; Kopp, Dorothee; Cachera, Marie; Travers-trolet, Morgane; Lefebvre, Sebastien.
Depth is one of the environmental variables influencing the structure of marine food webs by directly or indirectly influencing benthic-pelagic coupling and predator-prey relationships. In shallow waters, the high degree of connectivity between pelagic and benthic networks results in complex systems with multiple interactions. Digestive tract (DT) and stable isotope (SI) analyses were used to investigate depth-related changes in feeding patterns for 33 fish species (eastern English Channel [EEC]) collected between 5 m and 80 m depth. Fish species were first arranged into functional groups based upon trophic and habitat similarities. DTs were used to determine the general topology of the food web and SIs were used to estimate the contributions of different...
Tipo: Text
Ano: 2017 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00386/49711/52255.pdf
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Diet is correlated with otolith shape in marine fish ArchiMer
Mille, Tiphaine; Mahe, Kelig; Cachera, Marie; Villanueva, Ching-maria; De Pontual, Helene; Ernande, Bruno.
Previous studies have shown that food amount influence fish otolith structure, opacity and shape and that diet composition has an effect on otolith chemical composition. This study investigated the potential correlation between diet and otolith shape in 5 wild marine fish species by addressing 4 complementary questions. First, is there a global relationship between diet and otolith shape? Second, which prey categories are involved in this relationship? Third, what are the respective contributions of food quantity and relative composition to diet–otolith shape co-variation? Fourth, is diet energetic composition related to otolith shape? For each species, we investigated how otolith shape varies with diet. These questions were tackled by describing diet in...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Fourier analysis; English Channel; Interspecific; Morphometric analysis; Otolith growth; Saccular otolith; Stomach contents.
Ano: 2016 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00345/45639/45269.pdf
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Directional bilateral asymmetry in otolith morphology may affect fish stock discrimination based on otolith shape analysis ArchiMer
Mahe, Kelig; Ider, Djamila; Massaro, Andrea; Hamed, Oussama; Jurado-ruzafa, Alba; Goncalves, Patricia; Anastasopoulou, Aiketerini; Jadaud, Angelique; Mytilineou, Chryssi; Elleboode, Romain; Ramdane, Zohir; Bacha, Mahmoud; Amara, Rachid; De Pontual, Helene; Ernande, Bruno.
Otolith shape analysis is an efficient fish stock identification tool. However, most applications used left and right otoliths or only one of them arbitrarily chosen without testing for biases resulting from potential directional bilateral asymmetry (DA) in otolith shape, i.e. a unimodal population-level deviation form bilateral symmetry between right and left otolith shapes. In this study, 560 bogues (Boops boops) were sampled from 11 geographical locations from the Canary Islands to the Aegean Sea and elliptical Fourier descriptors were used to describe their otoliths’ shape. First, a significant otolith DA was observed at the global scale with an average amplitude of 2.77%. However, at the scale of sampling locations, DA was not always significant and...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Boops boops; Elliptical Fourier analysis; Mediterranean Sea; Side effect; Stock identification.
Ano: 2019 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00468/57967/60418.pdf
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Do environmental conditions (temperature and food composition) affect otolith shape during fish early-juvenile phase? An experimental approach applied to European Seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax) ArchiMer
Mahé, Kelig; Gourtay, Clemence; Bled--defruit, Geoffrey; Chantre, Celina; De Pontual, Helene; Amara, Rachid; Claireaux, Guy; Audet, C.; Zambonino-infante, Jose-luis; Ernande, Bruno.
Otolith shape is an efficient tool for fish stock discrimination. Therefore, it is crucial to identify the environmental parameters that could influence otolith morphogenesis and growth. Current global ocean warming negatively affects the production of polyunsaturated fatty acids (EPA and DHA) by phytoplankton and thus their availability in marine food webs. As EPA and DHA are essential nutrients for most fish species, their deficiency could affect many aspects of fish physiology, notably otolith morphogenesis. The goal of this study was to assess experimentally the combined influences of temperature (T) and dietary polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) content on European seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax) otolith morphogenesis during early life stages. 300...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: N-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids; Otolith shape; Temperature effect; Elliptic Fourier descriptors; Multivariate mixed-effects models; Directional asymmetry.
Ano: 2019 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00588/70054/68017.pdf
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Does the positive body-size-trophic level relationship hold at the species level? ArchiMer
Kopp, Dorothee; Lefebvre, Sebastien; Villanueva, Ching-maria; Ernande, Bruno.
The structure, dynamics and productivity of marine ecosystems depend mainly on their underlying food webs. In temperate marine ecosystems, specifically in the English Channel, strong seasonality, habitat diversity and variability in the sources of available organic matters are controlling factors affecting the trophodynamics of these networks. Exploitation through fisheries may also alter these food webs. During the last decade, the study of trophic ecology has greatly benefited from the use of stable isotope analysis (SIA) that integrates diet information over long time periods and complements gut content analysis. Applied in complex ecosystems, such as the English Channel, SIA may help to detect nutrient pathways and trophic links. Stable isotopic...
Tipo: Text
Ano: 2011 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00161/27213/25412.pdf
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Ecology - Managing evolving fish stocks ArchiMer
Jorgensen, Christian; Enberg, Katja; Dunlop, Erin S.; Arlinghaus, Robert; Boukal, David S.; Brander, Keith; Ernande, Bruno; Gardmark, Anna; Johnston, Fiona; Matsumura, Shuichi; Pardoe, Heidi; Raab, Kristina; Silva, Alexandra; Vainikka, Anssi; Dieckmann, Ulf; Heino, Mikko; Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D..
Evolutionary impact assessment is introduced as a framework for quantifying the effects of 29 harvest-induced evolution on the utility generated by fish stocks.
Tipo: Text
Ano: 2007 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/2007/publication-3302.pdf
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Effects of genetic drift and selection at larval stage resulting from hatchery practices in the Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas) ArchiMer
Taris, Nicolas; Sauvage, Christopher; Ernande, Bruno; Batista, Frederico; Boudry, Pierre.
Hatchery techniques are now well handled in an increasing number of aquaculture species. However, unintentional effects of domestication often remain poorly documented. In this context, we studied how current hatchery practices may genetically influence larval traits for which significant genetic variation had previously been reported in the Pacific oyster. Two main factors were studied: culling (i.e. discarding the smallest larvae) and rearing temperature (26°C versus 20°C). In parallel, we estimated genetic diversity of broodstock populations sampled in French hatcheries. Finally, we compared larval development and settlement success in the progeny of one of these hatchery broodstock, which had been selected for seven generations, with those of wild...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Genetic drift; Selection; Genetic; Crassostrea gigas; Oysters; Hatchery techniques.
Ano: 2006 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/2006/acte-3362.pdf
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Estimating age at maturation and energy-based life-history traits from individual growth trajectories with nonlinear mixed-effects models ArchiMer
Brunel, Thomas; Ernande, Bruno; Mollet, Fabian M.; Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D..
A new method is presented to estimate individuals’ (1) age at maturation, (2) energy acquisition rate, (3) energy expenditure for body maintenance, and (4) reproductive investment, and the multivariate distribution of these traits in a population. The method relies on adjusting a conceptual energy allocation model to individual growth curves using nonlinear mixed-effects modelling. The method’s performance was tested using simulated growth curves for a range of life-history types. Individual age at maturation, energy acquisition rate and the sum of maintenance and reproductive investment rates, and their multivariate distribution, were accurately estimated. For the estimation of maintenance and reproductive investment rates separately, biases were observed...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Bioenergetics growth model; Individual growth trajectory; Life-history trade-offs; Energy acquisition; Maintenance; Reproductive investment; Sexual maturation.
Ano: 2013 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00124/23537/21378.pdf
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