%0 Journal Article %J Conservation Biology %D 2024 %T Testing for concordance between predicted species richness, past prioritization, and marine protected area designations in the western Indian Ocean %A McClanahan, Tim R. %A Friedlander, Alan M. %A Wickel, Julien %A Graham, Nicholas A. J. %A Bruggemann, J. Henrich %A Guillaume, Mireille M. M. %A Chabanet, P. %A Porter, Sean %A Schleyer, Michael H. %A Azali, M. Kodia %A Muthiga, N. A. %B Conservation Biology %8 Apr-03-2026 %G eng %U https://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/cobi.14256 %! Conservation Biology %R 10.1111/cobi.14256 %0 Journal Article %J Marine Pollution Bulletin %D 2024 %T Trace element variations in mussels' shells from continent to sea: The St. Lawrence system, Canada %A Guillot, Alice %A Barrat, Jean-Alix %A Olivier, Frédéric %A Tremblay, Rejean %A Saint-Louis, Richard %A Rouget, Marie-Laure %A Ben Salem, Douraied %K Rare earth elements Trace elements Estuary Bivalve Shell Environmental proxy Pollution %X Rare Earth Elements (REE) and several trace elements abundances in mussel's shells collected along the St. Lawrence River, the Estuary, and the Gulf of St. Lawrence (EGSL) reveal coherent chemical variations, with a sharp contrast between freshwater and seawater bivalves. In freshwater mussel's shells, Rare Earth Elements and Y (REY) patterns are rather flat. Their Mn and Ba concentrations are higher than those of EGSL mussel shells, which are much richer in Sr. Shale-normalized REY abundances in mussel's shells from the EGSL show positive anomalies in La and Y and well-marked negative anomalies in Ce, reflecting those of seawater. Prince Edward Island shells show light REE depletion relative to PAAS, positive La and Y anomalies, and negative Ce anomalies. Our data confirm the lack of detectable Gd pollution in the St. Lawrence River and in the EGSL, as well as Pb pollution at the mouth of the Saguenay Fjord and near Rimouski. %B Marine Pollution Bulletin %V 199 %P 116034 %8 Jan-02-2024 %G eng %U https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0025326X24000110 %! Marine Pollution Bulletin %R 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2024.116034 %0 Journal Article %J Limnology and Oceanography %D 2024 %T Tracing the fate of seabird‐derived nitrogen in a coral reef using nitrate and coral skeleton nitrogen isotopes %A Choisnard, Noémie %A Duprey, Nicolas Noel %A Wald, Tanja %A Thibault, Martin %A Houlbrèque, Fanny %A Foreman, Alan D. %A Cuet, Pascale %A Mireille M.M. Guillaume %A Vonhof, Hubert %A Sigman, Daniel M. %A Haug, Gerald H. %A Maguer, Jean‐François %A L'Helguen, Stéphane %A Martínez‐García, Alfredo %A Lorrain, Anne %B Limnology and Oceanography %8 Mar-01-2024 %G eng %U https://aslopubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/lno.12485 %! Limnology & Oceanography %R 10.1002/lno.12485 %0 Journal Article %J Science of The Total Environment %D 2023 %T Temporal pesticide dynamics alter specific eukaryotic taxa in a coastal transition zone %A Hervé, Vincent %A Sabatier, Pierre %A Lambourdière, Josie %A Poulenard, Jérôme %A Pascal Jean Lopez %B Science of The Total Environment %V 866 %P 161205 %8 Jan-03-2023 %G eng %U https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0048969722083097 %! Science of The Total Environment %R 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.161205 %0 Journal Article %J Global Ecology and Biogeography %D 2023 %T Threatened fish species in the Northeast Atlantic are functionally rare %A Coulon, Noémie %A Lindegren, Martin %A Goberville, Eric %A Toussaint, Aurèle %A Receveur, Aurore %A Arnaud Auber %X The criteria used to define the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List categories are essentially based on demographic parameters at the species level, but they do not integrate species' traits or their roles in ecosystems. Consequently, current IUCN-based protection measures may not be sufficient to conserve ecosystem functioning and services. Some species may have a singular combination of traits associated with unique functions. Such functionally distinct species are increasingly recognized as a key facet of biodiversity since they are, by definition, functionally irreplaceable. The aim of this study is to investigate whether threatened species are also functionally rare and to identify which traits determine extinction risk. %B Global Ecology and Biogeography %8 Dec-07-2023 %G eng %! Global Ecol Biogeogr %R 10.1111/geb.13731 %0 Journal Article %J Chemical Geology %D 2023 %T Trace elements in bivalve shells: How “vital effects” can bias environmental studies %A Barrat, Jean-Alix %A Chauvaud, Laurent %A Olivier, Frédéric %A Poitevin, Pierre %A Rouget, Marie-Laure %X We report on the concentrations of rare earths (REE), Y, Mg, Mn, Cu, Zn, Sr, Ba, Pb and U in a series of wild scallops (Placopecten magellanicus) collected alive on the same day in Saint Pierre et Miquelon (a French archipelago located south of Newfoundland) and ranging in age from 2 to about 20 years. We analyzed representative fragments from the entire last annual shell growth increment of each animal to assess changes in trace element incorporation with age. No correlation with the age of the animals was obtained for Sr and Mn concentrations, which are quite variable from one individual to another, even of similar age. On the other hand, for REE, Y, Cu, Zn, Ba and U, the concentrations measured in the last annual growth increment formed by animals aged 2 to 7 years are similar. From 8 years of age, the concentrations of these elements increased very strongly (for example for Yb, almost by an order of magnitude between 8 and 20 years of age), and possibly with some variation between individuals of the same age. Two elements show a different behavior: Mg concentrations in the shell margins increase continuously with the age of the animals; Pb concentrations are scattered but seem to decrease with the age of the animals.This turning point in the behavior of the elements from 8 years of age coincides with major metabolic changes, since at this age wild P. magellanicus from Newfoundland reduce their growth, in favor of gamete production. Our results demonstrate that metabolic activity of the animals largely controls the incorporation of many trace elements into the shells. These results demonstrate that the age of the animals must be taken into account when their shells are used to study pollution or (paleo) %B Chemical Geology %P 121695 %8 Jan-08-2023 %G eng %U https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0009254123003959 %! Chemical Geology %R 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2023.121695 %0 Journal Article %J Scientific Reports %D 2023 %T Transcriptome wide analyses reveal intraspecific diversity in thermal stress responses of a dominant habitat‐forming species %A Nicastro, Katy R. %A Pearson, G.A. %A Ramos, X. %A Vasco Pearson %A Christopher Mc Quaid %A Zardi, Gerardo I. %B Scientific Reports %V 13 %8 2023 %G eng %N 5645 %R https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-32654-w %0 Journal Article %J Frontiers in Endocrinology %D 2022 %T Tachykinins, new players in the control of reproduction and food intake: A comparative review in mammals and teleosts %A Campo, Aurora %A Sylvie Dufour %A Rousseau, Karine %B Frontiers in Endocrinology %V 13 %8 Apr-12-2023 %G eng %U https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fendo.2022.1056939/full %! Front. Endocrinol. %R 10.3389/fendo.2022.1056939 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Sea Research %D 2022 %T Temporal characteristics of plankton indicators in coastal waters: High-frequency data from PlanktonScope %A Bi, Hongsheng %A Song, Junting %A Zhao, Jian %A Liu, Hui %A Cheng, Xuemin %A Wang, Linlin %A Cai, Zhonghua %A Benfield, Mark C. %A Otto, Saskia %A Goberville, Eric %A Keister, Julie %A Yang, Yong %A Yu, Xinglong %A Cai, Jun %A Ying, Kezhen %A Alessandra Conversi %X Plankton are excellent indicators of ecosystem status and fisheries because of their pivotal role in marine food webs and their core values in the integrated ecosystem assessment (IEA). Monitoring plankton is essential to understand their dynamics and underlying processes. Recent advances in imaging technologies have enabled in situ, high-frequency, real-time observations of plankton in coastal waters. While high-frequency plankton time series have provided unprecedented fundamental information about physical and biological processes, understanding and identifying the underlying mechanisms that influence plankton dynamic remains a major challenge. We use high-frequency plankton data from PlanktonScope as an example to examine the impacts of physical and biological processes on plankton dynamics at different temporal scales. Frequency patterns were identified for both environmental factors and different plankton groups that matched in time. Using logistic regression models on the selected daily peaks for different plankton groups, we found that diurnal cycle, monsoon season, and major episodic events, such as typhoons, had major impacts on the dynamics of plankton, as proxied by our indicators. We further synthesized, across multiple spatiotemporal scales in the study area, the impacts of various processes on plankton with different mobility. Our study demonstrates that the suite of plankton indicators simultaneously generated from PlanktonScope provides a robust holistic view of pelagic ecosystem status over a broad range of spatiotemporal scales. In situ imaging systems like PlanktonScope are promising tools for near real-time plankton monitoring and a deep understanding of plankton dynamics. %B Journal of Sea Research %V 189 %P 102283 %8 Jan-11-2022 %G eng %U https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1385110122001216 %! Journal of Sea Research %R 10.1016/j.seares.2022.102283 %0 Journal Article %J Environmental Science and Pollution Research %D 2022 %T Temporal variations in the level of chlordecone in seawater and marine organisms in Martinique Island (Lesser Antilles) %A Charlotte R. Dromard %A Allénou, Jean-Pierre %A Tapie, Nathalie %A Budzinski, Hélène %A Cimmaterra, Nicolas %A De Rock, Pauline %A Arkam, Salim %A Cordonnier, Sébastien %A Gonzalez, Jean-Louis %A Bouchon-Navaro, Yolande %A Bouchon, Claude %A Thouard, Emmanuel %K coral reef %K Mangrove %K organochlorine pollution %K passive samplers %K seagrass %K Stable isotopes %X The present study, conducted in the Galion Bay in Martinique, aims to highlight the temporal and seasonal variations of chlordecone contamination (an organochlorine pollutant) in the ambient environment (seawater) but also in the marine organisms in three main coastal marine habitats (mangroves, seagrass beds and coral reefs). To this end, two methodologies were used to measure and compare the chemical contamination of seawater during 13 months (spot samplings and POCIS technique). In parallel, concentrations of chlordecone and isotopic ratios (C and N) were carried out on marine organisms, collected during two contrasting climatic periods (dry and rainy), to evidence seasonal variations. The results showed that the contamination of seawater displayed significant variations over time and depended on environmental factors such as water flows, which imply dilution and dispersion phenomena. Concerning the marine organisms, the level of contamination varied considerably between the two seasons in seagrass beds with higher levels of contamination during the rainy season. Reef organisms were more moderately affected by this pollution, while mangrove organisms showed a high level of chlordecone whatever the season. Finally, isotope analyses highlighted that bioamplification along marine food-webs occurs at each season and each station. %B Environmental Science and Pollution Research %8 Oct-06-2023 %G eng %U https://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11356-022-21528-9 %! Environ Sci Pollut Res %R 10.1007/s11356-022-21528-9 %0 Journal Article %J Frontiers in Physiology %D 2022 %T Transient Receptor Potential-Vanilloid (TRPV1-TRPV4) Channels in the Atlantic Salmon, Salmo salar. A Focus on the Pineal Gland and Melatonin Production %A Nisembaum, Laura Gabriela %A Loentgen, Guillaume %A L'Honoré, Thibault %A Martin, Patrick %A Paulin, Charles-Hubert %A Fuentès, Michael %A Escoubeyrou, Karine %A Delgado, Maria Jesus %A Besseau, Laurence %A Falcón, Jack %K Atlantic salmon %K melatonin %K pineal organ %K Temperature %K transient receptor potential vanilloid (TRPV) %K TRPV1 %K TRPV4 %X Fish are ectotherm, which rely on the external temperature to regulate their internal body temperature, although some may perform partial endothermy. Together with photoperiod, temperature oscillations, contribute to synchronizing the daily and seasonal variations of fish metabolism, physiology and behavior. Recent studies are shedding light on the mechanisms of temperature sensing and behavioral thermoregulation in fish. In particular, the role of some members of the transient receptor potential channels (TRP) is being gradually unraveled. The present study in the migratory Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar, aims at identifying the tissue distribution and abundance in mRNA corresponding to the TRP of the vanilloid subfamilies, TRPV1 and TRPV4, and at characterizing their putative role in the control of the temperature-dependent modulation of melatonin production—the time-keeping hormone—by the pineal gland. In Salmo salar, TRPV1 and TRPV4 mRNA tissue distribution appeared ubiquitous; mRNA abundance varied as a function of the month investigated. In situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry indicated specific labeling located in the photoreceptor cells of the pineal gland and the retina. Additionally, TRPV analogs modulated the production of melatonin by isolated pineal glands in culture. The TRPV1 agonist induced an inhibitory response at high concentrations, while evoking a bell-shaped response (stimulatory at low, and inhibitory at high, concentrations) when added with an antagonist. The TRPV4 agonist was stimulatory at the highest concentration used. Altogether, the present results agree with the known widespread distribution and role of TRPV1 and TRPV4 channels, and with published data on trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), leading to suggest these channels mediate the effects of temperature on S. salar pineal melatonin production. We discuss their involvement in controlling the timing of daily and seasonal events in this migratory species, in the context of an increasing warming of water temperatures. %B Frontiers in Physiology %V 22 %P 15 %8 01/2022 %G eng %U https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphys.2021.784416/full?&utm_source=Email_to_authors_&utm_medium=Email&utm_content=T1_11.5e1_author&utm_campaign=Email_publication&field=&journalName=Frontiers_in_Physiology&id=784416 %N 784416 %9 original research %R 10.3389/fphys.2021.784416 %0 Journal Article %J Frontiers in Microbiology %D 2021 %T Temporal Patterns and Intra- and Inter-Cellular Variability in Carbon and Nitrogen Assimilation by the Unicellular Cyanobacterium Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142Data_Sheet_1.pdfData_Sheet_2.XLSX %A Polerecky, Lubos %A Masuda, Takako %A Eichner, Meri %A Rabouille, Sophie %A Vancová, Marie %A Kienhuis, Michiel V. M. %A Bernát, Gabor %A Bonomi-Barufi, Jose %A Campbell, Douglas Andrew %A Pascal Claquin %A Červený, Jan %A Giordano, Mario %A Kotabová, Eva %A Kromkamp, Jacco %A Lombardi, Ana Teresa %A Lukeš, Martin %A Prášil, Ondrej %A Stephan, Susanne %A Suggett, David %A Zavřel, Tomas %A Halsey, Kimberly H. %B Frontiers in Microbiology %V 12 %8 Apr-02-2021 %G eng %U https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2021.620915/full %! Front. Microbiol. %R 10.3389/fmicb.2021.62091510.3389/fmicb.2021.620915.s00110.3389/fmicb.2021.620915.s002 %0 Journal Article %J Knowledge & Management of Aquatic Ecosystems %D 2021 %T Temporary turbine and reservoir level management to improve downstream migration of juvenile salmon through a hydropower complex %A Tétard, Stéphane %A Roy, Romain %A Teichert, Nils %A Rancon, Jocelyn %A Courret, Dominique %K Atlantic salmon %K downstream migration %K migratory delay %K operational management %K Turbine shutdown %X Developing management rules to improve downstream migration of salmon smolts in large hydropower plants is essential to limit mortality and migration delay. A 2-year telemetry study was conducted to assess the efficiency of temporary measures to enhance the safety and speed of juvenile salmon passage through the Poutès dam (Allier River, France). 124 smolts were tracked through the reservoir and downstream of the dam, during implementation of turbine modulation and/or shutdown during night and reservoir level lowering. Level lowering significantly reduced median residence time from 3.4 days to 4.4 hours. However, even with high spill during turbine modulation, the risk of smolt being drawn toward the turbines was increased at low reservoir level due to the site’s configuration, greater proximity to the surface and weak repulsive effect of the rack. Moreover, results revealed that a substantial proportion of smolts can migrate during daytime and twilight during floods, even at the beginning of the migration period. Thus targeted turbine shutdown has a good potential to protect smolts, but implementation requires studies taking account of site specificities and a flexible approach. %B Knowledge & Management of Aquatic Ecosystems %P 4 %8 Jan-01-2021 %G eng %U https://www.kmae-journal.org/10.1051/kmae/2021004 %N 422 %! Knowl. Manag. Aquat. Ecosyst. %R 10.1051/kmae/2021004 %0 Journal Article %J Marine Chemistry %D 2021 %T Thermodynamic uptake of atmospheric CO2 in the oligotrophic and semiarid São Francisco estuary (NE Brazil) %A Gwenaël Abril %A Libardoni, Bruno G. %A Brandini, Nilva %A Cotovicz, Luiz C. %A Medeiros, Paulo R.P. %A Cavalcante, Geórgenes H. %A Knoppers, Bastiaan A. %B Marine Chemistry %V 233 %P 103983 %8 01/2021 %G eng %U https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0304420321000682 %! Marine Chemistry %R 10.1016/j.marchem.2021.103983 %0 Journal Article %J Peer Community In Ecology %D 2021 %T Towards a better understanding of the effects of self-shading on Fucus serratus populations %A Cédric Hubas %B Peer Community In Ecology %8 Feb-08-2021 %G eng %U https://ecology.peercommunityin.org/ %! PCI Ecology %R 10.24072/pci.ecology.100086 %0 Journal Article %J Marine Drugs %D 2021 %T Transcriptome Profiling of the Pacific Oyster Crassostrea gigas Visceral Ganglia over a Reproduction Cycle Identifies Novel Regulatory Peptides %A Réalis-Doyelle, Emilie %A Schwartz, Julie %A Cabau, Cédric %A Le Franc, Lorane %A Bernay, Benoît %A Guillaume Rivière %A Klopp, Christophe %A Favrel, Pascal %B Marine Drugs %V 19 %P 452 %8 Jan-08-2021 %G eng %U https://www.mdpi.com/1660-3397/19/8/452 %N 8 %! Marine Drugs %R 10.3390/md19080452 %0 Journal Article %J Mar Drugs %D 2021 %T Transcriptome Profiling of the Pacific Oyster Visceral Ganglia over a Reproduction Cycle Identifies Novel Regulatory Peptides. %A Réalis-Doyelle, Emilie %A Schwartz, Julie %A Cabau, Cédric %A Le Franc, Lorane %A Bernay, Benoît %A Riviere, Guillaume %A Klopp, Christophe %A Favrel, Pascal %X

The neuropeptides involved in the regulation of reproduction in the Pacific oyster () are quite diverse. To investigate this diversity, a transcriptomic survey of the visceral ganglia (VG) was carried out over an annual reproductive cycle. RNA-seq data from 26 samples corresponding to VG at different stages of reproduction were de novo assembled to generate a specific reference transcriptome of the oyster nervous system and used to identify differentially expressed transcripts. Transcriptome mining led to the identification of novel neuropeptide precursors (NPPs) related to the bilaterian Eclosion Hormone (EH), crustacean female sex hormone/Interleukin 17, Nesfatin, neuroparsin/IGFBP, prokineticins, and urotensin I; to the protostome GNQQN, pleurin, prohormones 3 and 4, prothoracotropic hormones (PTTH), and QSamide/PXXXamide; to the lophotrochozoan CCWamide, CLCCY, HFAamide, and LXRX; and to the mollusk-specific NPPs CCCGS, clionin, FYFY, GNamide, GRWRN, GSWN, GWE, IWMPxxGYxx, LXRYamide, RTLFamide, SLRFamide, and WGAGamide. Among the complete repertoire of NPPs, no sex-biased expression was observed. However, 25 NPPs displayed reproduction stage-specific expression, supporting their involvement in the control of gametogenesis or associated metabolisms.

%B Mar Drugs %V 19 %8 2021 Aug 07 %G eng %N 8 %R 10.3390/md19080452 %0 Journal Article %J bioRxiv %D 2021 %T Trophic niche of the invasive gregarious species Crepidula fornicata, in relation to ontogenic changes %A Androuin, Thibault %A Stanislas Dubois %A Cédric Hubas %A Lefebvre, Gwendoline %A Le Grand, Fabienne %A Gauthier Schaal %A Carlier, Antoine %X Crepidula fornicata is a common and widespread invasive gregarious species along the European coast. Among its life-history traits, well documented ontogenic changes in behavior (i.e., motile male to sessile female) suggest a potential shift in feeding strategy across its life stages. Considering the ecological significance of this species in colonized areas, understanding how conspecifics share the trophic resource is crucial. Using fatty acids (FA) and stable isotopes (SI) as complementary trophic markers, we conducted a field survey between late winter and spring to investigate the trophic niche of three ontogenic stages of C. fornicata that bear different sexual (male/female) and motility (motile/sessile) traits. Potential trophic sources were characterized by their pigment, FA and SI compositions and showed well discriminated compositions over the studied period. We showed that the biofilm covering C. fornicata shells harbored a higher biomass of primary producers (i.e., chlorophytes and diatoms) than the surrounding sediment. Over the studied period, we observed a covariation between the three ontogenic stages for both FA and SI compositions which suggest that the trophic niche of C. fornicata does not change significantly across its benthic life. During periods of low food availability, slipper limpets displayed an opportunistic suspension-feeding behaviour, relying on both fresh and detrital organic matter, likely coming from superficial sedimentary organic matter. However, during high food availability (i.e., spring phytoplankton bloom), all ontogenic stages largely benefited from this fresh supply of organic matter (pelagic diatoms in this case). The three ontogenic stages showed consistent differences in FA composition, and to a lesser extent in SI composition. These differences persist over time, as they originate from ontogenic physiological changes (differential growth rates, metabolic rate or gametogenesis) rather than diet discrepancies. This study revealed that multiple trophic markers allow high complementary to characterize organic matter as well as food partitioning between conspecific organisms.
Recommended by PCI Ecology : https://ecology.peercommunityin.org/articles/rec?id=140 %B bioRxiv %P 2020.07.30.229021 %G eng %U https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.07.30.229021v1.abstract %9 ver. 4 peer-reviewed and recommended by Peer Community In Ecology %R 10.1101/2020.07.30.229021 %0 Journal Article %J Microbial Pathogenesis %D 2020 %T Taxonomy and 18S rDNA-based phylogeny of Henneguya multiradiatus n. sp. (Cnidaria: Myxobolidae) a parasite of Brochis multiradiatus from Peruvian Amazon %A Mathews, Patrick D. %A Mertins, Omar %A Espinoza, Luis L. %A Milanin, Tiago %A Alama-Bermejo, Gema %A Audebert, Fabienne %A Morandini, André C. %B Microbial Pathogenesis %V 147 %P 104372 %8 Jan-10-2020 %G eng %U https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0882401020307385 %! Microbial Pathogenesis %R 10.1016/j.micpath.2020.104372 %0 Book Section %B Evolution of Marine Coastal Ecosystems under the Pressure of Global Changes %D 2020 %T Temperature and salinity changes in coastal waters of Western Europe: variability, trends and extreme events %A Charria, Guillaume %A Rimmelin-Maury, Peggy %A Goberville, Eric %A Stéphane L'Helguen %A Barrier, Nicolas %A David-Beausire, Christine %A Cariou, Thierry %A Emilie Grossteffan %A Répécaud, Michel %A Quéméner, Loic %A Theetten, Sébastien %A Paul Tréguer %K Climate variability %K Coastal ecosystems %K Extreme events %K High- and low-frequency in situ sampling %K Large and local forcings %X Coastal marine ecosystems worldwide are not only highly affected by the effects of human activities, but also by the influence of natural climate variability and global climate change. However, it is still a challenge to assess the spatial and temporal scales at which forcings operate and their persistence over time, to determine the vulnerability of coastal ecosystems to climate changes and climate extreme events, and therefore to anticipate the ecological and biological responses of these areas. By investigating these knowledge gaps, our recent studies have shown that the combination of large- and local-scale hydroclimatic influences have induced obvious changes in the physical and chemical characteristics of coastal waters in Western Europe. Because of the complex and non-linear climate-coastal ecosystem relationships, a thorough understanding of the underlying processes is still needed, while extending the spatial and temporal scales of inference. Here, using both high- and low-frequency observations collected from 1998 onwards at the outlet of the Bay of Brest and off Roscoff, we described and documented monthly changes in (1) sea surface temperature, (2) sea surface salinity, (3) river discharges and (4) precipitation patterns. By focusing on the winter period (from December to February), our study revealed that coastal waters of Western Europe are not only significantly connected to large-scale atmospheric conditions and patterns, but also to local-scale drivers such as river discharges. Current strong impacts of regional climate extreme events worldwide led us to devote more attention on understanding the possible impacts of such episodes on the long-term variability and trends of these ecosystems in coastal waters of Western Europe. The signature of extreme events in the Bay of Brest is described and the numerical simulations allowed us to highlight the link between local rivers and changes in salinity. %B Evolution of Marine Coastal Ecosystems under the Pressure of Global Changes %7 H.-J. Ceccaldi et al. %I Springer Nature %C Switzerland %G eng %U https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-3-030-43484-7_15 %& 15 %R 10.1007/978-3-030-43484-7_15 %0 Journal Article %J Frontiers in Marine Science %D 2020 %T Time-Dynamic Food Web Modeling to Explore Environmental Drivers of Ecosystem Change on the Kerguelen Plateau %A Subramaniam, Roshni C. %A Melbourne-Thomas, Jessica %A Corney, Stuart P. %A Alexander, Karen %A Clara Péron %A Ziegler, Philippe %A Swadling, Kerrie M. %X Understanding the impacts of climate and fishing on marine systems is important for ecosystem-based management in the Southern Ocean, but can be difficult to evaluate due to patchy data in space and time. We developed the first time-dynamic food web model for the Kerguelen Plateau using Ecopath with Ecosim to explore likely drivers of change in this relatively data-poor region. The Kerguelen Plateau is located at the centre of intersecting frontal systems and is inhabited by one of the largest populations of the commercially important Patagonian toothfish. We used this model to evaluate the environmental and human drivers of food web dynamics in the region by calibrating it with French and Australian fisheries data from 1997–2018 and biomass data for the period 1986–2018. Fishing was not identified as a driver of food web dynamics within this model, which could indicate that current management strategies are sustainable. A correlation analysis with environmental parameters likely to drive food web dynamics (sea surface temperature, zonal wind, Southern Annular Mode and chlorophyll a concentration) highlighted cool sea surface temperature, higher zonal wind speeds and negative phases of the Southern Annular Mode as important drivers of change, particularly during the summer. As the Southern Ocean is predicted to warm and winds are expected to intensify under future climate change, our study illustrates the importance of considering environmental change in ecosystem management. %B Frontiers in Marine Science %V 7 %P 641 %G eng %U https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2020.00641 %R 10.3389/fmars.2020.00641 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Fish Biology %D 2020 %T A tomographic study of the histological structure of teeth in the gilthead sea bream, %A Germain, Damien %A François J Meunier %X X‐ray tomography shows that caniniform and molariform teeth of the gilthead sea bream, Sparus aurata, have a simplexodont plicidentine organization. Together with an insertion of the teeth in alveolae, and the presence of bony shafts sustaining the dental plate, the simplexodont plicidentine is linked to the durophagous diet of the fish. %B Journal of Fish Biology %V 97 %P 273 - 278 %8 Jan-07-2020 %G eng %U https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/10958649/97/1 %N 1 %! J Fish Biol %R 10.1111/jfb.v97.110.1111/jfb.14373 %0 Journal Article %J Science of The Total Environment %D 2020 %T Towards transferability in fish migration models: A generic operational tool for predicting silver eel migration in rivers %A Teichert, Nils %A Tétard, Stéphane %A Thomas Trancart %A de Oliveira, Eric %A Anthony Acou %A Alexandre Carpentier %A Bourillon, Bastien %A Eric Feunteun %K eel runs prediction %K ensemble modelling %K European eel management %K fish migration %K model transferability %K river obstacle %X In the global context of river fragmentation, predicting fish migration is urgent to implement management actions aimed at protecting and promoting the free movement of diadromous fish. However, large-scale applicability of conservation measures requires transferable models that enable prediction of migration even in data-poor regions. Here, we surveyed 12 contrasted European river sites to predict the activity peaks of silver eels (Anguilla anguilla) during river migration towards spawning areas through an ensemble modelling approach. Site-specific Boosted Regression Tree (BRT) models were adjusted using standardized hydrological variables to predict migration probability, which were aggregated in consensus predictions. Results of independent cross-validations demonstrated that silver eel migration runs were accurately predicted in response to changes in river discharge. Transferability and predictive performance were improved by considering catchment-size dissimilarity between river sites (85 to 109 930 km²) when combining the site-specific predictions. Nevertheless, we provided two examples for which the effects of human actions on flow conditions were so high that they prevented reliable predictions of migration runs. Further contributions should thus take advantage of the flexibility of our approach for updating model collection with new sites to extend the predictive performance under a larger range of ecological conditions. Our transferable hydrological-based modelling framework offers an opportunity to implement large-scale management strategies for eel conservation, even in rivers where eel monitoring data lack. The BRT models and prediction functions were compiled in an R package named ‘silvRpeak’ to facilitate operational implementation by end-user managers, which can determine when mitigation measures should be implemented to improve river continuity (e.g. turbine shutdown and sluice gate opening) and balance their economic activity towards eel conservation. The only input required is discharge records that are widely available across European hydrological stations. %B Science of The Total Environment %V 739 %P 140069 %8 Jan-10-2020 %G eng %U https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0048969720335890 %! Science of The Total Environment %R 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.140069 %0 Journal Article %J Chemosphere %D 2020 %T Transfer of elements released by aluminum galvanic anodes in a marine sedimentary compartment after long-term monitoring in harbor and laboratory environments %A Christelle Caplat %A Olivier Basuyaux %A Pineau, S %A Deborde, Jonathan %A Grolleau, AM %A S. Leglatin %A Mahaut, Marie-Laure %K Aluminum %K galvanic anode %K Harbor %K Marine sediments %K Quality index %K Zinc %X Cathodic protection by galvanic anodes (GACP) is often used to protect immerged metallic structures in harbor environments, especially GACP employing aluminum-based anodes. To follow a previous study that was performed in a laboratory on Al-anode, two monitoring periods were performed in parallel, one in an in situ environment (in the Port of Calais) for 42 months and the other in a laboratory for 18 months, to evaluate the transfer of metals constituting the Al-anode towards the sedimentary compartment. During each monitoring, two conditions of agitation of water (weak and strong) were compared, and different factors of sediment quality were used to assess the enrichment and potential toxic effects of these released metals. The results showed that the dissolution of Al-anode-induced a greater Zn enrichment of sediment than an Al enrichment. This is in contrast with the abundance of these elements present in the composition of the anode and suggested a potential toxic effect for marine organisms with regards to the discovered Zn level, especially in confined areas. %B Chemosphere %V 239 %P 124720 %G eng %U http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0045653519319502 %R 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.124720 %0 Journal Article %J Acta Zoologica %D 2019 %T Teeth of extant Polypteridae and Amiidae have plicidentine organization %A Germain, D %A François J Meunier %K 3D tomography %K Amia %K plicidentine %K Polypterus %K tooth %K virtual histology %X

Abstract The study of teeth of the lower jaws of Amia calva and Polypterus senegalus, with non -destructive X-ray tomography, has revealed that there are dentine folds in the tooth pulp cavity in both species. These folds are simple and present only in the base of the pulp cavity where they strengthen the fixation of teeth on the jaw. So the teeth of these two basal actinopterygian taxa have a simplexodont type of plicidentine like the extinct †Cheirolepis and various extant teleostean predators, whereas the extant Lepisosteids, the sister group of Amiidae, have polyplocodont plicidentine. The phylogenetic/adaptive significance of this simplexodont plicidentine is discussed.

%B Acta Zoologica %V 100 %P 119-125 %G eng %U https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/azo.12237 %R 10.1111/azo.12237 %0 Journal Article %J Nature Climate Change %D 2019 %T Temperature patterns and mechanisms influencing coral bleaching during the 2016 El Niño %A McClanahan, T.R. %A Darling, E.S. %A Maina, J.M. %A Muthiga, N.A. %A D’agata, S. %A Jupiter, S.D. %A Arthur, R. %A Wilson, S.K. %A Mangubhai, S. %A Nand, Y. %A Ussi, A.M. %A Humphries, A.T. %A Patankar, V.J. %A Mireille M.M. Guillaume %A Philippe Keith %A Shedrawi, G. %A Julius, P. %A Grimsditch, G. %A Ndagala, J. %A Leblond, J. %K Algae %K Anthozoa %X Under extreme heat stress, corals expel their symbiotic algae and colour (that is, ‘bleaching’), which often leads to widespread mortality. Predicting the large-scale environmental conditions that reinforce or mitigate coral bleaching remains unresolved and limits strategic conservation actions1,2. Here we assessed coral bleaching at 226 sites and 26 environmental variables that represent different mechanisms of stress responses from East Africa to Fiji through a coordinated effort to evaluate the coral response to the 2014–2016 El Niño/Southern Oscillation thermal anomaly. We applied common time-series methods to study the temporal patterning of acute thermal stress and evaluated the effectiveness of conventional and new sea surface temperature metrics and mechanisms in predicting bleaching severity. The best models indicated the importance of peak hot temperatures, the duration of cool temperatures and temperature bimodality, which explained 50% of the variance, compared to the common degree-heating week temperature index that explained only 9%. Our findings suggest that the threshold concept as a mechanism to explain bleaching alone was not as powerful as the multidimensional interactions of stresses, which include the duration and temporal patterning of hot and cold temperature extremes relative to average local conditions. © 2019, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited. %B Nature Climate Change %V 9 %P 845-851 %G eng %U https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-019-0576-8 %R 10.1038/s41558-019-0576-8 %0 Journal Article %J Ecography %D 2019 %T Testing methods in species distribution modelling using virtual species: what have we learnt and what are we missing? %A Meynard, Christine N. %A Leroy, Boris %A Kaplan, David M. %B Ecography %V 42 %P 2021 - 2036 %8 May-12-2020 %G eng %U https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ecog.04385 %N 12 %! Ecography %R 10.1111/ecog.04385 %0 Journal Article %J Cybium %D 2019 %T A third European species of grayling (Actinopterygii, Salmonidae), endemic to the Loire River basin (France), Thymallus ligericus n. sp. %A Persat, Henri %A Weiss, Steven J. %A Froufe, Elsa %A Secci-Petretto, Giulia %A Denys, Gaël %X Loire grayling was already known to belong to a distinct lineage, compared to other European population, according to molecular data (enzymatic polymorphism, mtDNA sequencing and microsatellites). In this paper, we consider this lineage as a new species, Thymallus ligericus n. sp., which is endemic to the Loire drainage (France). Compared with the other species, T. ligericus n. sp. is characterized by a more elongated body, the presence of a pointed snout and a strait or convex snout profile, a more inferior mouth with a transversal aperture and a fleshier upper lip, usually more than 50 to several hundreds black dots on the flanks, a shorter head (20.0-23.7% SL), smaller occipital and orbital depths of the head (54.8-71.7% HL and 43.5-53.4% HL, respectively) and a shorter horizontal eye diameter (22.6-26.3% HL). %B Cybium %V 43 %P 233-238 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Cybium %D 2019 %T Threatened fish: Lentipes rubrofasciatus Maugé, Marquet and Laboute, 1992 (Gobiidae) %A Philippe Keith %A Marion Mennesson %B Cybium %V 43 %P 123-124 %G eng %U http://sfi-cybium.fr/fr/threatened-fish-lentipes-rubrofasciatus-maug%C3%A9-marquet-laboute-1992-gobiidae %N 2 %R 10.26028/cybium/2019-423-001 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of the Royal Society Interface %D 2019 %T Three-dimensional structural evolution of the cuttlefish Sepia officinalis shell from embryo to adult stages %A Le Pabic, Charles %A Derr, Julien %A Luquet, Gilles %A Pascal Jean Lopez %A Laure Bonnaud-Ponticelli %B Journal of the Royal Society Interface %V 16 %P 20190175 %G eng %U https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02318453 %R 10.1098/rsif.2019.0175 %0 Journal Article %J Frontiers in Environmental Science %D 2019 %T Tissue-Specific Biomarker Responses in the Blue Mussel Mytilus spp. Exposed to a Mixture of Microplastics at Environmentally Relevant Concentrations %A Revel, Messika %A Lagarde, Fabienne %A Perrein-Ettajani, Hanane %A Bruneau, Mélanie %A Akcha, Farida %A Sussarellu, Rossana %A Rouxel, Julien %A Katherine Costil %A Decottignies, Priscilla %A Cognie, Bruno %A Châtel, Amélie %A Mouneyrac, Catherine %K biomarkers %K microplastics %K Mytilus %K oxidative stress %K polyethylene %K polypropylene %X The impact of a microplastic (MP) mixture composed of polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) plastic particles, prepared from commercially available products, was evaluated in blue mussels Mytilus spp. exposed to three environmentally relevant concentrations: 0.008 μg L−1 (low), 10 μg L−1 (medium), and 100 μg L−1 (high). Organisms were exposed for 10 days followed by 10 days of depuration in clean seawater under controlled laboratory conditions. The evaluation of MP effects on mussel clearance rate, tissue structure, antioxidant defenses, immune and digestive parameters, and DNA integrity were investigated while the identification of plastic particles in mussel tissues (gills, digestive gland, and remaining tissues), and biodeposits (feces and pseudofaeces) was performed using infrared microscopy (μFT-IR). Results showed the presence of MPs only in the digestive gland of mussels exposed to the highest tested concentration of MPs with a mean of 0.75 particle/mussel (after the 10 days of exposure). In biodeposits, PE and PP particles were detected following exposure to all tested concentrations confirming the ingestion of MPs by the organisms. A differential response of antioxidant enzyme activities between digestive gland and gills was observed. Significant increases in superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) activities were measured in the digestive gland of mussels exposed to the low (0.008 μg L−1) and medium (10 μg L−1) concentrations ofMPs and in the gills frommussels exposed to the highest concentration (100 μg L−1) of MPs that could be indicative of a change in the redox balance. Moreover, an increase in acid phosphatase activity was measured in hemolymph of mussels exposed to 0.008 and 10 μg L−1 concentrations. No significant difference was observed in the clearance rate, and histopathological parameters between control and exposed mussels. This study brings new insights on the potential sublethal impacts of MPs at environmentally relevant concentrations in marine bivalves. %B Frontiers in Environmental Science %V 7 %8 Sep-03-2020 %G eng %U https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2019.00033 %! Front. Environ. Sci. %R 10.3389/fenvs.2019.00033 %0 Journal Article %J Limnology and Oceanography %D 2019 %T The transformation of macrophyte-derived organic matter to methane relates to plant water and nutrient contents %A Charlotte Grasset %A Gwenaël Abril %A Raquel Mendonça %A Fabio Roland %A Sebastian Sobek %B Limnology and Oceanography %8 mar %G eng %U https://doi.org/10.1002/lno.11148 %R 10.1002/lno.11148 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Sea Research %D 2019 %T Trophic relationships and basal resource utilisation in the Can Gio Mangrove Biosphere Reserve (Southern Vietnam) %A Frank David %A Cyril Marchand %A Nguyen, Thanh-Nho %A Pierre Taillardat %A Tarik Meziane %X

Abstract Fatty acid biomarkers and dual stable isotopes (δ13C and δ15N) were used to identify the preferred food sources of consumers in a mangrove tidal creek and nearby unforested (mud bank) and forested areas located in the Can Gio Mangrove Biosphere Reserve (Southern Vietnam). We analysed 15 macro-invertebrates and 1 fish species representing primary consumers and their immediate predators in this area. Specific groups of fatty acids were used to trace the fate of various food sources (i.e., suspended particulate organic matter, mangrove litter and sedimentary organic matter). The δ13C and δ15N of consumers ranged from −26.9 to −18.8‰ and from 1.1 to 9.9‰, respectively. The trophic pathway based on mangrove litter, characteristic of mangrove ecosystems, is nutritionally sustaining various crab and snail species. In contrast, it appears that the most mobile species (fish and shrimps), living in the water column and possibly migrating with tides, are mostly feeding on suspended particulate organic matter, suggesting that this trophic pathway is of great importance for connectivity among tropical coastal ecosystems. Our study suggests that snails and crabs mainly act as mineralisers, processing high quantities of detrital material to meet their nutritional needs and thus releasing nutrients through the production of faeces, that are further mineralised by microorganisms, while locally grown phytoplankton reintegrates these compounds into its biomass and feeds migrating species. We highlight here a possible link between mangrove litter and coastal food webs.

%B Journal of Sea Research %G eng %U https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1385110118301679 %M 10.1016/j.seares.2018.12.006 %R 10.1016/j.seares.2018.12.006 %0 Journal Article %J Frontiers in Endocrinology %D 2018 %T Tachykinin-3 Genes and Peptides Characterized in a Basal Teleost, the European Eel: Evolutionary Perspective and Pituitary Role. %A Campo, Aurora %A Anne-Gaelle Lafont %A Lefranc, Benjamin %A Leprince, Jérôme %A Tostivint, Hervé %A Kamech, Nedia %A Sylvie Dufour %A Karine Rousseau %B Frontiers in Endocrinology %V 9 %P 304 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Aquatic Living Resources %D 2018 %T Temporal variation of secondary migrations potential: concept of temporal windows in four commercial bivalve species %A Martin Forêt %A Réjean Tremblay %A Urs Neumeier %A Frédéric Olivier %K Bivalves recruits %K drifting %K secondary migrations %K temporal windows %X

Post-settlement dispersal potential of four commercial bivalve species (Mytilus edulis, Pecten maximus, Venus verrucosa and Ruditapes philippinarum) were studied through the assessment of recruits' sinking velocities by using a sinking velocity tube of five meters height. In parallel, dynamics of shear stress were monitored for five months on a tidal habitat characterized by the presence and the dispersal of the four species. By coupling both datasets we propose first theoretical estimates of temporal windows of secondary migrations. These experiments revealed interspecific differences in migration potential relate to shell shapes and behaviour, especially to secretion of byssal threads. The sensitivity to passive and active post-settlement migrations seems to rely on the synchronisation between the arrival on the sediment, the tidal regime (spring tide, neap tide), but also the rate of growth of the recruits. The present study confirms that patterns of secondary migrations of bivalve recruits result from a close physical-biological coupling involving benthic boundary layer (BBL) hydrodynamics and shell morphology as well as eco-ethological responses to environmental conditions but clearly modulated by the growth dynamics until a threshold size when drifting is no longer possible.

%B Aquatic Living Resources %V 31 %P 1-9 %8 08/2018 %G eng %U https://www.alr-journal.org/articles/alr/abs/2018/01/alr170158/alr170158.html %N 19 %R https://doi.org/10.1051/alr/2018007 %0 Journal Article %J Diversity and Distribution %D 2018 %T Testing the transferability of track‐based habitat models for sound marine spatial planning %A Clara Péron %A Authier, Matthieu %A Grémillet, David %K biologging %K habitat modelling; transferability;central place foragers %X Aim

Species distribution models (SDMs) are statistical tools aiming at mapping and predicting species distributions across landscapes. Data acquisition being limited in space and time, SDM are commonly used to predict species distribution in unsampled areas or years, with the expectation that modelled habitat–species relationships will hold across spatial or temporal contexts (i.e., model transferability). This key aspect of habitat modelling has major implications for spatial management, yet it has received limited attention, especially in the dynamic marine realm. Our aims were to test geographical and temporal habitat model transferability and to make recommendations for future population‐scale habitat modelling.

Location

Two contrasted regions of the North Western Mediterranean Sea: the cold and productive waters of the Gulf of Lion, and the warm and oligotrophic waters of Corsica.

Methods

We GPS‐tracked 189 Scopoli's shearwaters, Calonectris diomedea, at four breeding sites during the chick‐rearing period in 2011 and 2012 (418 foraging trips), and analysed their fine‐scale foraging behaviour. We then built colony‐specific habitat models (GAMMs) to test SDM geographical and temporal transferability and investigated the effect of extrinsic (environmental extrapolation) and intrinsic (trip characteristics) factors on transferability.

Results

Scopoli's shearwaters from our four study sites had comparable foraging strategies (as assessed from trip characteristics and isotopic diet tracers). Despite such similarities, SDMs revealed colony‐specific habitat associations. Geographical and temporal model transferability was better within than between regions.

Main conclusions

Crucially, our study illustrates how habitat–species relationships can vary between colonies located <200 km apart, and underlines the effect of spatio‐temporal extrapolation in habitat modelling. We therefore warn that defining adequate spatial scales for model predictions is critical to sound marine spatial planning and conservation. %B Diversity and Distribution %V 24 %P 1772-1787 %8 12/2018 %G eng %U https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/ddi.12832 %N 12 %R 10.1111/ddi.12832 %0 Journal Article %J Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety %D 2018 %T Toxicological effects of CdSe nanocrystals on the marine diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum: The first mass spectrometry-based proteomic approach %A Poirier, Isabelle %A Pallud, Marie %A Kuhn, Lauriane %A Hammann, Philippe %A Demortière, Arnaud %A Jamali, Arash %A Chicher, Johana %A Christelle Caplat %A Gallon, Régis Kevin %A Bertrand, Martine %B Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety %V 152 %P 78 - 90 %8 Jan-05-2018 %G eng %U https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0147651318300514?via%3Dihub %! Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety %R 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2018.01.043 %0 Journal Article %J Chemosphere %D 2018 %T Trace metals partitioning between particulate and dissolved phases along a tropical mangrove estuary (Can Gio, Vietnam) %A Thanh-Nho, Nguyen %A Strady, Emilie %A Nhu-Trang, Tran–Thi %A Frank David %A Marchand, Cyril %X Mangroves can be considered as biogeochemical reactors along (sub)tropical coastlines, acting both as sinks or sources for trace metals depending on environmental factors. In this study, we characterized the role of a mangrove estuary, developing downstream a densely populated megacity (Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam), on the fate and partitioning of trace metals. Surface water and suspended particulate matter were collected at four sites along the estuarine salinity gradient during 24 h cycling in dry and rainy seasons. Salinity, pH, DO, TSS, POC, DOC, dissolved and particulate Fe, Mn, Cr, As, Cu, Ni, Co and Pb were measured. TSS was the main trace metals carrier during their transit in the estuary. However, TSS variations did not explain the whole variability of metals distribution. Mn, Cr and As were highly reactive metals while the other metals (Fe, Ni, Cu, Co and Pb) presented stable log KD values along the estuary. Organic matter dynamic appeared to play a key role in metals fractioning. Its decomposition during water transit in the estuary induced metal desorption, especially for Cr and As. Conversely, dissolved Mn concentrations decreased along the estuary, which was suggested to result from Mn oxidative precipitation onto solid phase due to oxidation and pH changes. Extra sources as pore-water release, runoff from adjacent soils, or aquaculture effluents were suggested to be involved in trace metal dynamic in this estuary. In addition, the monsoon increased metal loads, notably dissolved and particulate Fe, Cr, Ni and Pb. %B Chemosphere %V 196 %P 311–322 %G eng %U https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0045653517321677 %R 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2017.12.189 %0 Journal Article %J Ecosphere %D 2018 %T Trophic cues promote secondary migrations of bivalve recruits in a highly dynamic temperate intertidal system %A Foret, Martin %A Barbier, Pierrick %A Tremblay, Rejean %A Tarik Meziane %A Neumeier, Urs %A Duvieilbourg, Eric %A Olivier, Frédéric %B Ecosphere %V 9 %P e02510 %8 Apr-12-2018 %G eng %U https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/21508925/9/12 %N 12 %! Ecosphere %R 10.1002/ecs2.2018.9.issue-1210.1002/ecs2.2510 %0 Journal Article %J Ecosphere %D 2018 %T Trophic cues promote secondary migrations of bivalve recruits in a highly dynamic temperate intertidal system %A Foret, Martin %A Barbier, Pierrick %A Tremblay, Rejean %A Meziane, Tarik %A Neumeier, Urs %A Duvieilbourg, Eric %A Olivier, Frédéric %B Ecosphere %V 9 %P e02510 %8 Apr-12-2018 %G eng %U https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/21508925/9/12 %N 12 %! Ecosphere %R 10.1002/ecs2.2018.9.issue-1210.1002/ecs2.2510 %0 Journal Article %J Ecology of Freshwater Fish %D 2018 %T Trophic ecology of speckled peacock bass Cichla temensis Humboldt 1821 in the middle Negro River, Amazon, Brazil %A Jamerson Aguiar-Santos %A Pieter A. P. deHart %A Marc Pouilly %A Carlos E.C. Freitas %A Flávia K. Siqueira-Souza %B Ecology of Freshwater Fish %V 27 %P 1076–1086 %G eng %U https://doi.org/10.1111/eff.12416 %R 10.1111/eff.12416 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS ONE %D 2017 %T Tempo and Rates of diversification in the South American Cichlid Genus Apistogramma (Teleostei: Perciformes: Cichlidae) %A Tougard, C %A Garcia Davila, C %A Römer, U %A Fabrice Duponchelle %A Cerqueira, F %A Guinand, B %A Angulo Chávez, C %A Salas, V %A Sophie Quérouil %A Sirvas Cornero, S %A Renno, Jean-Francois %B PLoS ONE %V in press %G eng %0 Journal Article %J ICES Journal of Marine Science %D 2017 %T Towards ecosystem-based management: identifying operational food-web indicators for marine ecosystems %A Tam, Jamie C %A Link, Jason S %A Rossberg, Axel G. %A Rogers, Stuart I %A Levin, Philip S %A Rochet, Marie-Joëlle %A Bundy, Alida %A Belgrano, Andrea %A Libralato, Simone %A Maciej Tomasz Tomczak %A van de Wolfshaar, K %A Pranovi, F %A Gorokhova, E %A Large, S I %A Nathalie Niquil %A Greenstreet, SPR %A Druon, JN %A Lesutiene, J %A Johansen, M %A Preciado, I %A Patrício, Joana %A Palialexis, A %A Tett, P %A Johansen, GO %A Houle, J %A Rindorf, A %B ICES Journal of Marine Science %P fsw230 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Environmental Science and Pollution Research %D 2017 %T Toxicity assessment of five emerging pollutants, alone and in binary or ternary mixtures, towards three aquatic organisms %A Di Poi, Carole %A Katherine Costil %A Bouchart, Valerie %A Halm-Lemeille, Marie-Pierre %K Freshwater species %K Marine bivalve %K Mixture and single-compound toxicity %K Personal care products %K Pesticides %K pharmaceuticals %X

Despite a growing scientific attention on ecological impact of emerging pollutants (EPs) such as pharmaceuticals, personal care products, and pesticides, knowledge gaps remain regarding mixture toxicity and effects on aquatic organisms. Several EPs were screened in seawater (Normandy, France), and the ecotoxicity of five compounds, chosen on their occurrence in ecosystems and use worldwide, was assessed and were the biocides methylparaben (MP) and triclosan (TCS), a pesticide degradation product (AMPA), and the pharmaceuticals venlafaxine (VEN) and carbamazepine (CBZ). The acute or sub-chronic toxicity, alone or in binary/ternary mixtures of three of them (CBZ, AMPA, and MP), was assessed on one marine and two freshwater organisms: Crassostrea gigas, Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata, and Daphnia magna. TCS and AMPA were, respectively, the most (EC50 < 1 mg L−1) and the least (EC50 > 50 mg L−1) toxic chemicals for the four endpoints (algal growth inhibition, daphnia immobilization, oyster embryotoxicity, and metamorphosis). The anxiolytic VEN (EC50 < 1 mg L−1) was particularly toxic to oyster larvae showing sensitivity difference between freshwater and marine organisms. If all the mixtures appeared to be in the same range of toxicity, the joint-toxic effects mainly led to synergistic or antagonistic interactions compared to single-compound toxicity. The data also highlighted species-dependent differing models of toxicity and underscored the need for an awareness of cocktail effects for better ecological risk assessment.

%B Environmental Science and Pollution Research %G eng %R DOI 10.1007/s11356-017-9306-9 %0 Journal Article %J Zootaxa %D 2017 %T Two new ovoviviparous species of the family Selachinematidae and Sphaerolaimidae (Nematoda, Chromadorida and Monhysterida) from the northern South China Sea %A Sujing Fu %A Boucher, G %A Lizhe Cai %K Bendiella vivipara n. sp. %K free-living marine nematodes %K ovoviviparity %K Parasphaerolaimus jintiani n. sp. %K South China Sea %X

Two new ovoviviparous nematode species are described from South China Sea. Bendiella vivipara n. sp. belongs to the family Selachinematidae and is characterized by a cuticle with lateral differentiation of 2–4 longitudinal rows of dots, and the presence of 3 papillose precloacal supplements. Parasphaerolaimus jintiani n. sp. is characterized by a cuticle with lateral longitudinal unstriated band extending from about the middle of the pharynx to the anterior two-thirds of the tail and a vulva situated far posteriorly. The importance of ovoviviparity in free living marine nematodes is discussed.

%B Zootaxa %V 4317 %P 95-110 %8 01/09/2017 %G eng %U https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.4317.1.4 %N 1 %R 10.11646/zootaxa.4317.1.4 %0 Journal Article %J Fottea %D 2017 %T Two new Tursiocola species (Bacillariophyta) epizoic on green turtles (Chelonia mydas) in French Guiana and Eastern Caribbean %A Riaux-Gobin, Catherine %A Witkowski, Andrzej %A Chevallier, Damien %A Daniszewska-Kowalczyk, Genowefa %B Fottea %V 17 %P 150 - 163 %8 Aug-09-2018 %G eng %U http://fottea.czechphycology.cz/doi/10.5507/fot.2017.007.html %N 2 %! FotteaFottea, Olomouc %R 10.5507/fot.2017.007 %0 Journal Article %J Ringing & Migration %D 2016 %T Tele-anaesthesia’: a new approach to wild bird capture under field conditions %A Chevallier, Damien %A Dehorter, Olivier %A Brossard, Christian %A Larvol, Jean-Pierre %B Ringing & Migration %V 31 %P 77 - 80 %8 Jan-06-2017 %G eng %U http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03078698.2016.1190549 %N 1 %! Ringing & Migration %R 10.1080/03078698.2016.1190549 %0 Journal Article %J Gen Comp Endocrinol %D 2016 %T Three nuclear and two membrane estrogen receptors in basal teleosts, Anguilla sp.: Identification, evolutionary history and differential expression regulation. %A Anne-Gaelle Lafont %A Karine Rousseau %A Tomkiewicz, Jonna %A Sylvie Dufour %X

Estrogens interact with classical intracellular nuclear receptors (ESR), and with G-coupled membrane receptors (GPER). In the eel, we identified three nuclear (ESR1, ESR2a, ESR2b) and two membrane (GPERa, GPERb) estrogen receptors. Duplicated ESR2 and GPER were also retrieved in most extant teleosts. Phylogeny and synteny analyses suggest that they result from teleost whole genome duplication (3R). In contrast to conserved 3R-duplicated ESR2 and GPER, one of 3R-duplicated ESR1 has been lost shortly after teleost emergence. Quantitative PCRs revealed that the five receptors are all widely expressed in the eel, but with differential patterns of tissue expression and regulation. ESR1 only is consistently up-regulated in vivo in female eel BPG-liver axis during induced sexual maturation, and also up-regulated in vitro by estradiol in eel hepatocyte primary cultures. This first comparative study of the five teleost estradiol receptors provides bases for future investigations on differential roles that may have contributed to the conservation of multiple estrogen receptors.

%B Gen Comp Endocrinol %V 235 %P 177-91 %8 2016 Sep 1 %G eng %R 10.1016/j.ygcen.2015.11.021 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Applied Ecology %D 2016 %T Trans-Amazonian natal homing in giant catfish %A Fabrice Duponchelle %A Marc Pouilly %A Pecheyran, Christophe %A Hauser, Marilia %A Renno, Jean-Francois %A Panfili, Jacques %A Darnaude, Audrey M. %A García-Vasquez, Aurea %A Carvajal-Vallejos, Fernando %A Carmen García-Dávila %A Doria, Carolina %A Bérail, Sylvain %A Donard, Ariane %A Sondag, Francis %A Santos, Roberto V. %A Jesus Nuñez-Rodriguez %A Point, David %A Labonne, Maylis %A Baras, Etienne %K 87Sr/86Sr ratios %K Amazon %K anthropogenic activities %K Brachyplatystoma spp %K freshwater fish %K giant catfish %K hydroelectric dams %K Migration %K otoliths %X

1.Knowledge of fish migration is a prerequisite to sustainable fisheries management and preservation, especially in large international river basins. In particular, understanding whether a migratory lifestyle is compulsory or facultative, and whether adults home to their natal geographic area is paramount to fully appraise disruptions of longitudinal connectivity resulting from damming.2.In the Amazon, the large migratory catfishes of the Brachyplatystoma genus are apex predators of considerable interest for fisheries. They are believed to use the entire length of the basin to perform their life cycle, with hypothesized homing behaviours. Here we tested these hypotheses, using the emblematic B. rousseauxii as a model species.3.We sampled adults close to major breeding areas in the Amazon basin (upper Madeira and upper Amazonas) and assessed their lifetime movements by measuring variations in 87Sr/86Sr along transverse sections of their otoliths (ear stones) using laser ablation multicollector mass spectrometry (LA-MC-ICPMS).4.We demonstrate that larvae migrate downstream from the Andean piedmont to the lower Amazon, where they grow over a protracted period before migrating upstream as adults. Contrary to prevailing inferences, not all fish spend their nursery stages in the Amazon estuary. By contrast, the passage in the lower or central Amazon seems an obligate part of the life cycle. We further evidence that most adults home to their natal geographic area within the Madeira sub-basin. Such long-distance natal homing is exceptional in purely freshwater fishes.5.Synthesis and applications. By using otolith microchemistry, we were able to demonstrate a seemingly compulsory basin-wide migratory life cycle of large Amazonian catfishes. This makes them the organisms performing the longest migrations (>8000 km) in fresh waters. This exceptional life history is already jeopardized by two dams recently built in the Madeira River, which block a major migration route and access to a substantial part of their spawning grounds. Major impacts can be anticipated from the current and forthcoming hydroelectric development in the Amazon basin, not only on the populations and fisheries of this apex predator, but also on Amazonian food webs through trophic cascades.This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

%B Journal of Applied Ecology %V 53 %P 1511-1520 %G eng %U http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.12665 %R 10.1111/1365-2664.12665 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Fish Biology %D 2015 %T Temporal and spatial distribution of young Brachyplatystoma spp. (Siluriformes: Pimelodidae) along the rapids stretch of the Madeira River (Brazil) before the construction of two hydroelectric dams %A Cella Ribeiro, A. %A Fugimoto Assakawa, L. %A Torrente-Vilara, Gislene %A Zuanon, Jansen %A Leite, R.G. %A Doria, C. %A Fabrice Duponchelle %B Journal of Fish Biology %V 86 %P 1429-37 %8 04/2015 %G eng %N 4 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Fish Biology %D 2015 %T Temporal and spatial distribution of young Brachyplatystoma spp. (Siluriformes: Pimelodidae) along the rapids stretch of the Madeira River (Brazil) before the construction of two hydroelectric dams %A Cella-Ribeiro, Ariana %A Assakawa, L. F. %A Torrente-Vilara, Gislene %A Zuanon, Jansen %A Leite, R. G. %A Doria, C. %A Fabrice Duponchelle %B Journal of Fish Biology %V 86 %P 1429-1437 %G eng %N 4 %0 Journal Article %J Environ Sci Pollut Res Int %D 2015 %T The three steps of the carbonate biogenic dissolution process by microborers in coral reefs (New Caledonia). %A Grange, J %A Hervé Rybarczyk %A Tribollet, A %X

Biogenic dissolution of carbonates by microborers is one of the main destructive forces in coral reefs and is predicted to be enhanced by eutrophication and ocean acidification by 2100. The chlorophyte Ostreobium sp., the main agent of this process, has been reported to be one of the most responsive of all microboring species to those environmental factors. However, very little is known about its recruitment, how it develops over successions of microboring communities, and how that influences rates of biogenic dissolution. Thus, an experiment with dead coral blocks exposed to colonization by microborers was carried out on a reef in New Caledonia over a year period. Each month, a few blocks were collected to study microboring communities and the associated rates of biogenic dissolution. Our results showed a drastic shift in community species composition between the 4th and 5th months of exposure, i.e., pioneer communities dominated by large chlorophytes such as Phaeophila sp. were replaced by mature communities dominated by Ostreobium sp. Prior the 4th month of exposure, large chlorophytes were responsible for low rates of biogenic dissolution while during the community shift, rates increased exponentially (×10). After 6 months of exposure, rates slowed down and reached a "plateau" with a mean of 0.93 kg of CaCO3 dissolved per m(2) of reef after 12 months of exposure. Here, we show that (a) Ostreobium sp. settled down in new dead substrates as soon as the 3rd month of exposure but dominated communities only after 5 months of exposure and (b) microbioerosion dynamics comprise three distinct steps which fully depend on community development stage and grazing pressure.

%B Environ Sci Pollut Res Int %8 2015 Jan 17 %G eng %R 10.1007/s11356-014-4069-z %0 Journal Article %J Dev Comp Immunol %D 2015 %T The Toll/NF-κB pathway in cuttlefish symbiotic accessory nidamental gland. %A Cornet, Valérie %A Joël Henry %A Corre, Erwan %A Gildas Le Corguille %A Céline Zatylny-Gaudin %X

The female genital apparatus of decapod cephalopods contains a symbiotic accessory nidamental gland (ANG) that harbors bacterial symbionts. Although the ANG bacterial consortium is now well described, the impact of symbiosis on Sepia officinalis innate immunity pathways remains unknown. In silico analysis of the de novo transcriptome of ANG highlighted for the first time the existence of the NF-κB pathway in S. officinalis. Several signaling components were identified, i.e. five Toll-like receptors, eight signaling cascade features, and the immune response target gene iNOS, previously described as being involved in the initiation of bacterial symbiosis in a cephalopod gland. This work provides a first key for studying bacterial symbiosis and its impact on innate immunity in S. officinalis ANG.

%B Dev Comp Immunol %V 53 %P 42-46 %8 2015 Jul 2 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1016/j.dci.2015.06.016 %0 Journal Article %J Oikos %D 2015 %T Towards understanding the organisation of metacommunities in highly dynamic ecological systems %A T. Datry %A N. Bonada %A J. Heino %X

ABSTRACT: Community ecology recognises today that local biological communities are not only affected by local biotic interactions and abiotic environmental conditions, but also by regional processes (e.g. dispersal). While much is known about how metacommunities are organised in space in terrestrial, marine and freshwater ecological systems, their temporal variations remain poorly studied. Here, we address the question of the dynamics of metacommunities in highly variable systems, using intermittent rivers (IRs), those rivers which temporarily stop flowing or dry up, as a model system. We first review how habitat heterogeneity in space and time influences metacommunity organisation. Second, we compare the metacommunities in IRs to those in perennial rivers (PRs) and develop the idea that IRs could undergo highly dynamic shifts due to the temporal variability in local and regional community processes. Third, we develop the idea that in IRs, metacommunities of the wet and dry phases of IRs are closely intertwined, thereby increasing even more their respective temporal dynamics. Last, we provide a roadmap to stimulate further conceptual and empirical developments of metacommunity research and identify possible applications for improving the management of IRs and other highly dynamic ecological systems.

%B Oikos %G eng %R doi: 10.1111/oik.02922 %0 Journal Article %J Aquat Toxicol %D 2015 %T Trace metal concentrations in post-hatching cuttlefish Sepia officinalis and consequences of dissolved zinc exposure. %A Le Pabic, C %A Christelle Caplat %A Lehodey Jean-Paul %A Milinkovitch, Thomas %A Siméoni Koueta-Noussithé %A Cosson, Richard Philippe %A Paco Bustamante %X

In this study, we investigated the changes of 13 trace metal and metalloid concentrations (i.e. Ag, As, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni, Pb, Se, V, Zn) and their subcellular fractionation in juvenile cuttlefish Sepia officinalis reared in controlled conditions between hatching and 2 months post-hatching. In parallel, metallothionein concentrations were determined. Our results highlighted contrasting changes of studied metals. Indeed, As and Fe concentrations measured in hatchlings suggested a maternal transfer of these elements in cuttlefish. The non-essential elements Ag and Cd presented the highest accumulation during our study, correlated with the digestive gland maturation. During the 6 first weeks of study, soluble fractions of most of essential trace metals (i.e. Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Se, Zn) slowly increased consistently with the progressive needs of cuttlefish metabolism during this period. In order to determine for the first time in a cephalopod how metal concentrations and their subcellular distributions are impacted when the animals are trace metal-exposed, we studied previously described parameters in juveniles exposed to dissolved Zn at environmental (i.e. 50 μg l(-1)) and sublethal (i.e. 200 μg l(-1)) levels. Moreover, oxidative stress (i.e. glutathione S-transferase (GST), superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase activities, and lipid peroxidation (LPO)) was assessed in digestive gland and gills after 1 and 2 months exposures. Our results highlighted no or low ability of this stage of life to regulate dissolved Zn accumulation during the studied period, consistently with high sensitivity of this organism. Notably, Zn exposures caused a concentration-dependent Mn depletion in juvenile cuttlefish, and an increase of soluble fraction of Ag, Cd, Cu without accumulation modifications, suggesting substitution of these elements (i.e. Mn, Ag, Cd, Cu) by Zn. In parallel, metallothionein concentrations decreased in individuals most exposed to Zn. Finally, no perturbations in oxidative stress management were detected in gills, whereas modifications of GST, SOD and catalase activity levels were recorded in digestive gland, resulting in an increase of LPO content after a 6-week exposure to low Zn concentration. Altogether, these perturbations are consistent with previously described high sensitivity of juvenile cuttlefish towards Zn. Our results underlined the need to study deeply contamination impact on this animal at this stage of life.

%B Aquat Toxicol %V 159 %P 23-35 %8 2015 Feb %G eng %R 10.1016/j.aquatox.2014.11.012 %0 Journal Article %J Fish Shellfish Immunol %D 2015 %T Transcriptome analysis reveals strong and complex antiviral response in a mollusc. %A He, Yan %A Jouaux, Aude %A Ford, Susan E %A Christophe Lelong %A Pascal Sourdaine %A Mathieu, Michel %A Guo, Ximing %X

Viruses are highly abundant in the oceans, and how filter-feeding molluscs without adaptive immunity defend themselves against viruses is not well understood. We studied the response of a mollusc Crassostrea gigas to Ostreid herpesvirus 1 µVar (OsHV-1μVar) infections using transcriptome sequencing. OsHV-1μVar can replicate extremely rapidly after challenge of C. gigas as evidenced by explosive viral transcription and DNA synthesis, which peaked at 24 and 48 h post-inoculation, respectively, accompanied by heavy oyster mortalities. At 120 h post-injection, however, viral gene transcription and DNA load, and oyster mortality, were greatly reduced indicating an end of active infections and effective control of viral replication in surviving oysters. Transcriptome analysis of the host revealed strong and complex responses involving the activation of all major innate immune pathways that are equipped with expanded and often novel receptors and adaptors. Novel Toll-like receptor (TLR) and MyD88-like genes lacking essential domains were highly up-regulated in the oyster, possibly interfering with TLR signal transduction. RIG-1/MDA5 receptors for viral RNA, interferon-regulatory factors, tissue necrosis factors and interleukin-17 were highly activated and likely central to the oyster's antiviral response. Genes related to anti-apoptosis, oxidation, RNA and protein destruction were also highly up-regulated, while genes related to anti-oxidation were down-regulated. The oxidative burst induced by the up-regulation of oxidases and severe down-regulation of anti-oxidant genes may be important for the destruction of viral components, but may also exacerbate oyster mortality. This study provides unprecedented insights into antiviral response in a mollusc. The mobilization and complex regulation of expanded innate immune-gene families highlights the oyster genome's adaptation to a virus-rich marine environment.

%B Fish Shellfish Immunol %8 2015 May 22 %G eng %R 10.1016/j.fsi.2015.05.023 %0 Journal Article %J Ecological indicators %D 2015 %T Trophic networks: How do theories link ecosystem structure and functioning to stability properties? A review %A Saint-Béat, B %A Dan Baird %A H Asmus %A R Asmus %A Bacher, C %A Pacella, S R %A Johnson, Galen A %A David, Valérie %A Vézina, A F %A Nathalie Niquil %B Ecological indicators %V 52 %P 458–471 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Freshwater Biology %D 2015 %T Trophic opportunism of central Amazon floodplain fish %A Jean-Michel Mortillaro %A Marc Pouilly %A Wach, M %A Carlos E.C. Freitas %A Gwenaël Abril %A Tarik Meziane %B Freshwater Biology %V 60 %P 1659–1670 %G eng %0 Book Section %B Sediment Fluxex in Coastal Areas %D 2015 %T The "Turritella Layer": a potential proxy of a drastic Holocene environmental change on the North-East Atlantic coast %A Agnès Baltzer %A Zohra Mokeddem %A Evelyne Goubert %A Franck Lartaud %A Nathalie Labourdette %A Jérôme Fournier %A Jean-François Bourillet %B Sediment Fluxex in Coastal Areas %7 Coastal Research Library %I Springer Science %C Dordrecht %P 3-21 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Mar Genomics %D 2014 %T Temperature influences histone methylation and mRNA expression of the Jmj-C histone-demethylase orthologues during the early development of the oyster Crassostrea gigas. %A Alexandre Fellous %A Pascal Favrel %A Guillaume Rivière %X

In many groups, epigenetic mechanisms influence developmental gene regulation under environmental inputs. The Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas belongs to lophotrochozoans and its larval development is highly dependent on temperature, but the role of epigenetic mechanisms in this context is unknown despite high levels of the recently characterized Jumonji histone demethylase (JHDM) orthologues (Cg_Jumonji) suggesting a physiological relevance of histone methylation in the oyster development. Because in other species alterations of the histone methylation pattern have deleterious outcomes, we investigated the influence of temperature during the oyster larval life on histone methylation and JHDM expression. To shed light on this point, oyster embryonic and early larval development experiments were carried out at different temperatures (18°C, 25°C and 32°C). Histone methylation levels were investigated using fluorescent ELISA at 6 and 24h post-fertilization. When compared to the 25°C group, at 18°C H3K4, H3K9 and H3K27 residues were hypomethylated at 6h post fertilization (hpf) and hypermethylated at 24hpf. In contrast, at 32°C, 6hpf animals present a dramatic hypermethylation (ca. 4-fold) of all examined residues, which is minored but sustained at 24hpf. RT-qPCR investigations of the mRNA expression of the nine oyster JHDMs, showed gene- and stage-specific temperature sensitivities throughout the early life of oysters. This study provides evidence of the biological significance of histone methylation during development in a lophotrochozoan species. Our results also indicate that temperature influences histone methylation, possibly through the expression level of putative actors of its regulation, which might participate in developmental control. To our knowledge, this is the first report indicating a direct relationship between an epigenetic mark and an environmental parameter in marine molluscs. Such investigations could help better understand the molecular mechanisms of development and adaptation in lophotrochozoans.

%B Mar Genomics %8 2014 Sep 16 %G eng %R 10.1016/j.margen.2014.09.002 %0 Journal Article %J Aquaculture %D 2014 %T Temperature modulates the progression of vitellogenesis in the European eel %A Mazzeo, I %A Penaranda, David S %A Gallego, Victor %A Sylvie Baloche %A Nourizadeh-Lillabadi, R %A Tveiten, Helge %A Sylvie Dufour %A Asturiano, Juan F %A Weltzien, Finn-Arne %A Perez, Luz %B Aquaculture %V 434 %P 38-47 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Cybium %D 2014 %T Three new species of Lentipes (Teleostei: Gobiidae) from Indonesia. %A Philippe Keith %A Hadiaty, Renny %A Hubert, Nicolas %A Frédéric Busson %A Clara Lord %K Bali %K Freshwater %K Gobiidae %K Java %K Lentipes %K New species %K Sulawesi %K Sumatra %X

Three new species of Lentipes (L. argenteus, L. ikeae and L. mekonggaensis), freshwater gobies, are
described from streams of Sumatra, Java, Bali and Sulawesi (Indonesia). They differ from other species of the
genus by a combination of characters including an urogenital papilla lacking lateral lobes and retractable into a
sheath-like groove, the number of pectoral fin rays, the number of scales, tricuspid teeth in the upper jaw, and a
specific body colour in males.

%B Cybium %V 38 %P 133-146 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Sea Research %D 2014 %T Tidal and seasonal effects on the short-term temporal patterns of bacteria, microphytobenthos and exopolymers in natural intertidal biofilms (Brouage, France) %A Francis Orvain %A Margot de Crignis %A Katell Guizien %A Sébastien Lefebvre %A Clarisse Mallet %A Takahashi, E %A Christine Dupuy %B Journal of Sea Research %V 92 %P 6-18 %8 09/2014 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Ecological modelling %D 2014 %T A toolbox to evaluate data reliability for whole-ecosystem models: application on the Bay of Biscay continental shelf food-web model %A Géraldine Lassalle %A Bourdaud, Pierre %A Saint-Béat, B %A Rochette, Sébastien %A Nathalie Niquil %B Ecological modelling %V 285 %P 13–21 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J J Biotechnol %D 2014 %T Transcriptomic and peptidomic analysis of protein hydrolysates from the white shrimp (L. vannamei). %A Robert, Marie %A Céline Zatylny-Gaudin %A Fournier, Vincent %A Corre, Erwan %A Gildas Le Corguille %A Bernay, Benoît %A Joël Henry %X

An RNAseq approach associated to mass spectrometry was conducted to assess the composition, molecular mass distribution and primary sequence of hydrolytic peptides issued from hydrolysates of white shrimp (Litopenaeus vannamei) by-products. High performance size exclusion chromatography (HPSEC) analyses indicated that 69.2% of the 214-nm-absorbing components had apparent molecular masses below 1000 Da, and 88.3% below 2000 Da. OFFGEL-nLC-MALDI-TOF/TOF and nLC-ESI-MS/MS analyses led to the identification of 808 peptides based on the NCBI EST databank (161,397 entries) completed by the new L. vannamei databank (58,508 entries) that we created from the RNAs of tissues used for hydrolysate production. Whereas most of hydrolytic peptides have a MW below 2000 Da, preliminary investigations of antimicrobial properties revealed three antibacterial fractions that demonstrate functional activities. The abundance of small peptides as well as the biological activities detected could imply very interesting applications for shrimp hydrolysate in the field of aquaculture feeding.

%B J Biotechnol %V 186 %P 30-7 %8 2014 Sep 30 %G eng %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24998765?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1016/j.jbiotec.2014.06.020 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS One %D 2014 %T Transcriptomic profiling of gametogenesis in triploid Pacific Oysters Crassostrea gigas: towards an understanding of partial sterility associated with triploidy. %A Dheilly, Nolwenn M %A Jouaux, Aude %A Boudry, Pierre %A Pascal Favrel %A Christophe Lelong %X

BACKGROUND: Triploidy can occur in many animal species but is often lethal. Among invertebrates, amphibians and fishes, triploids are viable although often sterile or infertile. Most triploids of the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas are almost sterile (named "3nβ") yet a low but significant proportion show an advanced gametogenesis (named "3nα"). These oysters thus constitute an interesting model to study the effect of triploidy on germ cell development. We used microarrays to compare the gonad transcriptomes of diploid 2n and the abovementioned triploid 3nβ and 3nα male and female oysters throughout gametogenesis.

RESULTS: All triploids displayed an upregulation of genes related to DNA repair and apoptosis and a downregulation of genes associated with cell division. The comparison of 3nα and 3nβ transcriptomes with 2n revealed the likely involvement of a cell cycle checkpoint during mitosis in the successful but delayed development of gonads in 3nα individuals. In contrast, a disruption of sex differentiation mechanisms may explain the sterility of 3nβ individuals with 3nβ females expressing male-specific genes and 3nβ males expressing female-specific genes.

CONCLUSIONS: The disruption of sex differentiation and mitosis may be responsible for the impaired gametogenesis of triploid Pacific oysters. The function of the numerous candidate genes identified in our study should now be studied in detail in order to elucidate their role in sex determination, mitosis/meiosis control, pachytene cell cycle checkpoint, and the control of DNA repair/apoptosis.

%B PLoS One %V 9 %P e112094 %8 2014 %G eng %N 11 %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0112094 %0 Journal Article %J Biochim. Biophys. Acta %D 2014 %T Trichoplaxin - a new membrane-active antimicrobial peptide from placozoan cDNA. %A Simunic, J %A Petrov, D %A Bouceba, T %A Kamech, Nedia %A Benincasa, M %A Juretic, D %B Biochim. Biophys. Acta %V 1838 %P 1430-1438 %G eng %N 5 %0 Journal Article %J Rev Fish Biol Fisheries %D 2014 %T Tropical and temperate freshwater amphidromy: a comparison between life history characteristics of Sicydiinae, ayu, sculpins and galaxiids. %A Watanabe, S %A Iida, Midori %A Clara Lord %A Philippe Keith %A Tsukamoto, Katsumi %K Amphidromous species %K Fluvial form %K Landlocked form %K Oceanic dependency %K Sicydiine species %X

Amphidromy is a distinctive form of
diadromy, but differences in the life histories of
tropical and temperate amphidromous fishes suggest
that there are two types of freshwater amphidromy.
The life histories of Sicydiinae gobies, ayu (Plecoglossus
altivelis), Japanese sculpins (Cottus) and galaxiids
(Galaxiidae), suggest that the Sicydiinae are
representatives of tropical freshwater amphidromy,
whereas ayu, sculpins and galaxiids are representatives
of temperate freshwater amphidromy. The Sicydiine
larval stage may be required to occur in the
ocean for all species, but ayu, sculpins and galaxiids
have landlocked or fluvial forms with larvae that do
not need to enter the ocean for larval feeding and
growth. This suggests that Sicydiine larvae have a high
oceanic dependency whereas ayu, sculpins and galaxiid
larvae have a low oceanic dependency. Freshwater
amphidromous fish in tropical and temperate zones
appear to have developed two different strategies in
the evolution of their life histories. It is likely that the
evolutionary direction of the larval stage of tropical
amphidromy is to remain in the sea and that of
temperate amphidromy is towards having the ability to
remain in freshwater if needed. Tropical and temperate
amphidromy appear to be biologically informative
categories and evaluations of this hypothesis will
facilitate better understanding of the various forms of
amphidromy in the future.

%B Rev Fish Biol Fisheries %V 24 %P 1:14 %G eng %R DOI 10.1007/s11160-013-9316-8 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Biogeography %D 2014 %T Twenty years of observed and predicted changes in subtidal red seaweed assemblages along a biogeographical transition zone: inferring potential causes from environmental data %A Régis Gallon %A Robuchon, Marine %A Leroy, Boris %A Le Gall, L %A Valero, Myriam %A Eric Feunteun %B Journal of Biogeography %V 41 %P 2293–2306 %G eng %U http://doi.wiley.com/10.1111/jbi.12380 %R 10.1111/jbi.12380 %0 Journal Article %J {ICES} Journal of Marine Science: Journal du Conseil %D 2014 %T A two-stage biomass model to assess the English Channel cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis L.) stock %A Gras, Michael %A Roel, Beatriz A. %A Coppin, Franck %A Foucher, Eric %A Jean-Paul Robin %B {ICES} Journal of Marine Science: Journal du Conseil %V 05 %8 05/2014 %G eng %N 19 %9 Original Article %0 Journal Article %J PloS one %D 2013 %T Tracking through life stages: adult, immature and juvenile autumn migration in a long-lived seabird %A Clara Péron %A Grémillet, David %B PloS one %V 8 %G eng %U https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0072713 %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0072713 %0 Journal Article %J Aquatic Living Resources %D 2013 %T Trophic resources of the bivalve, Venus verrucosa , in the Chausey archipelago (Normandy, France) determined by stable isotopes and fatty acids %A Perez, Véronique %A Frédéric Olivier %A Tremblay, Rejean %A Neumeier, Urs %A Thebault, Julien %A Chauvaud, Laurent %A Tarik Meziane %B Aquatic Living Resources %V 26 %P 229 - 239 %8 Jan-01-2013 %G eng %U http://www.alr-journal.org/10.1051/alr/2013058 %N 3 %! Aquat. Living Resour. %R 10.1051/alr/2013058 %0 Journal Article %J Mammal Notes %D 2012 %T Testing a Global Positioning System on free-ranging badgers Meles meles %A Brendel, Carole %A Helder, Rémi %A Chevallier, Damien %A Zaytoon, Janan %A Georges, Jean-Yves %A Handrich, Yves %B Mammal Notes %P 1-5 %8 2012 %G eng %U https://www.mammal.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Note-5-Brendel-MN-2012-1.pdf %9 Short note %0 Conference Proceedings %B 6ème Conférence Internationale Cigogne noire %D 2012 %T Threats on the wintering grounds of migratory species in West Africa %A Chevallier, Damien %A Brossault, Paul %A Gendre, Nicolas %A Baillon, François %A Duponnois, Robin %A Chapalain, Frédéric %A Strenna, Luc %A Yameogo, Dieudonné %A Le Maho, Yvon %B 6ème Conférence Internationale Cigogne noire %7 Ornithos %I Ornithos %C Châlons-en-Champagne, France %P 224 %8 2016 %G eng %6 1 %0 Journal Article %J Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science %D 2011 %T There’s more to the picture than meets the eye: Sampling microphytobenthos in a heterogeneous environment %A Spilmont, Nicolas %A Seuront, Laurent %A Tarik Meziane %A Welsh, David T. %B Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science %V 95 %P 470 - 476 %8 Jan-12-2011 %G eng %U https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0272771411004434 %N 4 %! Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science %R 10.1016/j.ecss.2011.10.021 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Oceanography %D 2005 %T Total Lipid and Fatty Acid Classes in Decomposing Mangrove Leaves of Bruguiera gymnorrhiza and Kandelia candel: Significance with respect to Lipid Input %A Mfilinge, Prosper L. %A Tarik Meziane %A Bachok, Zainudin %A Tsuchiya, Makoto %B Journal of Oceanography %V 61 %P 613 - 622 %8 Jan-06-2005 %G eng %U http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s10872-005-0069-4 %N 3 %! J Oceanogr %R 10.1007/s10872-005-0069-4