%0 Journal Article %J Scientific Reports %D 2023 %T Unmasking pipefish otolith using synchrotron-based scanning X-ray fluorescenceAbstract %A Haÿ, Vincent %A Berland, Sophie %A Medjoubi, Kadda %A Somogyi, Andrea %A Mennesson, Marion I. %A Philippe Keith %A Lord, Clara %B Scientific Reports %V 13 %8 Jan-12-2023 %G eng %U https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-31798-z %N 1 %! Sci Rep %R 10.1038/s41598-023-31798-z %0 Journal Article %J Scientific Reports %D 2023 %T Unmasking pipefish otolith using synchrotron-based scanning X-ray fluorescenceAbstract %A Haÿ, Vincent %A Berland, Sophie %A Medjoubi, Kadda %A Somogyi, Andrea %A Mennesson, Marion I. %A Keith, Philippe %A Lord, Clara %B Scientific Reports %V 13 %8 Jan-12-2023 %G eng %U https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-31798-z %N 1 %! Sci Rep %R 10.1038/s41598-023-31798-z %0 Journal Article %J Arthropoda %D 2023 %T Updated Checklist of the Freshwater Shrimps (Decapoda: Caridea: Atyidae) of Mindoro Island, the Philippines, with a Description of a New Species of Caridina %A de Mazancourt, Valentin %A Freitag, Hendrik %A von Rintelen, Kristina %A Manuel-Santos, Marivene %A von Rintelen, Thomas %B Arthropoda %V 1 %P 374 - 397 %8 Jan-12-2023 %G eng %U https://www.mdpi.com/2813-3323/1/4/15 %N 4 %! Arthropoda %R 10.3390/arthropoda1040015 %0 Journal Article %J Ecosystem Services %D 2023 %T The usefulness of food web models in the ecosystem services framework: Quantifying, mapping, and linking services supply %A Nogues, Quentin %A Baulaz, Yoann %A Clavel, Joanne %A Araignous, Emma %A Bourdaud, Pierre %A Ben Rais Lasram, Frida %A Dauvin, Jean-Claude %A Girardin, Valerie %A Halouani, Ghassen %A Le Loc'h, Francois %A Loew-Turbout, Frédérique %A Raoux, Aurore %A Nathalie Niquil %B Ecosystem Services %V 63 %P 101550 %8 Jan-10-2023 %G eng %U https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S2212041623000438 %! Ecosystem Services %R 10.1016/j.ecoser.2023.101550 %0 Journal Article %J Frontiers in Marine Science %D 2021 %T Unraveling salinity extreme events in coastal environments: a winter focus on the Bay of Brest %A Poppeschi, Coline %A Charria, Guillaume %A Goberville, Eric %A Rimmelin-Maury, Peggy %A Barrier, Nicolas %A Petton, Sébastien %A Unterberger, Maximilian %A Emilie Grossteffan %A Répécaud, Michel %A Quéméner, Loic %A Theetten, Sébastien %A Le roux, Jean-François %A Paul Tréguer %X Extreme weather events affect coastal marine ecosystems. The increase in intensity and occurrence of such events drive modifications in coastal hydrology and hydrodynamics. Here, focusing on the winter period (from December to March), we investigated long-term (2000-2018) changes in the hydrological properties of the Bay of Brest (French Atlantic coast) as an example of the response of a semi-enclosed bay to extreme weather episodes and large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns. The relationships between extreme weather events and severe low salinity conditions (as a proxy for changes in water density) were investigated using high-frequency in situ observations and high-resolution numerical simulations. The identification of intense episodes was based on the timing, duration and annual occurrence of extreme events. By examining the interannual variability of extreme low salinity events, we detect a patent influence of local and regional weather conditions on atmospheric and oceanic circulation patterns, precipitation and river runoff. We revealed that low salinity events in Brittany were controlled by large-scale forcings: they prevailed during the positive phase of the North Atlantic Oscillation and periods of low occurrences of the Atlantic Ridge weather regime. The increase in severe storms observed in western France since 2010 has led to a doubling of the occurrence and duration of extreme low salinity events in Brittany. %B Frontiers in Marine Science %V 8 %P 966 %G eng %U https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.705403 %0 Journal Article %J Aquatic Ecology %D 2021 %T Upstream/downstream food quality differences in a Caribbean Island River %A Frotté, Lou %A Alexandre Bec %A Cédric Hubas %A Perrière, Fanny %A Cordonnier, Sébastien %A Bezault, Etienne %A Monti, Dominique %B Aquatic Ecology %8 Oct-08-2021 %G eng %U https://link.springer.com/10.1007/s10452-021-09887-w %! Aquat Ecol %R 10.1007/s10452-021-09887-w %0 Journal Article %J Ecology and Evolution %D 2020 %T Unidirectional response to bidirectional selection on body size. I. Phenotypic, life‐history, and endocrine responses %A Renneville, Clémentine %A Millot, Alexis %A Agostini, Simon %A Carmignac, David %A Maugars, Gersende %A Sylvie Dufour %A Le Rouzic, Arnaud %A Edeline, Eric %B Ecology and Evolution %8 Jan-09-2021 %G eng %U https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.6713 %! Ecol Evol %R 10.1002/ece3.6713 %0 Journal Article %J Freshwater Biology %D 2020 %T Unmasking continental natal homing in goliath catfish from the upper Amazon %A Hauser, Marilia %A Duponchelle, Fabrice %A Hermann, Theodore W. %A Limburg, Karin E. %A Castello, Leandro %A Stewart, Donald J. %A Torrente‐Vilara, Gislene %A García‐Vasquez, Aurea %A García‐Dávila, Carmen %A Marc Pouilly %A Pecheyran, Christophe %A Ponzevera, Emmanuel %A Renno, Jean‐François %A Moret, Arthur S. %A Doria, Carolina R. C. %B Freshwater Biology %V 65 %P 325 - 336 %8 Jul-02-2020 %G eng %U https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/13652427/65/2 %N 2 %! Freshw Biol %R 10.1111/fwb.v65.210.1111/fwb.13427 %0 Journal Article %J PLOS ONE %D 2020 %T Unravelling the changes during induced vitellogenesis in female European eel through RNA-Seq: What happens to the liver? %A Bertolini, Francesca %A Jørgensen, Michelle Grace Pinto %A Henkel, Christiaan %A Sylvie Dufour %A Tomkiewicz, Jonna %B PLOS ONE %V 15 %P e0236438 %8 Jan-08-2021 %G eng %U https://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236438 %N 8 %! Liver transcriptomics of induced vitellogenesis in female European eels %R 10.1371/journal.pone.023643810 %0 Journal Article %J Frontiers in Marine Science %D 2020 %T An Untargeted Metabolomic Approach for Microphytobenthic Biofilms in Intertidal Mudflats %A Gaubert-Boussarie, Julie %A Prado, Soizic %A Cédric Hubas %X Microphytobenthic (MPB) biofilms in intertidal muddy sediments play important ecological functions in coastal ecosystems. These biofilms are mainly composed of epipelic diatoms but also prokaryotes, with a dominance of bacteria, which excrete diverse extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) according to their environment. While numerous studies have investigated the main components of these EPS matrices via traditional colorimetric assays, their fine composition, notably in specialized metabolites, is still largely unknown. A better chemical characterization of these MPB biofilms is necessary, especially regarding the numerous functions their chemical components play for microorganisms (e.g., motility, cell protection, defense mechanisms, and chemical communication), but also for coastal systems (e.g., primary production, sediment stabilization, larval settlement of some invertebrates with high economical value). An alternative approach to traditional analyses is the use of untargeted metabolomic techniques, which have not yet been applied to such MPB biofilms. The objectives of the present study were to (a) propose a protocol for metabolic fingerprinting by LC-MS and GC-MS for metabolites analysis in polar and non-polar fractions in MPB biofilms extracted from mudflat sediment and to (b) apply this protocol to a case study: the effect of light exposure on the metabolomic fingerprint of the MPB biofilm community. We compared three extraction methods using different mixes of solvents and selected a methanol/chloroform mix (1:1), which gave better results for both techniques and fractions. We then applied the selected protocol to our case study using a short-term light exposure experiment in aquaria (7 days). The present study is the first using a detailed untargeted metabolomic approach on MPB biofilms from mudflat sediment and will provide a solid baseline for further work in this area. %B Frontiers in Marine Science %V 7 %P 250 %G eng %U https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2020.00250 %R 10.3389/fmars.2020.00250 %0 Conference Proceedings %B SIBIC 2020 %D 2020 %T Upstream as a sanctuary for the French populations of catalan chub Squalius laietanus (Teleostei , Leuciscidae) threatened by the allochtonous European chub S. cephalus %A Rose, Morgane %A Dettai, Agnès %A Lefèbvre, Stéphane %A Blanc, Laurence %A Poulet, Nicolas %A Baudier, Olivier %A Hautecoeur, Mélyne %A Denys, Gaël %X In the Pyrénées-Orientales department (France), three Mediterranean catchments (Agly, Têt and Tech) are subject to high variations in water levels during Cevenol-type events. In order to fight against the effects of these floods, dams and wiers were built along these rivers with consequences on aquatic fauna, eliminating the ecological continuum. The chub Squalius is a potamodromous fish occurring from the salmonids stream to close to the estuaries. Moreover, whereas the European chub S. cephalus was thought to be represented by a single species in France, another species, endemic to Catalonia, was described: the Catalan chub S. laietanus. However, S. cephalus was also introduced in the catchments of this area with possibly threats of hybridization. Samples from eight populations of Squalius spp coming from these rivers were genetically identified using a DNA Barcoding approach with a mitochondrial (COI) and a nuclear (RAG1) markers. Our results confirm the presence of both species in the three drainages as well as their hybridization, threatening S. laietanus by hybridization as in 70% of Mediterrannean endemic species. There is also a downstream-upstream gradient in the presence of S. cephalus in the Têt and Tech catchments. S. laietanus seems less impacted by S. cephalus in headwaters than downstream. One of the explanations would be the numerous weirs between these areas. If the negative impacts of the absence of ecological continuum on the ichthyofauna are known and cannot be denied, these weirs might form in this case a barrier against the presence of S. cephalus in headwaters. As a consequence, S. laietanus has been evaluated as EN in the last French UICN Red List published in 2019. While the ecological parameters still need to be examined, our study brings additional information for better suited conservation actions regarding the ecological continuum. %B SIBIC 2020 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Frontiers in Marine Science %D 2020 %T Using Modern Conservation Tools for Innovative Management of Coral Reefs: The MANACO ConsortiumVideo_1.MP4 %A Selmoni, Oliver %A Lecellier, Gaël %A Ainley, Lara %A Collin, Antoine %A Doucet, Raimana %A Dubousquet, Vaimiti %A Feremaito, Hudson %A Ito Waia, Edouard %A Kininmonth, Stuart %A Magalon, Hélène %A Malimali, Siola’a %A Maugateau, Ateliana %A Meibom, Anders %A Mosese, Stephen %A René-Trouillefou, Malika %A Satoh, Noriyuki %A van Oppen, Madeleine J. H. %A Xozamé, André %A Yékawene, Maxime %A Joost, Stéphane %A Berteaux-Lecellier, Véronique %B Frontiers in Marine Science %V 7 %8 Sep-07-2021 %G eng %U https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2020.00609/full %! Front. Mar. Sci. %R 10.3389/fmars.2020.0060910.3389/fmars.2020.00609.s001 %0 Journal Article %J Revue scientifique Bourgogne-Franche-Comté Nature %D 2019 %T Une nouvelle espèce de poisson en Bourgogne-Franche-Comté : le goujon occitan (Gobio occitaniae) %A Denys, Gaël %A Besson, Sylvain %B Revue scientifique Bourgogne-Franche-Comté Nature %V 30-2019 %P 78-79 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Scientific Reports %D 2018 %T The unique functioning of a pre-Columbian Amazonian floodplain fishery %A Rumsaïs Blatrix %A Bruno Roux %A Philippe Béarez %A Gabriela Prestes-Carneiro %A Marcelo Amaya %A Jose Luis Aramayo %A Leonor Rodrigues %A Umberto Lombardo %A Jose Iriarte %A Jonas Gregorio de Souza %A Mark Robinson %A Cyril Bernard %A Marc Pouilly %A Mélisse Durécu %A Carl F. Huchzermeyer %A Mashuta Kalebe %A Alex Ovando %A Doyle McKey %B Scientific Reports %V 8 %G eng %U https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-24454-4 %R 10.1038/s41598-018-24454-4 %0 Journal Article %J Aquaculture Research %D 2018 %T Use of an acoustic telemetry array for fine scale fish behaviour assessment of captive Paiche, Arapaima gigas, breeders %A Jesus Nuñez-Rodriguez %A Vela Díaz, Antonia %A Bazan-Albitez, Roger %A Rebaza Alfaro, Carmela %A Koua, Daniel %A Núñez, Lucie %A Testi, Baptiste %A Renno, Jean-Francois %A Duponchelle, Fabrice %A Pella, Hervé %B Aquaculture Research %V 49 %P 2296 - 2304 %8 Jan-06-2018 %G eng %U http://doi.wiley.com/10.1111/are.2018.49.issue-6 %N 6 %! Aquac Res %R 10.1111/are.2018.49.issue-610.1111/are.13692 %0 Journal Article %J Aquaculture Research %D 2018 %T Use of an acoustic telemetry array for fine scale fish behaviour assessment of captive Paiche, Arapaima gigas, breeders %A Jesus Nuñez-Rodriguez %A Vela Diaz, A. %A Bazan-Albitez, R %A Koua, D %A Nuñez L. %A Testi, B. %A Renno, Jean-Francois %A Duponchelle, F %A Pella, H %X

As Arapaima gigas is one of the most valuable species for the growing production of Amazonian aquaculture, knowledge of its reproductive behaviour and its application to increase reproduction success in captivity is of great importance as no hormonal spawning induction technique exists for this species. An acoustic positioning system (LOTEK Inc.) was used to observe the interactions of adult fish to better understand the formation of mating pairs. Fish were placed in a 4,500 m2 aquaculture pond over a 6‐month period in the IIAP field station of Pucallpa, Perú. This paper describes the methodological protocols used to set up and test the hydrophone array and presents the methodology used for the analysis of the huge amount of collected data. This methodology is illustrated by the analysis of a 6‐day period for a mating pair that showed a spawning event. The results indicated that male and female occupied mostly one preferential area in one pond edge where the nesting area is located. Different activity patterns were observed during the spawning event, with male and female being closer during the spawning day. The results also showed that male travelled less distance than female during the studied period. Finally these results demonstrated the suitability of such equipment to monitor fish interactions at fine spatial (sub meter) and temporal (5 s) scales in confined environments like aquaculture ponds.

%B Aquaculture Research %V 49 %P 2296-2304 %G eng %U https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/are.13692 %R doi.org/10.1111/are.13692 %0 Journal Article %J Bridging the Gap Between Policy and Science in Assessing the Health Status of Marine Ecosystems %D 2017 %T Uses of innovative modeling tools within the implementation of the marine strategy framework directive %A Lynam, Christopher P. %A Uusitalo, Laura %A Patrício, Joana %A Piroddi, Chiara %A Queirós, Ana M %A Teixeira, Heliana %A Rossberg, Axel G. %A Sagarminaga, Yolanda %A Hyder, Kieran %A Nathalie Niquil %A Möllmann, C %A Wilson, C %A Chust, Guillem %A Galpasoro, I %A Forster, R %A Verissimo, H %A Tedesco, Letizia %A Revilla, M %A Neville, Suzanna %B Bridging the Gap Between Policy and Science in Assessing the Health Status of Marine Ecosystems %P 75 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Alauda %D 2016 %T Unexpectedmovements of male Bluethroats Luscinia svecica namnetum during the breeding period %A Clément Harmange %A Laurent Godet %A Matthieu Marquet %A Julie Dietrich %A Sarah Monnet %A Elisa Grégoire %A Marie-Christine Eybert %A Jérôme Fournier %X

During a radiotracking survey on 61 different males of Bluethroat Luscinia svecica namnetum from 2012 to 2015 in three different sites, we found that 8 males joined remote areas, at 300 to 900meters fromtheir regular territory and home range. Thesemovements occurred at dawn and dusk, but also at day. Such movements are not recorded in the literature and we propose four different hypotheses to explain them: the existence of “hidden leks”, a male poly-territoriality, the look for food or for a shelter from predators.

%B Alauda %V 84 %P 195-202 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Ecology and Evolution %D 2015 %T Uncertainties in the projection of species distributions related to general circulation models %A Goberville, Eric %A Grégory Beaugrand %A Nina-Coralie Hautekèete %A Yves Piquot %A Christophe Luczak %K Biogeography %K Climate Change %K Ecological niche modeling %K Global change models %K Species distribution projections %K Uncertainties %X

© 2015 The Authors. Ecological Niche Models (ENMs) are increasingly used by ecologists to project species potential future distribution. However the application of such models may be challenging and some caveats have already been identified. While studies have generally shown that projections may be sensitive to the ENM applied or the emission scenario to name just a few the sensitivity of ENM-based scenarios to General Circulation Models (GCMs) has been often underappreciated. Here using a multi-GCM and multi-emission scenario approach we evaluated the variability in projected distributions under future climate conditions. We modeled the ecological realized niche (sensu Hutchinson) and predicted the baseline distribution of species with contrasting spatial patterns and representative of two major functional groups of European trees: the dwarf birch and the sweet chestnut. Their future distributions were then projected onto future climatic conditions derived from seven GCMs and four emissions scenarios using the new Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs) developed for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) AR5 report. Uncertainties arising from GCMs and those resulting from emissions scenarios were quantified and compared. Our study reveals that scenarios of future species distribution exhibit broad differences depending not only on emissions scenarios but also on GCMs. We found that the between-GCM variability was greater than the between-RCP variability for the next decades and both types of variability reached a similar level at the end of this century. Our result highlights that a combined multi-GCM and multi-RCP approach is needed to better consider potential trajectories and uncertainties in future species distributions. In all cases between-GCM variability increases with the level of warming and if nothing is done to alleviate global warming future species spatial distribution may become more and more difficult to anticipate. When future species spatial distributions are examined we propose to use a large number of GCMs and RCPs to better anticipate potential trajectories and quantify uncertainties.

%B Ecology and Evolution %V 5 %G eng %R 10.1002/ece3.1411 %0 Book Section %B Biomineralization: from fundamentals to biomaterials & environmental issues %D 2015 %T Unveiling the evolution of bivalve nacre proteins by shell proteomics of Unionoidae. %A Marie, Benjamin %A Arivalagan, Jaison %A Dubost, Lionel %A Berland, Sophie %A Marie, Arul %A Marin, Frédéric %B Biomineralization: from fundamentals to biomaterials & environmental issues %7 Key Engineering Materials, 978-3-03835-591-5 Trans Tech Publications Ltd %V 672 %P pp.158-167 %G eng %) F. Marin, F. Brümmer, A. Checa, G. Furtos, I.G. Lesci & L. Šiller %& 2 %0 Journal Article %J Mediterranean Marine Science %D 2015 %T The use of Depletion Methods to assess Mediterranean cephalopod stocks under the current EU Data Collection Framework %A Keller, S %A Jean-Paul Robin %A Valls, M %A Gras, Michael %A Cabanellas-Reboredo, M %A Quetglas, A %B Mediterranean Marine Science %P 513–523 %G eng %U http://www.medit-mar-sc.net/index.php/marine/article/view/1127/671 %R DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/mms.1127 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Applied Ichthyology %D 2015 %T Using barcoding of larvae for investigating the breeding seasons of pimelodid catfishes from the Marañon, Napo and Ucayali rivers in the Peruvian Amazon %A García-Dávila, C. %A Castro-Ruiz, Diana %A Renno, Jean-Francois %A Chota-Macuyama, Werner %A Carvajal-Vallejos, Fernando %A Sanchez, H. %A Angulo, C. %A Nolorbe, C. %A Alvarado, J. %A Estivals, G %A Jesus Nuñez-Rodriguez %A Fabrice Duponchelle %B Journal of Applied Ichthyology %V 31 %P 40–51 %G eng %U http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jai.12987 %R 10.1111/jai.12987 %0 Journal Article %J ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS %D 2015 %T Using ecological models to assess ecosystem status in support of the European Marine Strategy Framework Directive %A Piroddi, Chiara %A Teixeira, Heliana %A Lynam, Christopher P. %A Smith, Chris %A Alvarez, Maria C. %A Mazik, Krysia %A Andonegi, Eider %A Churilova, Tanya %A Tedesco, Letizia %A Chifflet, Marina %A Chust, Guillem %A Galparsoro, Ibon %A Garcia, Ana Carla %A Kamari, Maria %A Kryvenko, Olga %A Géraldine Lassalle %A Neville, Suzanna %A Nathalie Niquil %A Papadopoulou, Nadia %A Rossberg, Axel G. %A Suslin, Vjacheslav %A Uyarra, Maria C. %X

The European Union's Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD) seeks to achieve, for all European seas, "Good Environmental Status" (GEnS), by 2020. Ecological models are currently one of the strongest approaches used to predicting and understanding the consequences of anthropogenic and climate-driven changes in the natural environment. We assess the most commonly used capabilities of the modelling community to provide information about indicators outlined in the MSFD, particularly on biodiversity, food webs, non-indigenous species and seafloor integrity descriptors. We built a catalogue of models and their derived indicators to assess which models were able to demonstrate: (1) the linkages between indicators and ecosystem structure and function and (2) the impact of pressures on ecosystem state through indicators. Our survey identified 44 ecological models being implemented in Europe, with a high prevalence of those that focus on links between hydrodynamics and biogeochemistry, followed by end-to-end, species distribution/habitat suitability, bio-optical (remote sensing) and multispecies models. Approximately 200 indicators could be derived from these models, the majority of which were biomass and physical/hydrological/chemical indicators. Biodiversity and food webs descriptors, with similar to 49% and similar to 43% respectively, were better addressed in the reviewed modelling approaches than the non-indigenous species (0.3%) and sea floor integrity (similar to 8%) descriptors. Out of 12 criteria and 21 MSFD indicators relevant to the abovementioned descriptors, currently only three indicators were not addressed by the 44 models reviewed. Modelling approaches showed also the potential to inform on the complex, integrative ecosystem dimensions while addressing ecosystem fundamental properties, such as interactions between structural components and ecosystems services provided, despite the fact that they are not part of the MSFD indicators set. The cataloguing of models and their derived indicators presented in this study, aim at helping the planning and integration of policies like the MSFD which require the assessment of all European Seas in relation to their ecosystem status and pressures associated and the establishment of environmental targets (through the use of indicators) to achieve GEnS by 2020. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

%B ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS %V 58 %P 175-191 %8 NOV %G eng %R {10.1016/j.ecolind.2015.05.037} %0 Journal Article %J VertigO %D 2011 %T Un réseau de surveillance des littoraux face au changement climatique en milieu insulaire tropical : l’exemple de Mayotte %A Jeanson, Matthieu %A Franck Dolique %A Anthony, Edward J. %B VertigO %8 Jul-01-2012 %G eng %U http://vertigo.revues.org %N Volume 10 Numéro 3 %! vertigo %R 10.4000/vertigo10.4000/vertigo.1047110.4000/vertigo.10512 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Ornithology %D 2011 %T The use of stopover sites by Black Storks (Ciconia nigra) migrating between West Europe and West Africa as revealed by satellite telemetry %A Chevallier, D. %A Le Maho, Y. %A Brossault, P. %A Baillon, F. %A Massemin, S. %B Journal of Ornithology %V 152 %P 1 - 13 %8 Jan-01-2011 %G eng %U http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s10336-010-0536-6 %N 1 %! J Ornithol %R 10.1007/s10336-010-0536-6 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Sea Research %D 1997 %T The use of lipid markers to define sources of organic matter in sediment and food web of the intertidal salt-marsh-flat ecosystem of Mont-Saint-Michel Bay, France %A Tarik Meziane %A Bodineau, Laurent %A Retiere, Christian %A Thoumelin, Guy %B Journal of Sea Research %V 38 %P 47 - 58 %8 Jan-12-1997 %G eng %U https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S138511019700035X %N 1-2 %! Journal of Sea Research %R 10.1016/S1385-1101(97)00035-X