16 results on '"Ponsard, Sergine"'
Search Results
2. Parallel evolution of behaviour during independent host-shifts following maize introduction into Asia and Europe.
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Calcagno, Vincent, Mitoyen, Clémentine, Audiot, Philippe, Ponsard, Sergine, Gao, Gui‐Zhen, Lu, Zhao‐Zhi, Wang, Zhen‐Ying, He, Kang‐Lai, and Bourguet, Denis
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CORN harvesting ,PLANT evolution ,PLANT adaptation ,AGRICULTURE ,CORN diseases - Abstract
Maize was introduced into opposite sides of Eurasia 500 years ago, in Western Europe and in Asia. This caused two host-shifts in the phytophagous genus Ostrinia; O. nubilalis (the European corn borer; ECB) and O. furnacalis (the Asian corn borer; ACB) are now major pests of maize worldwide. They originated independently from Dicot-feeding ancestors, similar to O. scapulalis (the Adzuki bean borer; ABB). Unlike other host-plants, maize is yearly harvested, and harvesting practices impose severe mortality on larvae found above the cut-off line. Positive geotaxis in the ECB has been proposed as a behavioural adaptation to harvesting practices, allowing larvae to move below the cut-off line and thus escape harvest mortality. Here, we test whether the same behavioural adaptation evolved independently in Europe and in Asia. We sampled eight genetically differentiated ECB, ACB and ABB populations in France and China and monitored geotaxis through the entire larval development in artificial stacks mimicking maize stems. We find that all ECB and ACB populations show a similar tendency to move down during the latest larval stages, a behaviour not observed in any European or Asian ABB population. The behaviour is robustly expressed regardless of larval density, development mode or environmental conditions. Our results indicate that maize introduction triggered parallel behavioural adaptations in Europe and Asia, harvest selection presumably being the main driver. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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3. Different thermal responses in two coexisting aphids may account for differences in their seasonal abundance in cotton fields.
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Gao, Guizhen, Ponsard, Sergine, Lu, Zhaozhi, Wang, Peiling, and Sharma, Shashi
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RESPONSIVE gels ,APHIDS ,ACYRTHOSIPHON ,HIGH temperatures ,GLOBAL warming - Abstract
The coexistence of species competing for resources can be facilitated by differential effects of temperature on fitness components. The coexisting cotton aphidsAphis gossypiiGlover andAcyrthosiphon gossypiiMordvilko show seasonal differences in abundance in North-Western China, the former reaching higher field abundances and declining later in the season than the latter. We hypothesized that differences in responses to temperature might be the proximate mechanism driving this difference in population dynamics between the two species. Aphids from laboratory-reared colonies and directly collected from the field in early summer were used to study their development, survival and reproduction under a range of constant temperatures. Life-table parameters suggest thatA. gossypiiperformed better thanAc. gossypiiunder all temperature treatments tested, and the difference tended to be strongest under high temperatures. These observations are consistent with the higher numbers and the later decline ofA. gossypiiin the field compared withAc. gossypii. Our findings help in understanding the seasonal population dynamics of both species, as well as in forecasting pest trends under global warming scenarios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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4. 'Becoming a species by becoming a pest' or how two maize pests of the genus Ostrinia possibly evolved through parallel ecological speciation events.
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Bourguet, Denis, Ponsard, Sergine, Streiff, Rejane, Meusnier, Serge, Audiot, Philippe, Li, Jing, and Wang, Zhen‐Ying
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BIOLOGICAL control of corn ,OSTRINIA ,GENETIC speciation ,AGRICULTURAL pests ,HERBIVORES ,COMPARATIVE studies ,LEPIDOPTERA - Abstract
New agricultural pest species attacking introduced crops may evolve from pre-existing local herbivores by ecological speciation, thereby becoming a species by becoming a pest. We compare the evolutionary pathways by which two maize pests (the Asian and the European corn borers, ACB and ECB) in the genus Ostrinia (Lepidoptera, Crambidae) probably diverged from an ancestral species close to the current Adzuki bean borer ( ABB). We typed larval Ostrinia populations collected on maize and dicotyledons across China and eastern Siberia, at microsatellite and mitochondrial loci. We found only two clusters: one on maize (as expected) and a single one on dicotyledons despite differences in male mid-tibia morphology, suggesting that all individuals from dicotyledons belonged to the ABB. We found evidence for migrants and hybrids on both host plant types. Hybrids suggest that field reproductive isolation is incomplete between ACB and ABB. Interestingly, a few individuals with an ' ABB-like' microsatellite profile collected on dicotyledons had ' ACB' mtDNA rather than ' ABB-like' mt DNA, whereas the reverse was never found on maize. This suggests asymmetrical gene flow directed from the ACB towards the ABB. Hybrids and backcrosses in all directions were obtained in no-choice tests. In laboratory conditions, they survived as well as parental strain individuals. In Xinjiang, we found ACB and ECB in sympatry, but no hybrids. Altogether, our results suggest that reproductive isolation between ACB and ABB is incomplete and mostly prezygotic. This points to ecological speciation as a possible evolutionary scenario, as previously found for ECB and ABB in Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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5. Suitability of three Ostrinia species as hosts for Macrocentrus cingulum: A comparison of their encapsulation abilities.
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Havard, Sébastien, Pélissier, Céline, Ponsard, Sergine, and Campan, Erick D. M.
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HOSTS of parasitoids ,MACROCENTRUS ,OSTRINIA ,PESTS ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Two cornborer species, Ostrinia furnacalis (Lepidoptera: Crambidae) and O. nubilalis, are major corn pests in Asia and Europe, respectively. In both continents, the larval endoparasitoid Macrocentrus cingulum (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) develops on another, closely related stemborer, O. scapulalis, which feeds on mugwort and other dicotyledons. M. cingulum also emerges from O. furnacalis in Asia and O. nubilalis in North America, but not from O. nubilalis in Europe. We assessed the ability of three populations of each of the three Ostrinia species to encapsulate foreign bodies of a size similar to that of a M. cingulum egg. We conclude that variations in encapsulation ability alone cannot account for the differences observed in the field between parasite emergence rates in these different host species and geographic areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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6. When History Repeats Itself: Exploring the Genetic Architecture of Host-Plant Adaptation in Two Closely Related Lepidopteran Species.
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Alexandre, Hermine, Ponsard, Sergine, Bourguet, Denis, Vitalis, Renaud, Audiot, Philippe, Cros-Arteil, Sandrine, and Streiff, Réjane
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PLANT adaptation ,LEPIDOPTERA ,OSTRINIA ,CORN diseases ,EUROPEAN corn borer ,OSTRINIA furnacalis ,HOST plants - Abstract
The genus Ostrinia includes two allopatric maize pests across Eurasia, namely the European corn borer (ECB, O. nubilalis) and the Asian corn borer (ACB, O. furnacalis). A third species, the Adzuki bean borer (ABB, O. scapulalis), occurs in sympatry with both the ECB and the ACB. The ABB mostly feeds on native dicots, which probably correspond to the ancestral host plant type for the genus Ostrinia. This situation offers the opportunity to characterize the two presumably independent adaptations or preadaptations to maize that occurred in the ECB and ACB. In the present study, we aimed at deciphering the genetic architecture of these two adaptations to maize, a monocot host plant recently introduced into Eurasia. To this end, we performed a genome scan analysis based on 684 AFLP markers in 12 populations of ECB, ACB and ABB. We detected 2 outlier AFLP loci when comparing French populations of the ECB and ABB, and 9 outliers when comparing Chinese populations of the ACB and ABB. These outliers were different in both countries, and we found no evidence of linkage disequilibrium between any two of them. These results suggest that adaptation or preadaptation to maize relies on a different genetic architecture in the ECB and ACB. However, this conclusion must be considered in light of the constraints inherent to genome scan approaches and of the intricate evolution of adaptation and reproductive isolation in the Ostrinia spp. complex. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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7. Phylogenetics and population genetics of the Eurasian parasitoid Macrocentrus cingulum based on mitochondrial and nuclear loci.
- Author
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Pélissié, Benjamin, Ponsard, Sergine, Bourguet, Denis, and Kergoat, Gael J.
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MACROCENTRUS ,ANIMAL population genetics ,INSECT phylogeny ,MITOCHONDRIA ,PHYSIOLOGICAL control systems ,OSTRINIA ,BAYESIAN analysis ,CORN diseases - Abstract
Specifying species boundaries is often tricky, because advanced biomolecular analyses can reveal that morphologically similar individuals in fact belong to distinct species. This is frequently the case when populations previously considered as a single polyphagous taxon prove to consist of several genetically distinct taxa using different resources, e.g., among insect parasitoids. Macrocentrus cingulum Brischke ( Hymenoptera: Braconidae), a parasitoid of the genus Ostrinia ( Lepidoptera: Crambidae) feeding on various host plants across the world, is one of them. In Western Europe, M. cingulum has never been found in Ostrinia nubilalis ( Hübner) populations feeding on maize, although it heavily parasitizes sympatric Ostrinia scapulalis Walker populations feeding on mugwort. In contrast, it contributes to pest control of Ostrinia furnacalis Guenée feeding on maize in Asia and O. nubilalis feeding on maize in America, suggesting that European and Asian M. cingulum populations might form two distinct taxa. We tested this hypothesis by conducting phylogenetic and population genetic analyses based on two mitochondrial and two nuclear genes, on 97 M. cingulum individuals sampled in Asia, USA, and Europe. Our analyses not only suggest that all sampled M. cingulum probably belong to the same species, but also show a significant genetic differentiation between individuals originating from Europe on the one hand and Asia/ USA on the other, which correlates with infestation patterns. Moreover, they show that American specimens are closely related to Asian ones, consistent with historical records about M. cingulum introductions into the USA in the 1920s and 1930s to control expanding O. nubilalis populations. Combining these results with what is known about the evolutionary history within the genus Ostrinia, we offer a candidate evolutionary scenario that is amenable to future empirical testing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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8. Reconsidering the taxomony of several Ostrinia species in the light of reproductive isolation: a tale for Ernst Mayr.
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FROLOV, ANDREI N., BOURGUET, DENIS, and PONSARD, SERGINE
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OSTRINIA ,REPRODUCTIVE isolation ,BIOLOGICAL specimens ,ANIMAL morphology ,ANIMAL reproduction - Abstract
We reconsider the taxonomy of a group of closely related Ostrinia spp., illustrating how useful Mayr’s biological species concept remains for studying speciation patterns and processes. We review and re-analyse recent data on Ostrinia scapulalis, Ostrinia nubilalis, Ostrinia narynensis and Ostrinia orientalis, along with those obtained over > 45 years in the former Soviet Union. The ten species of the ‘trilobed uncus’ group in the Ostrinia genus are classified into subgroups according to male mid-tibia morphology. However, none of the characters that further discriminate between them (female sex pheromones, male genitalia and calling time) varies together with male mid-tibia morphology, and neither do molecular markers. Moreover, male mid-tibia morphology appears to depend on only two diallelic loci and seems to be unrelated to reproductive isolation between Ostrinia taxa. By contrast, reproductive isolation is strongly related to host-plant type. In accordance with Mayr’s species concept, we thus propose a revision of the trilobed uncus Ostrinia spp. based primarily on host-plant type. We propose that O. narynensis Mutuura & Munroe, 1970 ( syn. nov.) and O. orientalis Mutuura & Munroe, 1970 ( syn. nov.) be synonymized with O. scapulalis (Walker, 1859). We further demonstrate that O. nubilalis auctt. pro parte feeding on mugwort, hop, and several other dicotyledons (previously called the ‘ O. nubilalis mugwort-race’ in France) also belongs to O. scapulalis. Consequently, we propose that only O. nubilalis specimens feeding on maize (the former French ‘ O. nubilalis maize-race’) belong to O. nubilalis (Hübner, 1796). The implications of this revision are discussed. © 2007 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2007, 91, 49–72. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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9. Dispersal propensity and settling preferences of European corn borers in maize field borders.
- Author
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BAILEY, RICHARD I., BOURGUET, DENIS, LE PALLEC, ANNE-HELENE, and PONSARD, SERGINE
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BACILLUS thuringiensis ,HABITATS ,OSTRINIA ,TEMPERATURE ,CORN dispersal ,EUROPEAN corn borer ,PESTS ,LARVAE ,RESISTANCE to change - Abstract
1. Bacillus thuringiensis ( Bt) crops kill pest larvae but have led to resistance evolution in several target pests. The high dose-refuge (HDR) strategy aimed at delaying Bt resistance evolution depends on dispersal patterns of target pests. Examination of adult dispersal of the European corn borer Ostrinia nubilalis (ECB), the main target of Bt maize, can help to improve resistance management. 2. Estimated recapture rates over 20 mark–release–recapture sessions in herbaceous field borders, where ECB adults rest during the day and mate at night, were used to examine the influence of sex, release period and site on ECB dispersal. Data from an additional 30 sessions were used to test the influence of night temperature, humidity, dew index and wind speed. 3. Average recaptures within 50 m of release were lower 12 h after night (7·7%) than 12 h after day (34·5%) releases, did not differ between sexes, and decreased during nights with higher temperatures and lower wind speed. 4. Local habitat had a major influence on dispersal. The number of unmarked adults caught initially in a given section of field border was strongly correlated with those subsequently captured in the same section, suggesting that moths flying in from the surroundings consistently settle in the same preferred spots. Moreover, recapture rates of marked adults were positively correlated with the prior density of unmarked adults in the release section. 5. The spatial distribution of recaptured moths around the release point suggests that they moved on a very local scale, while those not recaptured probably left the area by a different, long-range type of dispersal. 6. Synthesis and applications. A proportion of European corn borer adults typically remained within a few metres of their initial location for at least 12 h. This should favour non-random mating early in the flight season when nights are cold, population mixture is low and most individuals are unmated. Non-random mating can accelerate the evolution of resistance, but this effect may be offset by non-random oviposition. Our findings suggest that the intensity and direction of dispersal could be manipulated by field border management. Our data on the range and prevalence of short-range dispersal and the factors influencing this process, support the view that resistance evolution is multifactorial. Our results can be used to parameterize multifactorial models from which specific management recommendations can be formulated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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10. Genetic structure of European and Mediterranean maize borer populations on several wild and cultivated host plants.
- Author
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Leniaud, Laurianne, Audiot, Philippe, Bourguet, Denis, Frérot, Brigitte, Genestier, Gilles, Siu Fai Lee, Malausa, Thibaut, Le Pallec, Anne-Hélène, Souqual, Marie-Claude, and Ponsard, Sergine
- Subjects
BACILLUS thuringiensis genetics ,CORN ,BORERS (Insects) ,AGRICULTURAL pests ,HOST plants - Abstract
Target pests may become resistant to Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) toxins produced by trangenic maize ( Zea mays L.). Untreated refuge areas are set aside to conserve high frequencies of susceptibility alleles: a delay in resistance evolution is expected if susceptible individuals from refuges mate randomly with resistant individuals from Bt fields. In principle, refuges can be toxin-free maize or any other plant, provided it hosts sufficiently large pest populations mating randomly with populations from Bt-maize fields. Our aim was to examine the suitability of several cultivated or weedy plants [pepper ( Capsicum frutescens L.), sorghum ( Sorghum spec .), sunflower ( Helianthus annuus L.), cocklebur ( Xanthium spec .), cantaloupe ( Cucumis melo L.), and hop ( Humulus lupulus L.)] as refuges for Ostrinia nubilalis (Hübner) (Lepidoptera: Crambidae) and Sesamia nonagrioides Lefebvre (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae), two major maize pests in southern Europe. Larvae of both species were collected on these plants. Their genetic population structure was examined at several allozyme loci. We found little or no evidence for an influence of geographic distance, but detected a significant host-plant effect on the genetic differentiation for both species. Ostrinia nubilalis populations from sunflower, pepper, cocklebur, and sorghum appear to belong to the same genetic entity as populations collected on maize, but to differ from populations on hop. Accordingly, females from pepper and cocklebur produced exclusively the ‘Z’ type sexual pheromone, which, in France, characterizes populations developing on maize. Qualitatively, these plants (except hop) could thus serve as refuges for O. nubilalis; however, they may be of little use quantitatively as they were found much less infested than maize. Sesamia nonagrioides populations on maize and sorghum reached comparable densities, but a slight genetic differentiation was detected between both. The degree of assortative mating between populations feeding on both hosts must therefore be assessed before sorghum can be considered as a suitable refuge for this species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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11. Resistance Evolution to Bt Crops: Predispersal Mating of European Corn Borers.
- Author
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Dalecky, Ambroise, Ponsard, Sergine, Bailey, Richard I., Pélissier, Céline, and Bourguet, Denis
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TRANSGENIC plants ,DISEASE resistance of plants ,BACILLUS thuringiensis ,TOXINS ,PLANT genetic engineering ,AGRICULTURAL pests - Abstract
Over the past decade, the high-dose refuge (HDR) strategy, aimed at delaying the evolution of pest resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) toxins produced by transgenic crops, became mandatory in the United States and is being discussed for Europe. However, precopulatory dispersal and the mating rate between resident and immigrant individuals, two features influencing the efficiency of this strategy, have seldom been quantified in pests targeted by these toxins. We combined mark-recapture and biogeochemical marking over three breeding seasons to quantify these features directly in natural populations of Ostrinia nubilalis, a major lepidopteran corn pest. At the local scale, resident females mated regardless of males having dispersed beforehand or not, as assumed in the HDR strategy. Accordingly, 0-67% of resident females mating before dispersal did so with resident males, this percentage depending on the local proportion of resident males (0% to 67.2%). However, resident males rarely mated with immigrant females (which mostly arrived mated), the fraction of females mating before dispersal was variable and sometimes substantial (4.8% to 56.8%), and there was no evidence for male premating dispersal being higher. Hence, O. nubilalis probably mates at a more restricted spatial scale than previously assumed, a feature that may decrease the efficiency of the HDR strategy under certain circumstances, depending for example on crop rotation practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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12. Sources of variation in consumer-diet δ15N enrichment: a meta-analysis.
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Vanderklift, Mathew A. and Ponsard, Sergine
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CONSUMERS ,DIET ,STABLE isotopes ,NITROGEN excretion ,ORGANISMS - Abstract
Measurements of δ
15 N of consumers are usually higher than those of their diet. This general pattern is widely used to make inferences about trophic relationships in ecological studies, although the underlying mechanisms causing the pattern are poorly understood. However, there can be substantial variation in consumer-diet δ15 N enrichment within this general pattern. We conducted an extensive literature review, which yielded 134 estimates from controlled studies of consumer-diet δ15 N enrichment, to test the significance of several potential sources of variation by means of meta-analyses. We found patterns related to processes of nitrogen assimilation and excretion. There was a significant effect of the main biochemical form of nitrogenous waste: ammonotelic organisms show lower δ15 N enrichment than ureotelic or uricotelic organisms. There were no significant differences between animals feeding on plant food, animal food, or manufactured mixtures, but detritivores yielded significantly lower estimates of enrichment. δ15 N enrichment was found to increase significantly with the C:N ratio of the diet, suggesting that a nitrogen-poor diet can have an effect similar to that already documented for fasting organisms. There were also differences among taxonomic classes: molluscs and crustaceans generally yielded lower δ15 N enrichment. The lower δ15 N enrichment might be related to the fact that molluscs and crustaceans excrete mainly ammonia, or to the fact that many were detritivores. Organisms inhabiting marine environments yielded significantly lower estimates of δ15 N enrichment than organisms inhabiting terrestrial or freshwater environments, a pattern that was influenced by the number of marine, ammonotelic, crustaceans and molluscs. Overall, our analyses point to several important sources of variation in δ15 N enrichment and suggest that the most important of them are the main biochemical form of nitrogen excretion and nutritional status. The variance of estimates of δ15 N enrichment, as well as the fact that enrichment may be different in certain groups of organisms should be taken into account in statistical approaches for studying diet and trophic relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2003
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13. Assessing top-down and bottom-up control in a litter-based soil macroinvertebrate food chain.
- Author
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Ponsard, Sergine, Arditi, Roger, and Jost, Christian
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FOOD chains ,SOIL science ,ECOLOGY ,PREDATORY animals ,FORESTS & forestry ,DETRITUS - Abstract
The relative importance of top-down and bottom-up control in setting the equilibrium abundances within trophic levels is examined in a comparative study on the litter-based food chain of a temperate deciduous forest. During two consecutive years, we estimated the abundances of macroinvertebrate detritivores and their predators on a natural gradient of annual litterfall. Detritus-based food chains are thought to be classical examples of donor-controlled systems. Indeed, both trophic levels showed higher abundances on sites with higher annual litterfall. Therefore, they appear to be bottom-up controlled. Using the Errors-in-Variables regression technique, we quantitatively compared our data with the equilibrium predictions of a set of simple trophic chain models including bottom-up effects with different types of functional responses (Beddington-DeAngelis, Hassell-Varley, and ratio-dependent). The model with a Hassell-Varley type functional response yielded the best adjustment to the data, although with a very high value of the mutual interference parameter suggesting the existence of overcompensating density dependence. Several changes to the structure of this model were considered. Their adjustment to the data consistently yielded such high values of the interference parameter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
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14. What can stable isotopes (omega15N and omega13C) tell about the food web of soil...
- Author
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Ponsard, Sergine and Arditi, Roger
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STABLE isotopes ,SOIL invertebrates - Abstract
Measures stable isotope ratios omega 15N and omega 13C for the litter, soil, and macro-invertebrates of three temperate decidious forest sites in spring, summer, and autumn. Determination of the trophic structure of soil macro-invertebrates; Variance of the isotopic ratios of the detritivorous species.
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- 2000
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15. Should growing and adult animals fed on the same diet show different δ15N values?
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Ponsard, Sergine and Averbuch, Pierre
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- 1999
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16. The Genetic Structure of Asian Corn Borer, Ostrinia furnacalis, Populations in China: Haplotype Variance in Northern Populations and Potential Impact on Management of Resistance to Transgenic Maize.
- Author
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Li, Jing, Coates, Brad S., Kim, Kyung Seok, Bourguet, Denis, Ponsard, Sergine, He, Kanglai, and Wang, Zhenying
- Subjects
OSTRINIA furnacalis ,GENETIC research ,HAPLOTYPES ,GENE flow ,HEREDITY - Abstract
Asian corn borer, Ostrinia furnacalis (Guenée), is a severe pest that infests cultivated maize in the major production regions of China. Populations show genotype-by-environment variation in voltinism, such that populations with a single generation (univoltine) are fixed in Northern China where growing seasons are short. Low genetic differentiation was found among samples from 33 collection sites across China and one site from North Korea (n = 1673) using variation at 6 nuclear microsatellite loci (ENA corrected global FST = 0.020; P value < 0.05). Analysis of molecular variance indicated that geographic region, number of generations or voltinism accounted for <0.38% of the total genetic variation at nuclear loci and was corroborated by clustering of co-ancestries among genotypes using the program STRUCTURE. In contrast, a mitochondrial haplotype network identified 4 distinct clusters, where 70.5% of samples from univoltine populations were within a single group. Univoltine populations were also placed into a unique cluster using Population Graph and Principal component analyses, which showed significant differentiation with multivoltine populations (φST = 0.400; P value < 0.01). This study suggests that gene flow among O. furnacalis in China may be high among regions, with the exception of northeastern localities. Haplotype variation may be due to random genetic drift resulting from partial reproductive isolation between univoltine and multivoltine O. furnacalis populations. Such reproductive isolation might impact the potential spread of alleles that confer resistance to transgenic maize in China. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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