34 results on '"Bouget C"'
Search Results
2. Trait-Based Response of Deadwood and Tree-Related Microhabitats to Decline in Temperate Lowland and Montane Forests
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Bouget, C., Cours, J., Larrieu, L., Parmain, G., Müller, J., Speckens, V., and Sallé, A.
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- 2024
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3. Surviving in Changing Forests: Abiotic Disturbance Legacy Effects on Arthropod Communities of Temperate Forests
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Cours, J., Bouget, C., Barsoum, N., Horák, J., Le Souchu, E., Leverkus, A. B., Pincebourde, S., Thorn, S., and Sallé, A.
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- 2023
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4. Trade-offs between carbon stocks and biodiversity in European temperate forests
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Sabatini, F. M., de Andrade, R. B., Paillet, Y., Odor, P., Bouget, C., Campagnaro, T., Gosselin, F., Janssen, P., Mattioli, W., Nascimbene, J., Sitzia, T., Kuemmerle, T., and Burrascano, S.
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Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution - Abstract
Policies to mitigate climate change and biodiversity loss often assume that protecting carbon-rich forests provides co-benefits in terms of biodiversity, due to the spatial congruence of carbon stocks and biodiversity at biogeographic scales. However, it remains unclear whether this holds at the scales relevant for management, with particularly large knowledge gaps for temperate forests and for taxa other than trees. We built a comprehensive dataset of Central European temperate forest structure and multi-taxonomic diversity (beetles, birds, bryophytes, fungi, lichens, and plants) across 352 plots. We used Boosted Regression Trees to assess the relationship between above-ground live carbon stocks and (a) taxon-specific richness, (b) a unified multidiversity index. We used Threshold Indicator Taxa ANalysis to explore individual species' responses to changing above-ground carbon stocks and to detect change-points in species composition along the carbon-stock gradient. Our results reveal an overall weak and highly variable relationship between richness and carbon stock at the stand scale, both for individual taxonomic groups and for multidiversity. Similarly, the proportion of win-win and trade-off species (i.e. species favored or disadvantaged by increasing carbon stock, respectively) varied substantially across taxa. Win-win species gradually replaced trade-off species with increasing carbon, without clear thresholds along the above-ground carbon gradient, suggesting that community-level surrogates (e.g. richness) might fail to detect critical changes in biodiversity. Collectively, our analyses highlight that leveraging co-benefits between carbon and biodiversity in temperate forest may require stand-scale management that prioritizes either biodiversity or carbon-in order to maximize co-benefits at broader scales. Importantly, this contrasts with tropical forests, where climate [...], Comment: Pre-review Version 2018, 07\23 + Supplementary information 43 Pages, 5 figures + 9 supplementary Figures
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- 2019
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5. Responses of the hyper‐diverse community of canopy‐dwelling Hymenoptera to oak decline
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Le Souchu, E., primary, Cours, J., additional, Cochenille, T., additional, Bouget, C., additional, Bankhead‐Dronnet, S., additional, Braet, Y., additional, Burguet, P., additional, Gabard, C., additional, Galkowski, C., additional, Gereys, B., additional, Herbrecht, F., additional, Joncour, B., additional, Marhic, E., additional, Michez, D., additional, Buhl, P. Neerup, additional, Noblecourt, T., additional, Notton, D. G., additional, Penigot, W., additional, Rasplus, J.‐Y., additional, Robert, T., additional, Staverlokk, A., additional, Vincent‐Barbaroux, C., additional, and Sallé, A., additional
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- 2024
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6. Congruence across taxa and spatial scales: Are we asking too much of species data?
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Burrascano, S., de Andrade, R. B., Paillet, Y., Ódor, P., Antonini, G., Bouget, C., Campagnaro, T., Gosselin, F., Janssen, P., Persiani, A. M., Nascimbene, J., Sabatini, F. M., Sitzia, T., and Blasi, C.
- Published
- 2018
7. Post-harvesting dynamics of the deadwood profile: the case of lowland beech-oak coppice-with-standards set-aside stands in France
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Larrieu, L., Cabanettes, A., Gouix, N., Burnel, L., Bouget, C., and Deconchat, M.
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- 2019
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8. Trait-Based Response of Deadwood and Tree-Related Microhabitats to Decline in Temperate Lowland and Montane Forests
- Author
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Bouget, C., primary, Cours, J., additional, Larrieu, L., additional, Parmain, G., additional, Müller, J., additional, Speckens, V., additional, and Sallé, A., additional
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- 2023
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9. Effects of landscape design of forest reserves on Saproxylic beetle diversity
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Bouget, C. and Parmain, G.
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- 2016
10. Intraspecific variations in dispersal ability of saproxylic beetles in fragmented forest patches
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Bouget, C., Brin, A., Tellez, D., and Archaux, F.
- Published
- 2015
11. Where are we now with European forest multi-taxon biodiversity and where can we head to?
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Burrascano, S., Chianucci, F., Trentanovi, G., Kepfer-Rojas, S., Sitzia, T., Tinya, F., Doerfler, I., Paillet, Y., Nagel, T. A., Mitic, B., Morillas, L., Munzi, S., Van der Sluis, T., Alterio, E., Balducci, L., de Andrade, R. B., Bouget, C., Giordani, P., Lachat, T., Matosevic, D., Napoleone, F., Nascimbene, J., Paniccia, C., Roth, N., Aszalos, R., Brazaitis, G., Cutini, A., D'Andrea, E., De Smedt, P., Heilmann-Clausen, J., Janssen, P., Kozak, D., Marell, A., Mikolas, M., Norden, B., Matula, R., Schall, P., Svoboda, M., Ujhazyova, M., Vandekerkhove, K., Wohlwend, M., Xystrakis, F., Aleffi, M., Ammer, C., Archaux, F., Asbeck, T., Avtzis, D., Ayasse, M., Bagella, S., Balestrieri, R., Barbati, A., Basile, M., Bergamini, A., Bertini, G., Biscaccianti, A. B., Boch, S., Boloni, J., Bombi, P., Boscardin, Y., Brunialti, G., Bruun, H. H., Buscot, F., Byriel, D. B., Campagnaro, T., Campanaro, A., Chauvat, M., Ciach, M., Ciliak, M., Cistrone, L., Pereira, J. M. C., Daniel, R., De Cinti, B., De Filippo, G., Dekoninck, W., Di Salvatore, U., Dumas, Y., Elek, Z., Ferretti, F., Fotakis, D., Frank, T., Frey, J., Giancola, C., Gomoryova, E., Gosselin, M., Gosselin, F., Gossner, M. M., Gotmark, F., Haeler, E., Hansen, A. K., Hertzog, L., Hofmeister, J., Hosek, J., Johannsen, V. K., Justensen, M. J., Korboulewsky, N., Kovacs, B., Lakatos, F., Landivar, C. M., Lens, L., Lingua, E., Lombardi, F., Malis, F., Marchino, L., Marozas, V., Matteucci, G., Mattioli, W., Moller, P. F., Muller, J., Nemeth, C., Onodi, G., Parisi, F., Perot, T., Perret, S., Persiani, A. M., Portaccio, A., Posillico, M., Preiksa, Z., Rahbek, C., Rappa, N. J., Ravera, S., Romano, A., Samu, F., Scheidegger, C., Schmidt, I. K., Schwegmann, S., Sicuriello, F., Spinu, A. P., Spyroglou, G., Stillhard, J., Topalidou, E., Tottrup, A. P., Ujhazy, K., Veres, K., Verheyen, K., Weisser, W. W., Zapponi, L., and Odor, P.
- Published
- 2023
12. Methods for behavior study of laying hens
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Lorieau, L., primary, Chevé, B., additional, Bouget, C., additional, and Cousin, A., additional
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- 2022
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13. CLIMTREE: Quantifying changes in flying insect diversity and soil fauna along a gradient of climate induced forest decline using DNA metabarcoding
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Sire, Lucas, Schmidt Yáñez, Paul, Fontaneto, Diego, Bouget, C., Rougerie, Rodolphe, Larrieu, Laurent, Monaghan, Michael T., Yu, Douglas W., Herniou, Elisabeth, Lopez-Vaamonde, Carlos, and Lopez-Vaamonde, Carlos
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[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio] - Published
- 2019
14. Quantifying the impact of tree-diebacksand salvage logging on mountain forest biodiversity using metabarcoding
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Sire, L., Rougerie, R., Bouget, C., Larrieu, L., Courtial, B., Bezier, A., Yu, D., Herniou, E., Lopez Vaamonde, C., Institut de recherche sur la biologie de l'insecte UMR7261 (IRBI), Université de Tours (UT)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle (MNHN), Dynamiques Forestières dans l'Espace Rural (DYNAFOR), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-École nationale supérieure agronomique de Toulouse [ENSAT]-Institut National Polytechnique (Toulouse) (Toulouse INP), Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées, Centre National de la Propriété Forestière, Ecosystèmes forestiers (UR EFNO), Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA), Unité de recherche Zoologie Forestière (URZF), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), Institute of Zoology, Université de Tours (UT), KUNMING INSTITUTE OF ZOOLOGY CHN, Partenaires IRSTEA, Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA)-Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique - CNRS (FRANCE), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CHINA), Institut National Polytechnique de Toulouse - Toulouse INP (FRANCE), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique - INRA (FRANCE), Institut national de Recherche en Sciences et Technologies pour l'Environnement et l'Agriculture - IRSTEA (FRANCE), Sorbonne Université (FRANCE), Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes - EPHE (FRANCE), Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle - MNHN (FRANCE), Université de Tours (FRANCE), Dynamiques et Ecologie des Paysages Agriforestiers - DYNAFOR (Castanet-Tolosan, France), Université de Tours-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut National Polytechnique de Toulouse - INPT (FRANCE), Université de Tours, UNIVERSITE DE TOURS IRBI FRA, MNHN PARIS FRA, IRSTEA NOGENT SUR VERNISSON UR EFNO FRA, INRA UMR 1201 DYNAFOR CASTANET TOLOSAN FRA, and INRA ORLEANS FRA
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BOIS MORT ,ECLAIRCIE SANITAIRE ,Biodiversité et Ecologie ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,ADN ,DEPERISSEMENT ,blight ,species assignment ,mountain forest ,dna ,FORET DE MONTAGNE ,[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences ,ecological indicators ,MARQUEUR GENETIQUE ,Climate change ,DNA barcoding ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,DETERMINATION D'ESPECE ,biodiversity ,deadwood ,COLEOPTERE ,BIODIVERSITE ,Saproxylic beetles ,INVENTAIRE ,saproxylic organisms ,inventory ,ORGANISME SAPROXYLIQUE ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,genetic markers ,INDICATEUR ECOLOGIQUE - Abstract
Le colloque de Génomique Environnementale (GE) est une manifestation nationale permettant aux chercheurs français et internationaux travaillant sur l’écologie, l’évolution de la biodiversité ou le fonctionnement des écosystèmes d’échanger sur l’utilisation des nouvelles technologies de séquençages (NTS) et des développements récents en bioinformatique. Il s’agit de la quatrième édition du colloque de Génomique Environnementale après Lyon (2011), Rennes (2013) et de Montpellier (2015) organisé sous l'égide du GDR "Génomique Environnementale" (http://gdr3692.wix.com/gdrge) dont les actions sont soutenues par le CNRS, l’INRA et le MNHN. Ce colloque représente une opportunité exceptionnelle pour échanger entre chercheurs/doctorants/post-doctorants et répondre aux défis posés en matière d’environnement, de réchauffement climatique et plus généralement de maîtrise des impacts globaux sur les écosystèmes. Le colloque GE est un lieu d’échanges privilégié permettant un dialogue efficace entre, d’une part, la communauté scientifique et, d’autre part, les acteurs gérant les systèmes d’observation et d’analyse des écosystèmes (zones ateliers, ORE, parcs naturels etc...) ou les demandes sociétales dont les entreprises sont souvent porteuses.
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- 2017
15. Edge contrast does not modulate edge effect on plants and pollinators
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Andrieu, E., primary, Cabanettes, A., additional, Alignier, A., additional, Van Halder, I., additional, Alard, D., additional, Archaux, F., additional, Barbaro, L., additional, Bouget, C., additional, Bailey, S., additional, Corcket, E., additional, Deconchat, M., additional, Vigan, M., additional, Villemey, A., additional, and Ouin, A., additional
- Published
- 2018
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16. More than trees: a European scientific network to assess the relationships between forest structural heterogeneity, multi-taxon biodiversity, and carbon storage
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Burrascano, S., Antonini, G., Bouget, C., Campagnaro, T., De Andrade, R. B., Fuhr, M., Gosselin, F., Janssen, P., Maggi, O., Mattioli, W., Nascimbene, J., Odor, P., Paillet, Y., Sabatini, F. M., and Sitzia, T.
- Published
- 2017
17. Effet des caractéristiques de peuplement et de naturalité biologique sur la biodiversité - Quelles implications possibles pour les stratégies de gestion ?
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Bouget, C., Marion Gosselin, Ecosystèmes forestiers (UR EFNO), and Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA)
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forests ,GROS BOIS ,deadwood ,BOIS MORT ,GESTION FORESTIERE ,FORET ,anthropogenic disturbance ,forest exploitation ,BIODIVERSITE ,ACTION ANTHROPIQUE ,MICROHABITAT ,EXPLOITATION FORESTIERE ,NATURALITE ,forest stands ,PEUPLEMENT FORESTIER ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,anthropic activity ,naturalness ,biodiversity ,PERTURBATION ANTHROPIQUE - Abstract
La naturalité biologique n'est pas intrinsèquement liée à l'arrêt de l'exploitation mais correspond à la présence d'éléments structuraux typiques de forêts en évolution naturelle tels que les bois morts ou les dendromicrohabitats. Par ailleurs d'autres attributs ou propriétés du peuplement peuvent influencer la biodiversité. Les effets de l'ensemble de ces caractéristiques sur les 7 taxons du projet GNB sont examinés ici, avec une discussion sur la manière d'interpréter ces résultats pour la gestion forestière.
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- 2017
18. Gestion, Naturalité et Biodiversité : présentation générale du projet de recherche et de son approche
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Frédéric Gosselin, Yoan Paillet, Marion Gosselin, Durrieu, S., Laurent Larrieu, Anders Mårell, Boulanger, V., Debaive, N., Frédéric Archaux, Bouget, C., Gilg, O., Roquencourt, A., Drapier, N., Dauffy Richard, E., Ecosystèmes forestiers (UR EFNO), Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA), Territoires, Environnement, Télédétection et Information Spatiale (UMR TETIS), Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA)-Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (Cirad)-AgroParisTech-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Dynamiques Forestières dans l'Espace Rural (DYNAFOR), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut National Polytechnique (Toulouse) (Toulouse INP), Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Ecole Nationale Supérieure Agronomique de Toulouse, Réserves Naturelles de France, Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA)-AgroParisTech-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (Cirad), Dynamiques et écologie des paysages agriforestiers (DYNAFOR), École nationale supérieure agronomique de Toulouse [ENSAT]-Institut National Polytechnique (Toulouse) (Toulouse INP), and Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)
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GESTION FORESTIERE ,FORET ,forest exploitation ,MODELE STATISTIQUE ,INDICATEUR DE BIODIVERSITE ,PEUPLEMENT FORESTIER ,RECHERCHE ,RESERVE BIOLOGIQUE ,RESERVE NATURELLE ,biological reserve ,biodiversity indicator ,biodiversity ,ANALYSE STATISTIQUE ,forests ,research ,BIODIVERSITE ,statistical model ,methodology ,STRATEGIE D'ECHANTILLONNAGE ,EXPLOITATION FORESTIERE ,nature reserves ,sampling strategy ,INVENTAIRE ,NATURALITE ,inventory ,forest stands ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,statistical methods ,naturalness ,METHODOLOGIE - Abstract
Pour saisir la portée et l'intérêt du projet GNB, il ne suffit pas de connaître ses objectifs, dûment fondés sur un bilan circonstancié de l'état des connaissances. Il faut aussi appréhender sa démarche « expérimentale », à commencer par la stratégie d'échantillonnage et d'inventaires ; il faut comprendre le choix de méthodes d'analyse statistique innovantes mais complexes, avec en particulier la notion de magnitude des effets pour que les résultats puissent avoir une « lecture » opérationnelle. Impossible de résumer en quelques mots la réflexion exigeante qui a présidé à la conception du projet.
- Published
- 2017
19. Projet GNB : synthèse des relations entre naturalité anthropique, naturalité biologique et biodiversité
- Author
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Marion Gosselin, Bouget, C., Frédéric Archaux, Yoan Paillet, Boulanger, V., Debaive, N., Frédéric Gosselin, Ecosystèmes forestiers (UR EFNO), Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA), and Réserves Naturelles de France
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GESTION FORESTIERE ,FORET ,anthropogenic disturbance ,forest exploitation ,ACTION ANTHROPIQUE ,mosses ,flora ,PEUPLEMENT FORESTIER ,RESERVE BIOLOGIQUE ,anthropic activity ,BRYOPHYTE ,RESERVE NATURELLE ,CARABIDAE ,biological reserve ,CHIROPTERA ,biodiversity ,forests ,COLEOPTERE ,BIODIVERSITE ,EXPLOITATION FORESTIERE ,nature reserves ,saproxylic organisms ,NATURALITE ,forest stands ,ORGANISME SAPROXYLIQUE ,birds ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,OISEAU ,naturalness ,FLORE ,PERTURBATION ANTHROPIQUE - Abstract
Cet article conclut le dossier consacré au projet Gestion forestière, Naturalité, Biodiversité, qui s'est attaché à comparer la biodiversité de sept groupes taxonomiques (flore vasculaire, bryophytes, champignons lignicoles, carabes, coléoptères saproxyliques, oiseaux et chiroptères) dans des réserves forestières intégrales et dans leurs équivalents en forêt exploitée. Que retenir des résultats ? Tout d'abord, que des mesures directes de biodiversité confortent les dispositions en vigueur pour la conservation de la biodiversité forestière. Ensuite, que les premiers constats appellent de nouvelles analyses et invitent à approfondir la présentation des résultats, en travaillant avec les forestiers pour des analyses de magnitude plus réalistes.
- Published
- 2017
20. Fragmentation effects on dead wood-dependent species associated with disturbed forest habitats: implications for stump harvesting
- Author
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Ranius, T., primary, Mestre, L., additional, Bouget, C., additional, and Schroeder, M., additional
- Published
- 2016
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21. Effects of landscape design of forest reserves on Saproxylic beetle diversity
- Author
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Bouget, C., primary and Parmain, G., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Fragmentation effects on dead wood-dependent species associated with disturbed forest habitats: implications for stump harvesting.
- Author
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Ranius, T., Mestre, L., Bouget, C., and Schroeder, M.
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CARBON sequestration in forests ,FRAGMENTATION reactions ,SENSITIVITY analysis ,HABITATS ,LINEAR algebra ,SYMPATRIC speciation - Abstract
Stump harvesting after clear-felling may be detrimental for species’ landscape-scale persistence. Sensitivity to it is most likely due to reductions in habitat density, resulting in a non-linear relationship between population size and total habitat amount (i.e. fragmentation effects). Here we summarize theoretical expectations and empirical findings on fragmentation effects in stumps and other types of dead wood in disturbed forest habitats and draw conclusions about the consequences of stump harvesting. Within disturbed patches, some negative fragmentation effects have been observed for beetles and lichens, but most studies have found a linear relationship between habitat amount and population size. At landscape scale, evidence of fragmentation effects in disturbed forest habitats has been detected in some published investigations, but none of them focused on stumps. Thus, although organisms associated with disturbed forest habitats are assumed to be strong dispersers, they may still be sensitive to habitat fragmentation. We conclude that stump harvesting at a moderate level is not likely to increase risks for landscape-scale species extinctions markedly, despite clearly negative local effects. However, due to large uncertainties, adaptive management with monitoring of dead wood-dependent species should be applied wherever stump harvesting is more extensive. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2017
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23. Can rove beetles (Staphylinidae) be excluded in studies focusing on saproxylic beetles in central European beech forests?
- Author
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Parmain, G., Bouget, C., Müller, J., Horak, J., Gossner, M.M., Lachat, T., and Isacsson, G.
- Subjects
- *
STAPHYLINIDAE , *BEETLES , *BEECH , *FAGACEAE , *ALEOCHARA - Abstract
Monitoring saproxylic beetle diversity, though challenging, can help identifying relevant conservation sites or key drivers of forest biodiversity, and assessing the impact of forestry practices on biodiversity. Unfortunately, monitoring species assemblages is costly, mainly due to the time spent on identification. Excluding families which are rich in specimens and species but are difficult to identify is a frequent procedure used in ecological entomology to reduce the identification cost. The Staphylinidae (rove beetle) family is both one of the most frequently excluded and one of the most species-rich saproxylic beetle families. Using a large-scale beetle and environmental dataset from 238 beech stands across Europe, we evaluated the effects of staphylinid exclusion on results in ecological forest studies. Simplified staphylinid-excluded assemblages were found to be relevant surrogates for whole assemblages. The species richness and composition of saproxylic beetle assemblages both with and without staphylinids responded congruently to landscape, climatic and stand gradients, even when the assemblages included a high proportion of staphylinid species. At both local and regional scales, the species richness as well as the species composition of staphylinid-included and staphylinid-excluded assemblages were highly positively correlated. Ranking of sites according to their biodiversity level, which either included or excluded Staphylinidae in species richness, also gave congruent results. From our results, species assemblages omitting staphylinids can be taken as efficient surrogates for complete assemblages in large scale biodiversity monitoring studies. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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24. Congruence across taxa and spatial scales: Are we asking too much of species data?
- Author
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Yoan Paillet, Péter Ódor, Francesco Maria Sabatini, Thomas Campagnaro, R. B. de Andrade, Tommaso Sitzia, Frédéric Gosselin, Carlo Blasi, Juri Nascimbene, Christophe Bouget, Anna Maria Persiani, Gloria Antonini, Philippe Janssen, Sabina Burrascano, Università degli Studi di Roma 'La Sapienza' = Sapienza University [Rome], Ecosystèmes forestiers (UR EFNO), Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA), MTA Centre for Ecological Research [Tihany], Hungarian Academy of Sciences (MTA), UNIVERSITÀ DEGLI STUDI DI PADOVA PADUA ITA, Partenaires IRSTEA, Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA)-Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA), Laboratoire des EcoSystèmes et des Sociétés en Montagne (UR LESSEM), Université Grenoble Alpes [2016-2019] (UGA [2016-2019]), UNIVERSITY OF BOLOGNA ITA, HUMBOLDT UNIVERVITY BERLIN DEU, Burrascano, S., de Andrade, R.B., Paillet, Y., Ódor, P., Antonini, G., Bouget, C., Campagnaro, T., Gosselin, F., Janssen, P., Persiani, A.M., Nascimbene, J., Sabatini, F.M., Sitzia, T., and Blasi, C.
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,INDICATORS ,biodiversity, conservation, indicators, monitoring, multi-taxon, surrogates, temperate forests ,CONSERVATION ,Biodiversity ,MULTI-TAXON ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,surrogate ,Taxonomic rank ,MONITORING ,Lichen ,SURROGATES ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Global and Planetary Change ,Ecology ,indicator ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Species diversity ,15. Life on land ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematic ,Geography ,Taxon ,TEMPERATE FORESTS ,temperate forest ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,Spatial ecology ,BIODIVERSITY ,Species richness ,Temperate rainforest - Abstract
International audience; Aim: Biodiversity monitoring and conservation are extremely complex, and surrogate taxa may represent proxies to test methods and solutions. However, cross-taxon correlations in species diversity (i.e., cross-taxon congruence) may vary widely with spatial scale. Our goal is to assess how cross-taxon congruence varies with spatial scale in European temperate forests. We expect that congruence in species diversity increases when shifting from fine to coarse spatial scales, with differences between species richness and composition, and across pairs of taxonomic groups. Location: European temperate forests. Time period: Present. Major taxa studied: Vascular plants, bryophytes, birds, epiphytic lichens, saproxylic beetles and wood-inhabiting fungi. Methods: We used field data (354 plots across 23 sites) encompassing Italy, France and Hungary, with species information for six taxonomic groups. We accounted separately for spatial grain (the size of elementary sampling unit) and extent (the geographical area included in the survey) and evaluated the relationships within all the possible pairs of taxa. Results: Although no pair of taxa had its species richness consistently correlated across scales, we found no changes in the direction of correlations when analysing species composition. However, when increasing grain and extent, we did find a general increase in the magnitude of correlations in species composition and partial changes in significance, with plants having the highest number of significant correlations. Main conclusions: Species richness congruence among taxa is strongly scale dependent owing to differences in the relative contribution of large- and small-scale processes across taxa. Cross-taxon congruence in species composition is scale dependent only for its magnitude, because life-history traits of individual species make responses to environmental factors similar across scales. Forest monitoring should consider multi-taxon sampling and limit the use of surrogates at specific spatial scales, especially for species richness. Sampling plant species composition in scattered plots across different sites may effectively summarize the whole community composition.
- Published
- 2018
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25. Enhancing Buprestidae monitoring in Europe: Trap catches increase with a fluorescent yellow colour but not with the presence of decoys.
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Kuhn A, San Martin G, Hasbroucq S, Beliën T, Bonte J, Bouget C, Hautier L, Sweeney J, and Grégoire JC
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- Animals, Europe, Insect Control methods, Belgium, Male, Female, Pyrus, Diptera physiology, Color
- Abstract
This study investigated the efficacy of various traps differing in colour (green or yellow), presence or absence of decoys (dead Agrilus planipennis) or design (commercial MULTz or multifunnel traps, and homemade bottle- or fan-traps) for monitoring European Buprestidae in deciduous forests and pear orchards. Over two years, we collected 2220 samples on a two-week basis from 382 traps across 46 sites in Belgium and France. None of the traps proved effective for monitoring Agrilus sinuatus in infested pear orchards (17 specimens captured in 2021, 0 in 2022). The decoys did not affect the catch rates whatever the trap model, colour, buprestid species or sex. The fluorescent yellow traps (MULTz and yellow fan-traps) tended to be more attractive than the green traps (green fan-traps and, to a lower extent, multifunnel green traps). Most Agrilus species showed similar patterns in mean trap catches, with the exception of Agrilus biguttatus, which had the largest catches in the green multifunnel traps. Finally, we observed a high variation in catch rates between localities: the site explained 64% of the catches variance, while the tree within the site and the type of trap explained only 6-8.5% each. In many sites, we captured very few specimens, despite the abundance of dying mature trees favourable to the development of Buprestidae. For the early detection of non-native Buprestidae, it therefore seems essential to maximise the number of monitoring sites. Due to their cost-effectiveness, lightweight design, and modularity, fan-traps emerged as promising tools for buprestid monitoring. The study's findings extend beyond European fauna, as a preliminary trial in Canada suggested that yellow fan-traps could also improve captures of non-European buprestid species and catch species of interest such as Agrilus bilineatus (a species on the EPPO A2 list of pests/pathogens recommended for regulation in the EU)., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2024 Kuhn et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2024
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26. Persisting roadblocks in arthropod monitoring using non-destructive metabarcoding from collection media of passive traps.
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Sire L, Schmidt Yáñez P, Bézier A, Courtial B, Mbedi S, Sparmann S, Larrieu L, Rougerie R, Bouget C, Monaghan MT, Herniou EA, and Lopez-Vaamonde C
- Subjects
- Animals, DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic methods, DNA genetics, Ethanol, Glycols, Biodiversity, Diptera genetics
- Abstract
Background: Broad-scale monitoring of arthropods is often carried out with passive traps ( e.g., Malaise traps) that can collect thousands of specimens per sample. The identification of individual specimens requires time and taxonomic expertise, limiting the geographical and temporal scale of research and monitoring studies. DNA metabarcoding of bulk-sample homogenates has been found to be faster, efficient and reliable, but the destruction of samples prevents a posteriori validation of species occurrences and relative abundances. Non-destructive metabarcoding of DNA extracted from collection medium has been applied in a limited number of studies, but further tests of efficiency are required with different trap types and collection media to assess the consistency of the method., Methods: We quantified the detection rate of arthropod species when applying non-destructive DNA metabarcoding with a short (127-bp) fragment of mitochondrial COI on two combinations of passive traps and collection media: (1) water with monopropylene glycol (H
2 O-MPG) used in window-flight traps (WFT, 53 in total); (2) ethanol with monopropylene glycol (EtOH-MPG) used in Malaise traps (MT, 27 in total). We then compared our results with those obtained for the same samples using morphological identification (for WFTs) or destructive metabarcoding of bulk homogenate (for MTs). This comparison was applied as part of a larger study of arthropod species richness in silver fir ( Abies alba Mill., 1759) stands across a range of climate-induced tree dieback levels and forest management strategies., Results: Of the 53 H2 O-MPG samples from WFTs, 16 produced no metabarcoding results, while the remaining 37 samples yielded 77 arthropod MOTUs in total, of which none matched any of the 343 beetle species morphologically identified from the same traps. Metabarcoding of 26 EtOH-MPG samples from MTs detected more arthropod MOTUs (233) than destructive metabarcoding of homogenate (146 MOTUs, 8 orders), of which 71 were shared MOTUs, though MOTU richness per trap was similar between treatments. While we acknowledge the failure of metabarcoding from WFT-derived collection medium (H2 O-MPG), the treatment of EtOH-based Malaise trapping medium remains promising. We conclude however that DNA metabarcoding from collection medium still requires further methodological developments and cannot replace homogenate metabarcoding as an approach for arthropod monitoring. It can be used nonetheless as a complementary treatment when enhancing the detection of soft-bodied arthropods like spiders and Diptera., Competing Interests: The authors declare there are no competing interests., (©2023 Sire et al.)- Published
- 2023
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27. Ambient and substrate energy influence decomposer diversity differentially across trophic levels.
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Kriegel P, Vogel S, Angeleri R, Baldrian P, Borken W, Bouget C, Brin A, Bussler H, Cocciufa C, Feldmann B, Gossner MM, Haeler E, Hagge J, Hardersen S, Hartmann H, Hjältén J, Kotowska MM, Lachat T, Larrieu L, Leverkus AB, Macagno ALM, Mitesser O, Müller J, Obermaier E, Parisi F, Pelz S, Schuldt B, Seibold S, Stengel E, Sverdrup-Thygeson A, Weisser W, and Thorn S
- Subjects
- Animals, Trees, Wood, Biodiversity, Europe, Ecosystem, Coleoptera
- Abstract
The species-energy hypothesis predicts increasing biodiversity with increasing energy in ecosystems. Proxies for energy availability are often grouped into ambient energy (i.e., solar radiation) and substrate energy (i.e., non-structural carbohydrates or nutritional content). The relative importance of substrate energy is thought to decrease with increasing trophic level from primary consumers to predators, with reciprocal effects of ambient energy. Yet, empirical tests are lacking. We compiled data on 332,557 deadwood-inhabiting beetles of 901 species reared from wood of 49 tree species across Europe. Using host-phylogeny-controlled models, we show that the relative importance of substrate energy versus ambient energy decreases with increasing trophic levels: the diversity of zoophagous and mycetophagous beetles was determined by ambient energy, while non-structural carbohydrate content in woody tissues determined that of xylophagous beetles. Our study thus overall supports the species-energy hypothesis and specifies that the relative importance of ambient temperature increases with increasing trophic level with opposite effects for substrate energy., (© 2023 The Authors. Ecology Letters published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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28. Phylogenetic, functional and taxonomic responses of wild bee communities along urbanisation gradients.
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Villalta I, Bouget C, Lopez-Vaamonde C, and Baude M
- Subjects
- Animals, Bees, Cities, Ecosystem, Phenotype, Phylogeny, Biodiversity, Urbanization
- Abstract
Increasing urbanisation is one of the primary drivers of land-use change that threaten biodiversity. Wild bee communities have been reported with contrasting responses to urbanisation, with varying effects on abundance and taxonomical diversity. The suite of functional traits exhibited by wild bee species might determine their persistence in urban areas. Urbanisation thus can impose an environmental filter with potential consequences on the functional and phylogenetical diversity of wild bee communities. Here, we sampled 2944 wild bee specimens from 156 species in 29 sites located along an urbanisation gradient using a replicated design in three mid-sized cities in the Loire valley (France). We show that urban landscape cover has a negative effect on overall species richness and taxonomical diversity indices, while total abundance remains constant. Species loss was taxon dependent, mainly driven by Andrenidae and Halictidae. Only a few species, especially of the genus Lasioglossum, were positively affected by the urban landscape cover. Urban and peri-urban areas differed in their composition of bee assemblages. Species turnover was the main component of beta diversity, driving community dissimilarities through the urban gradient. Urbanisation favours bees with small body sizes, social structure and extended flight periods but did not affect the phylogenetic or the functional diversity of communities. Our findings have implications for understanding the factors involved in the environmental filter exerted through the urban gradient on bee communities helping to implement conservation measures and managing urban spaces for bees., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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29. Herbivory on the pedunculate oak along an urbanization gradient in Europe: Effects of impervious surface, local tree cover, and insect feeding guild.
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Valdés-Correcher E, Popova A, Galmán A, Prinzing A, Selikhovkin AV, Howe AG, Mrazova A, Dulaurent AM, Hampe A, Tack AJM, Bouget C, Lupaștean D, Harvey D, Musolin DL, Lövei GL, Centenaro G, Halder IV, Hagge J, Dobrosavljević J, Pitkänen JM, Koricheva J, Sam K, Barbaro L, Branco M, Ferrante M, Faticov M, Tahadlová M, Gossner M, Cauchoix M, Bogdziewicz M, Duduman ML, Kozlov MV, Bjoern MC, Mamaev NA, Fernandez-Conradi P, Thomas RL, Wetherbee R, Green S, Milanović S, Moreira X, Mellerin Y, Kadiri Y, and Castagneyrol B
- Abstract
Urbanization is an important driver of the diversity and abundance of tree-associated insect herbivores, but its consequences for insect herbivory are poorly understood. A likely source of variability among studies is the insufficient consideration of intra-urban variability in forest cover. With the help of citizen scientists, we investigated the independent and interactive effects of local canopy cover and percentage of impervious surface on insect herbivory in the pedunculate oak ( Quercus robur L.) throughout most of its geographic range in Europe. We found that the damage caused by chewing insect herbivores as well as the incidence of leaf-mining and gall-inducing herbivores consistently decreased with increasing impervious surface around focal oaks. Herbivory by chewing herbivores increased with increasing forest cover, regardless of impervious surface. In contrast, an increase in local canopy cover buffered the negative effect of impervious surface on leaf miners and strengthened its effect on gall inducers. These results show that-just like in non-urban areas-plant-herbivore interactions in cities are structured by a complex set of interacting factors. This highlights that local habitat characteristics within cities have the potential to attenuate or modify the effect of impervious surfaces on biotic interactions., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interests., (© 2022 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
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30. Climate-induced forest dieback drives compositional changes in insect communities that are more pronounced for rare species.
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Sire L, Yáñez PS, Wang C, Bézier A, Courtial B, Cours J, Fontaneto D, Larrieu L, Bouget C, Thorn S, Müller J, Yu DW, Monaghan MT, Herniou EA, and Lopez-Vaamonde C
- Subjects
- Animals, Endangered Species, France, Biodiversity, Biomass, Forests, Insecta
- Abstract
Species richness, abundance and biomass of insects have recently undergone marked declines in Europe. We metabarcoded 211 Malaise-trap samples to investigate whether drought-induced forest dieback and subsequent salvage logging had an impact on ca. 3000 species of flying insects in silver fir Pyrenean forests. While forest dieback had no measurable impact on species richness, there were significant changes in community composition that were consistent with those observed during natural forest succession. Importantly, most observed changes were driven by rare species. Variation was explained primarily by canopy openness at the local scale, and the tree-related microhabitat diversity and deadwood amount at landscape scales. The levels of salvage logging in our study did not explain compositional changes. We conclude that forest dieback drives changes in species assemblages that mimic natural forest succession, and markedly increases the risk of catastrophic loss of rare species through homogenization of environmental conditions., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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31. A DNA barcode-based survey of wild urban bees in the Loire Valley, France.
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Villalta I, Ledet R, Baude M, Genoud D, Bouget C, Cornillon M, Moreau S, Courtial B, and Lopez-Vaamonde C
- Subjects
- Animals, Bees classification, Cities, DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic, Ecosystem, Endangered Species, France, Gene Library, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Bees genetics
- Abstract
The current decline of wild bees puts important ecosystem services such as pollination at risk. Both inventory and monitoring programs are needed to understand the causes of wild bee decline. Effective insect monitoring relies on both mass-trapping methods coupled with rapid and accurate identifications. Identifying wild bees using only morphology can be challenging, in particular, specimens from mass-trapped samples which are often in poor condition. We generated DNA barcodes for 2931 specimens representing 157 species (156 named and one unnamed species) and 28 genera. Automated cluster delineation reveals 172 BINs (Barcodes Index Numbers). A total of 36 species (22.93%) were found in highly urbanized areas. The majority of specimens, representing 96.17% of the species barcoded form reciprocally exclusive groups, allowing their unambiguous identification. This includes several closely related species notoriously difficult to identify. A total of 137 species (87.26%) show a "one-to-one" match between a named species and the BIN assignment. Fourteen species (8.92%) show deep conspecific lineages with no apparent morphological differentiation. Only two species pairs shared the same BIN making their identification with DNA barcodes alone uncertain. Therefore, our DNA barcoding reference library allows reliable identification by non-experts for the vast majority of wild bee species in the Loire Valley.
- Published
- 2021
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32. Lack of definition of mathematical terms in ecology: The case of the sigmoid class of functions in macro-ecology.
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Godeau U, Bouget C, Piffady J, Pozzi T, and Gosselin F
- Abstract
Defining mathematical terms and objects is a constant issue in ecology; often definitions are absent, erroneous, or imprecise. Through a bibliographic prospection, we show that this problem appears in macro-ecology (biogeography and community ecology) where the lack of definition for the sigmoid class of functions results in difficulties of interpretation and communication. In order to solve this problem and to help harmonize papers that use sigmoid functions in ecology, herein we propose a comprehensive definition of these mathematical objects. In addition, to facilitate their use, we classified the functions often used in the ecological literature, specifying the constraints on the parameters for the function to be defined and the curve shape to be sigmoidal. Finally, we interpreted the different properties of the functions induced by the definition through ecological hypotheses in order to support and explain the interest of such functions in ecology and more precisely in biogeography., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflict of interest to declare., (© 2020 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
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33. Improving the Quality of Care of Long-Stay Nursing Home Residents in France.
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Rolland Y, Mathieu C, Piau C, Cayla F, Bouget C, Vellas B, and de Souto Barreto P
- Subjects
- Activities of Daily Living, Aged, 80 and over, Depression epidemiology, Depression prevention & control, Female, France epidemiology, Humans, Long-Term Care methods, Long-Term Care standards, Male, Patient Transfer methods, Patient Transfer standards, Pressure Ulcer epidemiology, Pressure Ulcer prevention & control, Prevalence, Quality Improvement, Staff Development methods, Staff Development standards, Geriatric Assessment methods, Geriatric Assessment statistics & numerical data, Homes for the Aged standards, Homes for the Aged statistics & numerical data, Nursing Homes standards, Nursing Homes statistics & numerical data, Quality Indicators, Health Care standards, Quality Indicators, Health Care statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
The aim of the Impact d'une démarche QUAlité sur l'évolution des pratiques et le déclin fonctionnel des Résidents en Établissement d'hébergement pour personnes âgées dépendantes (IQUARE) study was to examine the effects of a global intervention comprising professional support and education for nursing home (NH) staff on quality indicators (QIs) and functional decline and emergency department (ED) transfers of residents. One hundred seventy-five NHs in France (a total of 6,275 residents randomly selected from NHs) volunteered and were enrolled in a nonrandomized controlled multicenter individually customize trial with 18-month follow-up. NHs were allocated to a quality audit and feedback intervention (control group: 90 NHs, 3,258 residents) or to the quality audit and feedback intervention plus collaborative work meetings between a hospital geriatrician and NH staff (experimental group: 85 NHs, 3,017 residents). At the NH level, prevalence of assessment of kidney function, cognitive function, risk of pressure ulcers, behavioral disturbances, depression, pain, weight measurement, and transfer to the ED were recorded. Ability to perform basic activities of daily living was assessed at the resident level. At baseline, NH QIs were generally low (with large standard deviations), and annual rate of transfer to the ED was high (~20%) and similar in both groups. The intervention had a significant positive effect on the prevalence of assessment of pressure ulcer risk, depression, pain, and prevalence of ED transfers. It had no significant effect on functional decline. Large-scale efforts to improve QIs involving collaboration between hospital and NH providers and based on audit and collaborative discussion are feasible and improve some aspects of quality of care in NHs., (© 2016, Copyright the Authors Journal compilation © 2016, The American Geriatrics Society.)
- Published
- 2016
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34. PASSIFOR: A reference library of DNA barcodes for French saproxylic beetles (Insecta, Coleoptera).
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Rougerie R, Lopez-Vaamonde C, Barnouin T, Delnatte J, Moulin N, Noblecourt T, Nusillard B, Parmain G, Soldati F, and Bouget C
- Abstract
Saproxylic beetles - associated with dead wood or with other insects, fungi and microorganisms that decompose it - play a major role in forest nutrient cycling. They are important ecosystem service providers and are used as key bio-indicators of old-growth forests. In France alone, where the present study took place, there are about 2500 species distributed within 71 families. This high diversity represents a major challenge for specimen sorting and identification. The PASSIFOR project aims at developing a DNA metabarcoding approach to facilitate and enhance the monitoring of saproxylic beetles as indicators in ecological studies. As a first step toward that goal we assembled a library of DNA barcodes using the standard genetic marker for animals, i.e. a portion of the COI mitochondrial gene. In the present contribution, we release a library including 656 records representing 410 species in 40 different families. Species were identified by expert taxonomists, and each record is linked to a voucher specimen to enable future morphological examination. We also highlight and briefly discuss cases of low interspecific divergences, as well as cases of high intraspecific divergences that might represent cases of overlooked or cryptic diversity.
- Published
- 2015
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