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Dive into the research topics where Alain Bellido is active.

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Featured researches published by Alain Bellido.


Heredity | 1999

Microspatial genetic structure in the land snail Helix aspersa (Gastropoda: Helicidae)

Arnaud Jf; Luc Madec; Alain Bellido; Annie Guiller

The microspatial genetic structure of allele frequencies at seven isozyme loci was examined for 15 populations of the land snail Helix aspersa sampled in a village from Brittany (north-western France). Spatial heterogeneity of allele frequencies was highly significant (P < 0.001). Fixation indices reflected nonrandom mating within neighbourhoods and a slight but consistent differentiation between colonies (FST=0.044; P < 0.01). Analyses of gene flow or genetic distances failed to reveal a significant relationship with geographical distance, probably because of the complexity of environmental heterogeneity. However, matrix comparisons between genetic distances and connectivity networks among adjacent colonies (Gabriel-connected graph) yielded a significant correlation in every case, indicating a ‘step-by-step’ relationship between neighbouring localities. Moreover, most of the allozymes were spatially structured and showed (i) a gradual isolation of colonies with increasing geographical distances, and (ii), for some correlogram profiles, a circular gradient illustrating a multidirectional colonization of the village. The probable existence of disperser individuals allowed us to suggest a metapopulation model which would explain the maintenance of such animals in fragmented habitats where anthropogenic disturbances and extinction/recolonization events are commonly observed.


Heredity | 2003

Shell shape of the land snail Cornu aspersum in North Africa: unexpected evidence of a phylogeographical splitting

Luc Madec; Alain Bellido; Annie Guiller

Anatomical and molecular characters used to differentiate populations of the land snail Cornu aspersum (Helix aspersa) exhibit, in the western Mediterranean, definite and concordant patterns of correlation with geography. Scenarios involving Pliocene geological changes and postglacial expansion during the Pleistocene were proposed in previous studies to account for the establishment of this geographical structure. In the present work, we have performed a spatial analysis of variation in shell morphometrics, after the partitioning of the overall variation into size and shape components by means of a principal component-based approach (Cadima and Jolliffe, 1996). In order to know if the same historical events have also structured shell variation, the analysis includes all the populations from North Africa which were investigated for anatomical and molecular surveys. Contrary to shell size, which shows a significant spatial heterogeneity essentially related to environmental pressures, variation in shell shape components splits the populations according to a geographical pattern reflective of hypotheses suggested for molecular markers and genital anatomy. This implies that the selective forces often invoked to explain spatial changes in shell shape are not the deciding factors in the present case. Moreover, within each of the two geographical clusters defined, Mantel correlograms show that the similarity between populations declines according to an isolation by distance model. Because of the different allometric relationships between shell size and genitalia measurements in Western and Eastern entities of North Africa, mechanical constraints, possibly leading to a precopulatory isolation in the contact zone, are involved.


Heredity | 2002

Spatial structure of shell polychromatism in populations of Cepaea nemoralis: new techniques for an old debate

Alain Bellido; Luc Madec; Arnaud Jf; Annie Guiller

A conspicuous shell polychromatism is observed in colonies of Cepaea nemoralis from western France (Brittany). The present study is intended to search for a spatial structure of shell features at this scale and to infer evolutionary processes from the observed patterns. We used a database of morph frequencies (six composite phenotypes were retained) measured on 213 samples regularly distributed on the whole studied area. Data analysis was based on two distinct multivariate methods leading to the following steps: (i) to search for a structure without reference to environmental conditions with a method (global principal components analysis: GPCA) which takes into account the spatial information by means of a neighbouring relationship between sampling points (Delaunay triangulation); (ii) to test the structuring power of environmental conditions by means of two explanatory factors (distance from the sea, altitude) involved in a redundancy analysis (RDA); (iii) to search for a spatial structure using residuals of the previous analysis, ie, after removing effects of environmental conditions. Global covariance accounted for 26.4% of the total variance, leading to a highly significant autocorrelation for each phenotype (step 1). Geographical mapping of factorial scores resulting from global analysis showed a well structured littoral zone and a strong southern-northern inland differentiation. Sixteen percent of the total variance was expressed in RDA but all morphs were not equally concerned. After removing environmental effects, a significant spatial structure still remains but was essentially caused by random processes. We argue for the importance of these last phenomena.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2008

Phylogeography and historical demography of the Lusitanian snail Elona quimperiana reveal survival in unexpected separate glacial refugia.

Aude Vialatte; Annie Guiller; Alain Bellido; Luc Madec

BackgroundPresent day distributions of Palearctic taxa in northern latitudes mainly result from populations having survived in local patches during the Late Pleistocene and/or from recolonizing populations from southern temperate refugia. If well-studied Mediterranean and eastern European refugia are widely accepted, some recent biogeographical assumptions still remain unclear, such as the occurrence of multiple glacial refugia in Iberia and cryptic refugia in northern Europe during the last glaciations. The Lusitanian snail Elona quimperiana has a remarkably disjunct distribution, limited to northwestern France (Brittany), northwestern Spain and the Basque Country. By describing the phylogeographical structure of this species across its entire range, the present study attempts to identify refugia and subsequent recolonization routes.ResultsResults based on 16S and COI gene sequences showed that the low genetic diversity observed in the Brittany populations should be associated with a recent demographic expansion. By contrast, populations from Spain exhibit several differentiated lineages and are characterized by demographic equilibrium, while the Basque populations are the only ones harboring typical distinct haplotypes. The center of the star-like networks of both gene sequences is occupied by a common ancestral-like haplotype found in Brittany and Spain, which might have originated from the middle of Northern Spain (i.e. Asturias, eastern Lugo and western Cantabria). Estimates of the divergence time between the Spain-Brittany and Basque lineages strongly suggest that E. quimperiana survived the Pleistocene glaciations in distinct refugia on the Iberian Peninsula, one of which is situated in Picos de Europa, and the other in the Basque Country. The occurrence of a northern refugium in France cannot be rejected as of yet.ConclusionPresent results confirm the Iberian origin of the land snail E. quimperiana and strongly support the emerging phylogeographic hypothesis of multiple refugia in Iberia during the last glaciations. The scenario of a spatial expansion of E. quimperiana from an Iberian refuge located in Asturias to northern areas provides the most probable explanation for the present distribution of this land snail. By harboring distinct haplotypes, the Basque Country populations appear to be of great importance in terms of potential adaptation, long term persistence and hence, the conservation of E. quimperiana.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Can Population-Level Laterality Stem from Social Pressures? Evidence from Cheek Kissing in Humans

Amandine Chapelain; Pauline Pimbert; Lydiane Aubé; Océane Perrocheau; Gilles Debunne; Alain Bellido; Catherine Blois-Heulin

Despite extensive research, the origins and functions of behavioural laterality remain largely unclear. One of the most striking unresolved issues is the fact that laterality generally occurs at the population-level. Why would the majority of the individuals of a population exhibit the same laterality, while individual-level laterality would yet provide the advantages in terms of improving behavioural efficiency? Are social pressures the key factor? Can social pressures induce alignment of laterality between the individuals of a population? Can the effect of social pressures overpass the effect of other possible determining factors (e.g. genes)? We tested this important new hypothesis in humans, for the first time. We asked whether population-level laterality could stem from social pressures. Namely, we assessed social pressures on laterality in an interactive social behaviour: kissing on the cheek as a greeting. We performed observations in 10 cities of France. The observations took place in spots where people of the city meet and greet each other. We showed that: a) there is a population-level laterality for cheek kissing, with the majority of individuals being aligned in each city, and b) there is a variation between populations, with a laterality that depends on the city. These results were confirmed by our complementary data from questionnaires and internet surveys. These findings show that social pressures are involved in determining laterality. They demonstrate that population-level laterality can stem from social pressures.


Landscape Ecology | 2010

Spatial structure of shell polychromatism in Cepaea hortensis in relation to a gradient of landscape fragmentation in Western France

Eric Le Mitouard; Alain Bellido; Annie Guiller; Luc Madec

Because of their highly polymorphic shell patterns, Cepaea land snails have been the subject of numerous studies in ecological genetics. Here, we investigated the spatial structure of polychromatism in Cepaea hortensis in agricultural landscapes with zones from low to high hedgerow densities. Our main purpose was to search for a relationship between landscape composition and spatial structuring of chromatism. Despite significant spatial heterogeneity in the three landscapes sampled, only the high hedgerow density landscape showed a significant spatial structuring of shell polymorphism. In order to understand this result, an investigation of daily movement patterns in relation to habitat form was carried out on a mark-release experiment under semi-artificial conditions. This experiment revealed a strong influence of a linear corridor on snail dispersal. In the field, spatial heterogeneity of shell polymorphism, related to the effects of genetic drift, was shaped by restricted dispersal in narrow corridors. In the more enclosed one, i.e. where hedgerow density was the highest, the significant spatial structure we detected involved a balance between local genetic drift and environmentally mediated gene flow. This isolation-by-distance pattern resulted from direct gene exchange through fields between neighbouring populations. When applying landscape distances based on hedgerow length, no significant spatial correlation with polychromatism was found. In the more fragmented sites, random genetic drift seemed to be the prevailing force and, at the scale of the whole sampled area, selective pressures potentially interfere with these genetic drift-dispersal events.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Correction: Can Population-Level Laterality Stem from Social Pressures? Evidence from Cheek Kissing in Humans

Amandine Chapelain; Pauline Pimbert; Lydiane Aubé; Océane Perrocheau; Stéphanie Barbu; Gilles Debunne; Alain Bellido; Catherine Blois-Heulin

[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0124477.].


PLOS ONE | 2015

Frequency of the kissing sequences (1 kiss sequences, 2 kisses sequences, 3 kisses sequences, 4 kisses sequences) according to laterality, sex and age, in Montpellier.

Amandine Chapelain; Pauline Pimbert; Lydiane Aubé; Océane Perrocheau; Gilles Debunne; Alain Bellido; Catherine Blois-Heulin


PLOS ONE | 2015

Distribution of the kissing sequences (1 kiss sequences, 2 kisses sequences, 3 kisses sequences, 4 kisses sequences), in each city.

Amandine Chapelain; Pauline Pimbert; Lydiane Aubé; Océane Perrocheau; Gilles Debunne; Alain Bellido; Catherine Blois-Heulin


PLOS ONE | 2015

Distribution of the data according to sex, in each of the cities.

Amandine Chapelain; Pauline Pimbert; Lydiane Aubé; Océane Perrocheau; Gilles Debunne; Alain Bellido; Catherine Blois-Heulin

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