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Dive into the research topics where Anne-Lise Develle is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne-Lise Develle.


The Holocene | 2016

Erosion record in Lake La Thuile sediments (Prealps, France): Evidence of montane landscape dynamics throughout the Holocene:

Manon Bajard; Pierre Sabatier; Fernand David; Anne-Lise Develle; Jean-Louis Reyss; Bernard Fanget; Emmanuel Malet; Daniel Arnaud; Laurent Augustin; Christian Crouzet; Jérôme Poulenard; Fabien Arnaud

Lake La Thuile, in the Northern French Prealps (874 m a.s.l.), provides an 18-m long sedimentary sequence spanning the entire Lateglacial/Holocene period. The high-resolution multi-proxy (sedimentological, palynological, and geochemical) analysis of the uppermost 6.2 m reveals the Holocene dynamics of erosion in the catchment in response to landscape modifications. The mountain belt is at relevant altitude to study past human activities, and the watershed is sufficiently disconnected from large valleys to capture a local sedimentary signal. From 12,000 to 10,000 cal. BP (10–8 kyr cal. BC), the onset of hardwood species triggered a drop in erosion following the Lateglacial/Holocene transition. From 10,000 to 4500 cal. BP (8–2.5 kyr cal. BC), the forest became denser and favored slope stabilization, while erosion processes were very weak. A first erosive phase was initiated at ca. 4500 cal. BP without evidence of human presence in the catchment. Then, the forest declined at approximately 3000 cal. BP, suggesting the first human influence on the landscape. Two other erosive phases are related to anthropic activities: approximately 2500 cal. BP (550 cal. BC) during the Roman period and after 1600 cal. BP (350 cal. AD) with a substantial accentuation in the Middle Ages. In contrast, the lower erosion produced during the ‘Little Ice Age’, when climate deteriorations are generally considered to result in an increased erosion signal in this region, suggests that anthropic activities dominated the erosive processes and completely masked the natural effects of climate on erosion in the late Holocene.


Molecular Ecology | 2016

Long-term dynamics in microbial eukaryotes communities: a palaeolimnological view based on sedimentary DNA

Eric Capo; Didier Debroas; Fabien Arnaud; Typhaine Guillemot; Vincent Bichet; Laurent Millet; Emilie Gauthier; Charly Massa; Anne-Lise Develle; Cécile Pignol; Franck Lejzerowicz; Isabelle Domaizon

Assessing the extent to which changes in lacustrine biodiversity are affected by anthropogenic or climatic forces requires extensive palaeolimnological data. We used high‐throughput sequencing to generate time‐series data encompassing over 2200 years of microbial eukaryotes (protists and Fungi) diversity changes from the sedimentary DNA record of two lakes (Lake Bourget in French Alps and Lake Igaliku in Greenland). From 176 samples, we sequenced a large diversity of microbial eukaryotes, with a total 16 386 operational taxonomic units distributed within 50 phylogenetic groups. Thus, microbial groups, such as Chlorophyta, Dinophyceae, Haptophyceae and Ciliophora, that were not previously considered in lacustrine sediment record analyses appeared to be potential biological markers of trophic status changes. Our data suggest that shifts in relative abundance of extant species, including shifts between rare and abundant taxa, drive ecosystem responses to local and global environmental changes. Community structure shift events were concomitant with major climate variations (more particularly in Lake Igaliku). However, this study shows that the impacts of climatic fluctuations may be overpassed by the high‐magnitude eutrophication impacts, as observed in the eutrophicated Lake Bourget. Overall, our data show that DNA preserved in sediment constitutes a precious archive of information on past biodiversity changes.


Archive | 2016

Lake Pavin Paleolimnology and Event Stratigraphy

Léo Chassiot; Emmanuel Chapron; Yannick Miras; Markus J. Schwab; Patrick Albéric; Aude Beauger; Anne-Lise Develle; Fabien Arnaud; Patrick Lajeunesse; Renata Zocatelli; Sylvain Bernard; Anne-Catherine Lehours; Didier Jézéquel

In this chapter we present an up-to-date database of sedimentary sequences retrieved from Lake Pavin during the last 50 years in both oxic and anoxic waters. The detailed history of this mid Holocene crater lake can be reconstructed from the correlation of radiocarbon dated sedimentary sequences retrieved from the deep central basin, a subaquatic plateau and littoral environments. High-resolution measurements of sediment composition (diffuse spectral refl ectance, XRF core scanning) combined with the analysis of organic matter composition and preliminary pollen and diatom assemblages investigations on selected sediment cores are used to reconstruct (i) the evolution since ca. 7000 cal BP of Lake Pavin limnology together with its radiocarbon reservoir effect and (ii) the impact of a wide range of subaquatic slope failure events. Such a multidisciplinary approach of Lake Pavin basin fi ll revealed contrasted sedimentation patterns just after the volcanic eruption and following the development of a dense vegetation cover along the slopes of the crater. Pavin sedimenta-tion is rapidly and largely dominated by organic rich and fi nely laminated diatomite formation , but several short periods of enhanced mineral inputs might refl ect the infl uence of wetter periods, such as the Little Ice Age. Over the last millennium two large subaquatic mass wasting events are also identifi ed and may have signifi cantly impacted its limnology.


STRATI 2013 | 2014

Original Detection Methods for Tephra Layers and Cryptotephras

Gwénolé Jouannic; Anne-Véronique Walter-Simonnet; Gilles Bossuet; Anne-Lise Develle; Eric Delabrousse; Christophe Loup

The building of independent and accurate chronologies is crucial to correlate environmental and climatic changes as reflected in biotic as well as abiotic signals from continental lacustrine sediments. The use of tephras, which are instantaneous and synchronous atmospheric deposits, as time-parallel markers, allows independent, high-precision regional and inter-regional correlations to be established. The development of effective, rapid methods to detect tephra layers in sedimentary records of various compositions is a challenge. Many traditional methods for the detection of tephra layers, such as regular sampling or magnetic susceptibility measurements, have shown their limits. Regular sampling takes a long time, and finding tephra layers is an uncertain process. Moreover, magnetic susceptibility is ineffective when tephra layers are composed of volcanic glass shards of differentiated magma composition. This study proposes three original methods to detect tephra layers: XRF, CT imaging, and quantitative sulphur analysis. XRF enables tephra layer composition elements and sediment to be differentiated. CT imaging may be used to observe 3D sedimentary structures. Sulphur analysis allows the environmental impact of degassing in volcanic eruptions to be examined. These methods can be used successfully to detect tephra layers of various chemical compositions in both peaty and carbonated deposits.


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2010

Controlling factors on a paleo-lake oxygen isotope record (Yammoûneh, Lebanon) since the Last Glacial Maximum

Anne-Lise Develle; Julien Herreros; Laurence Vidal; Alexandre Sursock; Françoise Gasse


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2011

A 250 ka sedimentary record from a small karstic lake in the Northern Levant (Yammoûneh, Lebanon) Paleoclimatic implications

Anne-Lise Develle; Françoise Gasse; Laurence Vidal; David Williamson; François Demory; Elise Van Campo; Bassam Ghaleb; Nicolas Thouveny


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Long-term relationships among pesticide applications, mobility, and soil erosion in a vineyard watershed

Pierre Sabatier; Jérôme Poulenard; Bernard Fanget; Jean-Louis Reyss; Anne-Lise Develle; Bruno Wilhelm; Estelle Ployon; Cécile Pignol; Emmanuel Naffrechoux; Jean-Marcel Dorioz; Bernard Montuelle; Fabien Arnaud


Quaternaire | 2008

Chronologie et spatialisation de retombées de cendres volcaniques tardiglaciaires dans les massifs des vosges et du jura, et le plateau suisse

Anne-Véronique Walter-Simonnet; Gilles Bossuet; Anne-Lise Develle; Carole Bégeot; Pascale Ruffaldi; Michel Magny; Thierry Adatte; Michel Rossy; Jean-Pierre Simonnet; Jacques-Louis de Beaulieu; Boris Vannière; Matthieu Thivet; Laurent Millet; Bruno Régent; Chantal Wackenheim


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2015

Invited review Hydroclimatic changes in northern Levant over the past 400,000 years

Françoise Gasse; Laurence Vidal; Elise Van Campo; François Demory; Anne-Lise Develle; Kazuyo Tachikawa; Ata Elias; Edouard Bard; Marta Garcia; Corinne Sonzogni; Nicolas Thouveny


Chemical Geology | 2016

A hundred year record of industrial and urban development in French Alps combining Hg accumulation rates and isotope composition in sediment archives from Lake Luitel

Stéphane Guedron; David Amouroux; Pierre Sabatier; Carole Desplanque; Anne-Lise Develle; Julien Barre; Caiyan Feng; Frédéric Guiter; Fabien Arnaud; Jean Louis Reyss; Laurent Charlet

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Fabien Arnaud

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Pierre Sabatier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jérôme Poulenard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Manon Bajard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Louis Reyss

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christian Crouzet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Cécile Pignol

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Fernand David

Aix-Marseille University

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