Anne Luxereau
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Anne Luxereau.
Regional Environmental Change | 2012
Anne Luxereau; Pierre Genthon; Jean-Marie Ambouta Karimou
Recent level changes in Lake Chad are associated with large area changes because the lakebed is almost flat. They have deeply impacted the lifestyle of local populations. The Mober are the main ethnic group living in the surroundings of Bosso, in eastern Niger near the Yobe River and in Lake Chad. They were initially herders and farmers who developed flood-retreat farming and sophisticated irrigation systems. But their main activity during high Lake levels was fishing: it provided food as well as substantial incomes, thanks to the export of smoked and dried fish. Since 1973, Lake Chad has shrunk, mainly because of the decrease in rainfall in its southern hydrological basin, on the border between Chad and the Republic of Central Africa. On the border between Niger and Nigeria, the Yobe River discharge was more stable but it provided a minor input to the Lake. Large areas with rich soils, termed here as polders by analogy with those of the Bol region in Chad, became available and allowed maize, cowpeas, sorghum and vegetables farming without irrigation or fertilizer. This system is governed by the “bulama,” chiefs of the villages and of the land that is still abundant. However, without any return of the Lake on the polders, there is a serious risk of soil exhaustion. Sweet pepper farming has been developed on the sandy Yobe borders since 1960, partly thanks to the local farmers’ ancient knowledge of irrigation techniques. It requires an investment of capital to buy fertilizers, pesticides, and gasoline for the motor pumps. This farming system may not only provide high incomes, but it also promotes inequality between men and women on the one hand and on the other hand, between poor farmers, who must borrow money and who have to sell their harvest immediately, and those who are able to store their products and wait for the best prices. The Mober of Bosso were able to adapt to rapid changes in the level of the Lake firstly without public intervention due to their long-lasting pluriactivity. However, their ability to cope with stronger changes induced either by climate or by large projects aiming at restoring high Lake Chad levels should be carefully monitored.
Genetica | 2011
Ghayas Lakis; Athman Maï Ousmane; Douka Sanoussi; Abdoulaye Habibou; Mahamane Badamassi; Françoise Lamy; Naino Jika; Ramatou Sidikou; Toudou Adam; Aboubakry Sarr; Anne Luxereau; Thierry Robert
In the Sahel of Africa, farmers often modify their cultivation practices to adapt to environmental changes. How these changes shape the agro-biodiversity is a question of primary interest for the conservation of plant genetic resources. We addressed this question in a case study on pearl millet in south western Niger where farmers used to cultivate landraces with different cycle length in order to cope with rain uncertainty. Early and late landraces were previously grown on distant fields. Nowadays, mostly because of human population pressure and soil impoverishment, it happens that the two types of landraces are grown on adjacent fields, opening the question whether gene flow between them may occur. This question was tackled through a comparative study among contrasting situations pertaining to the spatial distribution of early and late landraces. Observations of flowering periods showed that pollen flow between the two landraces is possible and has a preferential direction from early to late populations.
Heredity | 2017
A K Naino Jika; Christine Raimond; Eric Garine; Anne Luxereau; N Takvorian; R S Djermakoye; T Adam; Thierry Robert
Despite of a growing interest in considering the role of sociological factors in seed exchanges and their consequences on the evolutionary dynamics of agro-biodiversity, very few studies assessed the link between ethno-linguistic diversity and genetic diversity patterns in small-holder farming systems. This is key for optimal improvement and conservation of crop genetic resources. Here, we investigated genetic diversity at 17 SSR markers of pearl millet landraces (varieties named by farmers) in the Lake Chad Basin. 69 pearl millet populations, representing 27 landraces collected in eight ethno-linguistic farmer groups, were analyzed. We found that the farmers’ local taxonomy was not a good proxy for population’s genetic differentiation as previously shown at smaller scales. Our results show the existence of a genetic structure of pearl millet mainly associated with ethno-linguistic diversity in the western side of the lake Chad. It suggests there is a limit to gene flow between landraces grown by different ethno-linguistic groups. This result was rather unexpected, because of the highly outcrossing mating system of pearl millet, the high density of pearl millet fields all along the green belt of this Sahelian area and the fact that seed exchanges among ethno-linguistic groups are known to occur. In the eastern side of the Lake, the pattern of genetic diversity suggests a larger efficient circulation of pearl millet genes between ethno-linguistic groups that are less numerous, spatially intermixed and, for some of them, more prone to exogamy. Finally, other historical and environmental factors which may contribute to the observed diversity patterns are discussed.
Genetica | 2011
Ghayas Lakis; Athman Maï Ousmane; Douka Sanoussi; Abdoulaye Habibou; Mahamane Badamassi; Françoise Lamy; Naino Jika; Ramatou Sidikou; Toudou Adam; Aboubakry Sarr; Anne Luxereau; Thierry Robert
The original article has been published with typographical errors in the results section and the corresponding Tables. The true percentage of variation (% var) explained by the village * landrace factor for the number of days between sowing and flowering of both main and last tillers is 2.3 % and 3 %, respectively, rather than 7.4 and 6 % as in the published article. Additionally, the correct values of the degree of freedom (df) for the error terms in Table 8 should read as 286 for the Type I samples and 285 for the Type II samples.
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2006
Cédric Mariac; Thierry Robert; Clémentine Allinne; Marie-Stanislas Remigereau; Anne Luxereau; Moussa Tidjani; O. Seyni; Gilles Bezançon; Jean Louis Pham; Amadou Sarr
Les Cahiers d’Outre-Mer. Revue de géographie de Bordeaux | 2014
Thierry Robert; Anne Luxereau; Hélène Joly; Marthe Diarra; Laure Benoit; Jika Naino; Amal Abad
Archive | 2013
Eric Garine; Anne Luxereau; Jean Wencélius; Chloé Violon; Thierry Robert; Adeline Barnaud; Sophie Caillon; Christine Raimond
Archive | 2005
Viviane Luong; Yves Vigouroux; Cédric Mariac; Jean Louis Pham; Jean-Pierre Guengant; Anne Luxereau; Gilles Bezançon; Thierry Robert; Issoufou Kapran; Aïssata Mamadou; Bruno Gérard; Fabrice Sagnard; Monique Deu; Jacques Chantereau; Ibrahim Amoukou
Archive | 2005
Gilles Bezançon; Viviane Luong; Yves Vigouroux; Cédric Mariac; Laure Benoit; Jean Louis Pham; Anne Luxereau; Clémentine Allinne; Jean-Pierre Guengant; Issoufou Kapran; Mamadou; Fabrice Sagnard; Monique Deu; Jacques Chantereau; Jupiter Ndjeunga; Hassane Y. Bissala; Bruno Gérard; Ibrahim Amoukou
Le patrimoine génétique : la diversité et la ressource | 2003
Thierry Robert; Anne Luxereau; Cédric Mariac; Kairou Ali; Clémentine Allinne; Bani, ,jibril; Yacouba Beidari; Gilles Bezançon; Sonia Cayeux; Emmanuel Couturon; Valérie Dedieu; Djibo Moussa; Mammane Sani Sadou; Moumouni Seydou; O. Seyni; Moussa Tidjani; Aboubakry Sarr