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Dive into the research topics where Cécile Vanpé is active.

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Featured researches published by Cécile Vanpé.


The American Naturalist | 2007

Antler size provides an honest signal of male phenotypic quality in roe deer.

Cécile Vanpé; Petter Kjellander; Atle Mysterud; Pauline Magnien; Daniel Delorme; Guy Van Laere; François Klein; Olof Liberg; A. J. Mark Hewison

Identifying factors shaping secondary sexual traits is essential in understanding how their variation may influence male fitness. Little information is available on the allocation of resources to antler growth in territorial ungulates with low sexual size dimorphism. We investigated phenotypic and environmental factors affecting both absolute and relative antler size of male roe deer in three contrasting populations in France and Sweden. In the three populations, we found marked age‐specific variation in antler size, with an increase in both absolute and relative antler size between yearling and prime‐age stages, followed by a decrease (senescence) for males older than 7 years. Antler size increased allometrically with body mass. This increase was particularly strong for senescent males, suggesting the evolution of two reproductive tactics: heavy old males invested particularly heavily in antler growth (potentially remaining competitive for territories), whereas light old males grew small antlers (potentially abandoning territory defense). Finally, environmental conditions had little effect on antler size: only population density negatively affected absolute antler size in one of the three populations. Antler size may therefore provide an honest signal of male phenotypic quality in roe deer. We discuss the implications of these results in terms of territory tenure and mating competition.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2008

Population density and sex do not influence fine-scale natal dispersal in roe deer.

A. J. M. Hewison; Petter Kjellander; Nathalie Pettorelli; Christophe Bonenfant; B. Van Moorter; Olof Liberg; Henrik Andrén; G Van Laere; F. Klein; Jean-Marc Angibault; Aurélie Coulon; Cécile Vanpé

It is commonly assumed that the propensity to disperse and the dispersal distance of mammals should increase with increasing density and be greater among males than among females. However, most empirical evidence, especially on large mammals, has focused on highly polygynous and dimorphic species displaying female-defence mating tactics. We tested these predictions on roe deer, a weakly polygynous species of large herbivore exhibiting a resource-defence mating tactic at a fine spatial scale. Using three long-term studies of populations that were subject to the experimental manipulation of size, we did not find any support for either prediction, whether in terms of dispersal probability or dispersal distance. Our findings of similar dispersal patterns in both sexes of roe deer suggest that the underlying cause of natal dispersal is not related to inbreeding avoidance in this species. The absence of positive density dependence in fine-scale dispersal behaviour suggests that roe deer natal dispersal is a pre-saturation process that is shaped by heterogeneities in habitat quality rather than by density per se.


Journal of Mammalogy | 2009

AGE-SPECIFIC VARIATION IN MALE BREEDING SUCCESS OF A TERRITORIAL UNGULATE SPECIES, THE EUROPEAN ROE DEER

Cécile Vanpé; Nicolas Morellet; Petter Kjellander; Olof Liberg; Daniel Delorme; A. J. Mark Hewison

Abstract We investigated age-specific variation in male yearly breeding success (YBS) using genetic estimates obtained from 2 populations of a territorial ungulate, the European roe deer (Capreolus capreolus). YBS in both populations was markedly age-structured, with 3 distinct stages, supporting the dome-shaped pattern of variation commonly reported for age-dependent variation in life-history traits of ungulates. YBS was low at 2 years of age, peaked at 3–8 years of age, and tended to decline afterwards (senescence). Most males successfully reproduced for the 1st time at 3 years of age, which is well after their physiological maturity. The few successful young males (i.e., 2 year olds) were likely fast-growing individuals that could successfully hold a territory. The high variance in YBS and antler size for old males at Bogesund, Sweden, suggests that only some males of this age class are able to maintain large antlers and, hence, retain their territories.


Behavioural Processes | 2008

Ranging behaviour and excursions of female roe deer during the rut

E. Richard; Nicolas Morellet; Bruno Cargnelutti; Jean-Marc Angibault; Cécile Vanpé; A. J. M. Hewison

Anecdotal evidence has suggested that, during the rutting period, female roe deer may undertake short excursions, outside of their normal home range, possibly to mate with a reproductive partner. To address this question, we analysed the ranging behaviour of 27 female roe deer Capreolus capreolus, equipped with GPS collars, inhabiting a fragmented landscape in France. We compared female movements during the rutting period with a non-rutting period over two summers using a recently published approach. Search intensity and home range size were significantly greater during the rutting period. The difference in home range size between the two periods was significantly greater in 2006 compared to 2005 and in open compared to closed habitat. We were not able to identify any influence of body mass on the difference in ranging behaviour between the two periods. Visual analysis of movement trajectories for 11 females revealed that 5 (45%) performed an excursion for a duration of a few hours to several days. We speculatively suggest that female rut excursions provide an opportunity for active mate choice in roe deer, where males are territorial, although we cannot rule out the alternative explanation that these movements are a means to avoid male harassment.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2014

The link between behavioural type and natal dispersal propensity reveals a dispersal syndrome in a large herbivore

Lucie Debeffe; Nicolas Morellet; Nadège Bonnot; Bruno Cargnelutti; H. Verheyden-Tixier; Cécile Vanpé; Aurélie Coulon; Jean Clobert; Richard Bon; A. J. M. Hewison

When individuals disperse, they modify the physical and social composition of their reproductive environment, potentially impacting their fitness. The choice an individual makes between dispersal and philopatry is thus critical, hence a better understanding of the mechanisms involved in the decision to leave the natal area is crucial. We explored how combinations of behavioural (exploration, mobility, activity and stress response) and morphological (body mass) traits measured prior to dispersal were linked to the subsequent dispersal decision in 77 roe deer Capreolus capreolus fawns. Using an unusually detailed multi-trait approach, we identified two independent behavioural continuums related to dispersal. First, a continuum of energetic expenditure contrasted individuals of low mobility, low variability in head activity and low body temperature with those that displayed opposite traits. Second, a continuum of neophobia contrasted individuals that explored more prior to dispersal and were more tolerant of capture with those that displayed opposite traits. While accounting for possible confounding effects of condition-dependence (body mass), we showed that future dispersers were less neophobic and had higher energetic budgets than future philopatric individuals, providing strong support for a dispersal syndrome in this species.


Biology Letters | 2014

The allometry between secondary sexual traits and body size is nonlinear among cervids

Jean-François Lemaître; Cécile Vanpé; Floriane Plard

Allometric relationships between sexually selected traits and body size have been extensively studied in recent decades. While sexually selected traits generally display positive allometry, a few recent reports have suggested that allometric relationships are not always linear. In male cervids, having both long antlers and large size provides benefits in terms of increased mating success. However, such attributes are costly to grow and maintain, and these costs might constrain antler length from increasing at the same rate as body mass in larger species if the quantity of energy that males can extract from their environment is limiting. We tested for possible nonlinearity in the relationship between antler size and body mass (on a log–log scale) among 31 cervids and found clear deviation from linearity in the allometry of antler length. Antler length increased linearly until a male body mass threshold at approximately 110 kg. Beyond this threshold, antler length did not change with increasing mass. We discuss this evidence of nonlinear allometry in the light of life-history theory and stress the importance of testing for nonlinearity when studying allometric relationships.


Animal Behaviour | 2015

Short- and long-term repeatability of docility in the roe deer: sex and age matter

L. Debeffe; Jean-François Lemaître; Ulrika Alm Bergvall; A. J. M. Hewison; Nicolas Morellet; Michel Goulard; C. Monestier; Morgan David; H. Verheyden-Tixier; Lars Jäderberg; Cécile Vanpé; Petter Kjellander

Behavioural consistency is a key assumption when evaluating how between-individual differences in behaviour influence life history tactics. Hence, understanding how and why variation in behavioural repeatability occurs is crucial. While analyses of behavioural repeatability are common, few studies of wild populations have investigated variation in repeatability in relation to individual status (e.g. sex, age, condition) and over different timescales. Here, we aimed to fill this gap by assessing within-population variation in the repeatability of docility, as assessed by the individuals response to human handling, in a free-ranging population of European roe deer, Capreolus capreolus. Docility was an equally repeatable behaviour at both short- and long-term timescales, suggesting that this behavioural trait is stable across time. Repeatability did not differ markedly between age and sex categories but tended to be higher in juvenile males than in juvenile females. Finally, contrary to expectation, individual variation in the repeatability of docility was not correlated with individual body mass. Further studies are required to assess the life history consequences of the individual variation in docility we report here.


Journal of Mammalogy | 2011

Spatial ecology of a ubiquitous Australian anteater, the short-beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus)

Stewart C. Nicol; Cécile Vanpé; Jenny Sprent; Gemma E. Morrow; Niels A. Andersen

Abstract The only specialized ant-eating mammal in Australia and New Guinea is the egg-laying short-beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus), and this single species occurs throughout Australia in a wide range of habitats. Despite the diversity of habitats and density and distribution of prey species, home-range sizes throughout Australia seem remarkably similar. We radiotracked echidnas in a population in Tasmania over a 13-year period and calculated home-range sizes using the fixed kernel method and the minimum convex polygon method. No relationship was found between body mass and home-range size, and mean annual home-range size of males (90% kernels) was 107 ha ± 48 SD, twice that of females (48 ± 28 ha). Male home ranges overlapped considerably and also overlapped with those of several females. The echidna follows the pattern seen in many solitary eutherian mammals: both sexes are promiscuous, and males have larger home ranges than females. Echidnas show a high degree of home-range fidelity but can make rare excursions out of their normal area. Hibernating echidnas move between shelters during their periodic arousals, resulting in home-range sizes similar to those of the active period. Consistent with their very low metabolic rate, echidnas have home-range sizes considerably smaller than predicted for carnivorous or omnivorous mammals. Examination of data from other ant-eating mammals shows that as a group anteaters not only have smaller than predicted home ranges but they depart significantly from the normal relationship between home-range size and body mass.


Australian Journal of Zoology | 2009

Development of microsatellite markers for the short-beaked echidna using three different approaches

Cécile Vanpé; Emmanuel Buschiazzo; Jawad Abdelkrim; Gemma E. Morrow; Stewart C. Nicol; Neil J. Gemmell

Abstract. We used three different methods, size-selected genomic library, cross-species amplification of a mammal-wide set of conserved microsatellites and genomic sequencing, to develop a panel of 43 microsatellite loci for the short-beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus). These loci were screened against 13 individuals from three different regions (Tasmania, Kangaroo Island, Perth region), spanning the breadth of the range of the short-beaked echidna. Nine of the 43 tested loci amplified reliably, generated clear peaks on the electropherogram and were polymorphic, with the number of alleles per locus ranging from two to eight (mean = 3.78) in the individuals tested. Polymorphic information content ranged from 0.16 to 0.78, and expected heterozygosity ranged from 0.19 to 0.84. One of the nine microsatellites showed a heterozygote deficit, suggesting a high probability of null alleles. The genomic sequencing approach using data derived from the Roche FLX platform is likely to provide the most promising method to develop echidna microsatellites. The microsatellite markers developed here will be useful tools to study population genetic structure, gene flow, kinship and parentage in Tachyglossus sp. and potentially also in endangered Zaglossus species.


Biology Letters | 2015

Response to Packard: make sure we do not throw out the biological baby with the statistical bath water when performing allometric analyses.

Jean-François Lemaître; Cécile Vanpé; Floriane Plard; Christophe Pélabon

Quantifying accurately the relationship between a phenotypic trait and body mass is a long-standing challenge in evolutionary biology and constitutes the core of allometric analyses. The traditional approach to study allometric relationships (expressed as y = b xa , [[1][1]]) is to fit a linear (or

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Petter Kjellander

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Nicolas Morellet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Bruno Cargnelutti

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Lucie Debeffe

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Maxime Galan

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Olof Liberg

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Jean-François Cosson

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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