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Dive into the research topics where Charles-Antoine Dedryver is active.

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Featured researches published by Charles-Antoine Dedryver.


Molecular Ecology | 1999

Reproductive mode and population genetic structure of the cereal aphid Sitobion avenae studied using phenotypic and microsatellite markers

Jean-Christophe Simon; S. Baumann; Paul Sunnucks; Paul D. N. Hebert; J.-S. Pierre; J.-F. Le Gallic; Charles-Antoine Dedryver

As French populations of the aphid Sitobion avenae exhibit a range of reproductive modes, this species provides a good opportunity for studying the evolution of breeding system variation. The present analysis combined ecological and genetic investigations into the spatial distribution of variation in reproductive mode. Reproductive mode was characterized in 277 lineages of S. avenae from France, and these aphids were scored for five microsatellite loci. The analyses revealed strong geographical partitioning of breeding systems, with obligate asexuals mostly restricted to the south of France, while lineages producing sexual forms were more common in the north. Contrary to what might be anticipated for organisms with frequent parthenogenesis, there was substantial genic and genotypic diversity, even in the obligately asexual lineages. More than 120 different genotypes were detected among the 277 aphid lineages, with an average of 5.9 alleles per locus (range four to 16) and heterozygosity of 56.7%. As with previous studies of allozyme variation in aphids, most loci showed heterozygote deficits, and disequilibrium was common among allelic variants at different loci, even after removal of replicate copies of genotypes that might have been derived through clonal reproduction. Our results suggest that selection is important in structuring reproductive systems and genetic variation in French S. avenae. Canonical correspondence analysis was employed to examine the associations between genotypic and phenotypic variables, enabling the identification of alleles correlated with life‐history traits.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2005

Limited genetic exchanges between populations of an insect pest living on uncultivated and related cultivated host plants

Aude Vialatte; Charles-Antoine Dedryver; Jean-Christophe Simon; Marina Galman; Manuel Plantegenest

Habitats in agroecosystems are ephemeral, and are characterized by frequent disturbances forcing pest species to successively colonize various hosts belonging either to the cultivated or to the uncultivated part of the agricultural landscape. The role of wild habitats as reservoirs or refuges for the aphid Sitobion avenae that colonize cultivated fields was assessed by investigating the genetic structure of populations collected on both cereal crops (wheat, barley and oat) and uncultivated hosts (Yorkshire fog, cocksfoot, bulbous oatgrass and tall oatgrass) in western France. Classical genetic analyses and Bayesian clustering algorithms indicate that genetic differentiation is high between populations collected on uncultivated hosts and on crops, revealing a relatively limited gene flow between the uncultivated margins and the cultivated part of the agroecosystem. A closer genetic relatedness was observed between populations living on plants belonging to the same tribe (Triticeae, Poeae and Aveneae tribes) where aphid genotypes appeared not to be specialized on a single host, but rather using a group of related plant species. Causes of this ecological differentiation and its implications for integrated pest management of S. avenae as cereals pest are discussed.


Molecular Ecology | 2009

Climate and agricultural context shape reproductive mode variation in an aphid crop pest

Aude Gilabert; Jean-Christophe Simon; L. Mieuzet; F. Halkett; Solenn Stoeckel; Manuel Plantegenest; Charles-Antoine Dedryver

In aphids, reproductive mode is generally assumed to be selected for by winter climate. Sexual lineages produce frost‐resistant eggs, conferring an advantage in regions with cold winters, while asexual lineages predominate in regions with mild winters. However, habitat and resource heterogeneities are known to exert a strong influence on sex maintenance and might modulate the effect of climate on aphid reproductive strategies. We carried out a hierarchical sampling in northern France to investigate whether reproductive mode variation of the aphid Rhopalosiphum padi is driven by winter climate conditions, by habitat and resource heterogeneities represented by a range of host plants or by both factors. We confirmed the coexistence in R. padi populations of two genetic clusters associated with distinct reproductive strategies. Asexual lineages predominated, whatever the surveyed year and location. However, we detected a between‐year variation in the local contribution of both clusters, presumably associated with preceding winter severity. No evidence for host‐driven niche differentiation was found in the field on six Poaceae among sexual and asexual lineages. Two dominant multilocus genotypes (∼70% of the sample), having persisted over a 10‐year period, were equally abundant on different plant species and locations, indicating their large ecological tolerance. Our results fit theoretical predictions of the influence of winter climate on the balance between sexual and asexual lineages. They also highlight the importance of current agricultural practices which seem to favour a small number of asexual generalist genotypes and their migration across large areas of monotonous environments.


Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 1991

Identifying bird cherry-oat aphid Rhopalosiphum padi emigrants, alate exules and gynoparae: application of multivariate methods to morphometric and anatomical features

Jean-Christophe Simon; Charles-Antoine Dedryver; J. S. Pierre

Multivariate analysis methods were used to distinguish between the three female alate morphs of Rhopalosiphum padi (L.) (emigrants, alate exules and gynoparae). Fourteen morphometric descriptors and seven anatomical parameters indicative of their potential fecundity were considered. Three populations or clones from distinct areas were also taken into account.


Evolutionary Ecology | 2014

Do ecological niches differ between sexual and asexual lineages of an aphid species

Aude Gilabert; Jean-Christophe Simon; Charles-Antoine Dedryver; Manuel Plantegenest

According to environmental-based theories on the maintenance of sexual reproduction, sexual and asexual populations may coexist if they occupy different ecological niches. The aphid Rhopalosiphum padi offers a good opportunity to test this hypothesis since sexual and asexual lineages show local coexistence during a large part of their respective life-cycles. Because these two reproductive variants are morphologically identical but genetically distinct, we first characterized them using genetic markers in populations of R. padi in areas where sexual and asexual lineages may occur in sympatry. We then inferred the natal host plant of sexual and asexual genotypes by analysing stable isotopic ratios and showed that sexual ones mostly originated from C3 Poaceae while asexual ones originated from C3 and C4 plants, although the majority came from C4 Poaceae. These findings indicate that ecological niches of sexual and asexual lineages of R. padi differ, offering a plausible explanation for the local coexistence of the two reproductive modes in this species through habitat specialisation.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Response of Insect Relative Growth Rate to Temperature and Host-Plant Phenology: Estimation and Validation from Field Data

Mamadou Ciss; Nicolas Parisey; Gwenaëlle Fournier; Pierre Taupin; Charles-Antoine Dedryver; Jean-Sébastien Pierre

Between 1975 to 2011, aphid Relative Growth Rates (RGR) were modelled as a function of mean outdoor temperature and host plant phenology. The model was applied to the grain aphid Sitobion avenae using data on aphid counts in winter wheat at two different climate regions in France (oceanic climate, Rennes (western France); continental climate, Paris). Mean observed aphid RGR was higher in Paris compared to the Rennes region. RGR increased with mean temperature, which is explained by aphid reproduction, growth and development being dependent on ambient temperature. From the stem extension to the heading stage in wheat, there was either a plateau in RGR values (Rennes) or an increase with a maximum at heading (Paris) due to high intrinsic rates of increase in aphids and also to aphid immigration. From the wheat flowering to the ripening stage, RGR decreased in both regions due to the low intrinsic rate of increase in aphids and high emigration rate linked to reduced nutrient quality in maturing wheat. The model validation process showed that the fitted models have more predictive power in the Paris region than in the Rennes region.


Environmental Entomology | 2014

Larval Hitch-Hiking and Adult Flight are Two Ways of Aphidiinae Parasitoids Long-Range Dispersal

Stéphane A.P. Derocles; Manuel Plantegenest; Evelyne Turpeau Ait-Ighil E; Bernard Chaubet; Charles-Antoine Dedryver; Anne Le Ralec

ABSTRACT Dispersal strategies and success of pests’ natural enemies widely influence the efficiency of biological control. In this study, we compare two dispersal strategies among Aphidiinae parasitoids: eggs and larvae dispersal through winged aphid flight and active dispersal by adult parasitoids. Using a molecular method applied to a sample of >2,000 winged migratory aphids captured in a suction trap situated in Western France, we assessed the proportion of winged aphids carrying an aphidiine larva. In the six most abundant aphid species, we found an average parasitism rate of migrating aphids close to 1% and identified seven different, mainly generalist, parasitoid species. We also identified the species and the sex of adult Aphidiinae captured by the suction trap based on morphological criteria. We found that dispersing adult parasitoids were almost exclusively female. Parasitoid dispersal strategy seems to be species-dependant but this result needs to be confirmed by an exhaustive analysis of winged aphids captured. We discuss the possible impact of the low parasitism rate of winged aphids on parasitoid population dynamics and the importance of these results in the context of biological control and of the study of food webs between aphids and their natural enemies.


Journal of Invertebrate Pathology | 1993

Influence of an Erynia neoaphidis Infection on the Relative Rate of Increase of the Cereal Aphid Sitobion Avenae

Vincent Schmitz; Charles-Antoine Dedryver; Jean-Sébastien Pierre


Environmental Entomology | 1997

Variability in the development of cereal aphid parasitoids and hyperparasitoids in oceanic regions as a response to climate and abundance of hosts

Liliane Krespi; Charles-Antoine Dedryver; V. Creach; J.M. Rabasse; A. Le Ralec; Jean-Pierre Nénon


Ecological Informatics | 2013

Understanding flying insect dispersion: Multiscale analyses of fragmented landscapes

Mamadou Ciss; Nicolas Parisey; Charles-Antoine Dedryver; Jean-Sébastien Pierre

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Jean-Christophe Simon

École nationale supérieure agronomique de Rennes

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Jean-Sébastien Pierre

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Nicolas Parisey

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Aude Gilabert

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Denis Tagu

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Mamadou Ciss

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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