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Dive into the research topics where Eric Vidal is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric Vidal.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 1998

Is the yellow-legged gull a superabundantbird species in the Mediterranean? Impacton fauna and flora, conservation measuresand research priorities

Eric Vidal; Frédéric Médail; Thierry Tatoni

In the Mediterranean basin, the yellow-legged gull Larus cachinnans has undergone a widespread demographic increase for the past 30 years. Owing to its high ecological adaptability, its aggressive behaviour and its abundance, this gull is often considered to be a pest. The authors review and analyse the impacts of the expansion of the yellow-legged gull on fauna and flora in the Mediterranean area. Despite the relatively limited number of both intensive and general studies, it clearly appears that the population explosion has had a very diverse and severe effect on the ecosystem as a whole (flora, vertebrates, interspecific competition, extinction–colonization processes). The most serious damage has occurred around the largest breeding colonies to the detriment of fragile, rare or very restricted plant and animal species. Thus, from the point of view of fauna and flora conservation, the yellow-legged gull can, for the moment, be considered to be locally superabun dant. Control measures are often very onerous and necessitate heavy manpower and material resources. Additional extensive investigations will be necessary to assess the future development of yellow-legged gull populations and their impact on natural environments.


Biological Invasions | 2011

The diet of feral cats on islands: a review and a call for more studies

E. Bonnaud; Félix M. Medina; Eric Vidal; Manuel Nogales; Bernie R. Tershy; Erika S. Zavaleta; C. J. Donlan; Bradford S. Keitt; M. Le Corre; S. V. Horwath

Cats are among the most successful and damaging invaders on islands and a significant driver of extinction and endangerment. Better understanding of their ecology can improve effective management actions such as eradication. We reviewed 72 studies of insular feral cat diet from 40 islands worldwide. Cats fed on a wide range of species from large birds and medium sized mammals to small insects with at least 248 species consumed (27 mammals, 113 birds, 34 reptiles, 3 amphibians, 2 fish and 69 invertebrates). Three mammals, 29 birds and 3 reptiles recorded in the diet of cats are listed as threatened by the IUCN. However, a few species of introduced mammals were the most frequent prey, and on almost all islands mammals and birds contributed most of the daily food intake. Latitude was positively correlated with the predation of rabbits and negatively with the predation of reptiles and invertebrates. Distance from landmass was positively correlated with predation on birds and negatively correlated with the predation of reptiles. The broad range of taxa consumed by feral cats on islands suggests that they have the potential to impact almost any native species, even the smallest ones under several grams, that lack behavioral, morphological or life history adaptations to mammalian predators. Insular feral cat’s reliance on introduced mammals, which evolved with cat predation, suggests that on many islands, populations of native species have already been reduced.


Ecoscience | 2005

Invasional meltdown potential: facilitation between introduced plants and mammals on French Mediterranean islands.

Karen Bourgeois; Carey M. Suehs; Eric Vidal; Frédéric Médail

ABSTRACT In the increasingly important domain of insular invasion ecology, the role of facilitation between different introduced taxa has been mentioned, but rarely studied. This paper outlines facilitation between introduced mammals and the invasive succulents Carpobrotus edulis and C. aff. acinaciformis on offshore islands in southeast France. Rats and rabbits are the primary seed dispersers of Carpobrotus sp. on the islands studied. No such dispersal activity was detected on the adjacent mainland. Seed digestion by rats and rabbits also enhanced percent seed germination and speed, in spite of an associated reduction in seed size. In return, Carpobrotus provides a water/energy-rich food source during the dry summer season, thus demonstrating a clear case of mutualism between invaders.


Oecologia | 2000

Seabirds drive plant species turnover on small Mediterranean islands at the expense of native taxa

Eric Vidal; Frédéric Médail; Thierry Tatoni; Véronique Bonnet

Abstract The analysis of long-term floristic changes was conducted on nine west-Mediterranean limestone islands (size range: 2–95 ha) which have recently undergone a severe demographic explosion in their yellow-legged gull Larus cachinnans colonies. A comparison of past and present plant inventories was used to quantify extinction-colonization events, both from a classical biogeographical perspective (per island approach) and a metapopulational perspective (per species approach). In the first approach, floristic turnover intensity was negatively related to island area and positively to gull nesting density, but was independent of island isolation. In the second, species turnover rate was compared with a set of plant species life history traits (dispersal mode, Grime CSR strategy, growth form, biogeographical type). Plants which exhibited the highest turnover rate were primarily ruderal, annual, wind-dispersed species with a wide geographic range. The severe disturbance induced by seabird activities has tended to select and favour some adapted plant species groups at the expense of indigenous island taxa. The relationships between specific turnover intensity and plant life history traits justify using the metapopulation approach and point to the importance of interspecific variations in extinction-colonization patterns.


BioScience | 2013

Feral Cats and Biodiversity Conservation: The Urgent Prioritization of Island Management

Manuel Nogales; Eric Vidal; Félix M. Medina; Elsa Bonnaud; Bernie R. Tershy; Karl J. Campbell; Erika S. Zavaleta

A great part of the Earths biodiversity occurs on islands, to which humans have brought a legion of invasive species that have caused population declines and even extinctions. The domestic cat is one of the most damaging species introduced to islands, being a primary extinction driver for at least 33 insular endemic vertebrates. Here, we examine the role of feral cats in the context of the island biodiversity crisis, by combining data from reviews of trophic studies, species conservation status reports, and eradication campaigns. The integration of these reviews permits us to identify priority islands where feral cat eradications are likely to be feasible and where cats are predicted to cause the next vertebrate extinctions. Funding agencies and global conservation organizations can use these results to prioritize scarce conservation funds, and national and regional natural resource management agencies can rank their islands in need of feral cat eradication within a global context.


Biological Invasions | 2009

Invasive rats and seabirds after 2,000 years of an unwanted coexistence on Mediterranean islands

Lise Ruffino; Karen Bourgeois; Eric Vidal; Céline Duhem; Mariano Paracuellos; F. Escribano; Paolo Sposimo; Nicola Baccetti; Michel Pascal; Daniel Oro

In the Mediterranean, the survival of endemic long-lived seabirds despite the long-standing introduction of one of the most damaging alien predator, the ship rat (Rattus rattus), on most islands constitutes an amazing conservation paradox. A database gathering information on approximately 300 Western Mediterranean islands was analyzed through generalized linear models to identify the factors likely to influence ship rat presence and to account for how ship rat presence and island characteristics may have driven the presence and abundance of seabirds. Our review showed that few Mediterranean islands remain rat-free. At the regional scale, rat presence was only a limiting factor in the abundance of the smallest seabird, the storm petrel (Hydrobates pelagicus), while the distribution and abundance of the three shearwaters were more influenced by island characteristics. We hypothesized that the long-term persistence of these seabirds may have been facilitated by the various biogeographical contexts of Mediterranean islands, likely to provide intra-island refuges.


Biological Conservation | 1998

Impact of gull colonies on the flora of the Riou Archipelago (Mediterranean Islands of south-east France)

Eric Vidal; Frédéric Médail; Thierry Tatoni; Philip Roche; Patrick Vidal

Abstract The effects of an increasingly large yellow-legged gull Larus cachinnans colony on the flora of a Mediterranean limestone archipelago (south-east France) were studied through the analysis of floristical changes which have occurred in the past 36 years. Island plant lists can be distinguished first according to the island area, but all the islands show a common pattern of historical changes in flora. This floristical change appears to be correlated with the gull density and the percentage of ruderal plant species. Disturbance by gulls favours the massive establishment of non-native plant species which has led to the extinction of some endangered taxa through this plant species ‘enrichment’. Small islets appear to be more affected than large islands. Some preliminary conservation measures are presented.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Seabird modulations of isotopic nitrogen on islands.

Stéphane Caut; Elena Angulo; Benoit Pisanu; Lise Ruffino; Lucie Faulquier; Olivier Lorvelec; Jean Louis Chapuis; Michel Pascal; Eric Vidal; Franck Courchamp

The transport of nutrients by migratory animals across ecosystem boundaries can significantly enrich recipient food webs, thereby shaping the ecosystems’ structure and function. To illustrate the potential role of islands in enabling the transfer of matter across ecosystem boundaries to be gauged, we investigated the influence of seabirds on nitrogen input on islands. Basing our study on four widely differing islands in terms of their biogeography and ecological characteristics, sampled at different spatial and temporal intervals, we analyzed the nitrogen isotopic values of the main terrestrial ecosystem compartments (vascular plants, arthropods, lizards and rodents) and their relationship to seabird values. For each island, the isotopic values of the ecosystem were driven by those of seabirds, which ultimately corresponded to changes in their marine prey. First, terrestrial compartments sampled within seabird colonies were the most enriched in δ15N compared with those collected at various distances outside colonies. Second, isotopic values of the whole terrestrial ecosystems changed over time, reflecting the values of seabirds and their prey, showing a fast turnover throughout the ecosystems. Our results demonstrate that seabird-derived nutrients not only spread across the terrestrial ecosystems and trophic webs, but also modulate their isotopic values locally and temporally on these islands. The wealth of experimental possibilities in insular ecosystems justifies greater use of these model systems to further our understanding of the modalities of trans-boundary nutrient transfers.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2014

Underlying impacts of invasive cats on islands: not only a question of predation

Félix M. Medina; Elsa Bonnaud; Eric Vidal; Manuel Nogales

The domestic cat has been introduced on most islands worldwide, where it has established feral populations and is currently known to be one of the worst invasive mammalian predators. Predation is the strongest deleterious effect of cats on wildlife, inducing a direct negative impact on population size and dynamics, breeding success and changes in species assemblages. Direct predation is not the only damaging impact on native wildlife, since cats can be responsible for other poorly-documented underlying ecological impacts, like competition, hybridization, disease transmission, ecological process alteration, and behavioral change. Here, we pinpoint relevant examples of these ecological impacts, by searching for accurate data from published literature. We used electronic databases covering most of the world islands where the effects of cats were documented. Knowledge of these impacts can be of great importance to preserve insular ecosystem functions and persistence of endangered native species. We emphasize that direct predation processes should not be the only factor considered in the management of invasive cats on islands.


Polar Biology | 2003

Contribution of alien and indigenous species to plant-community assemblages near penguin rookeries at Crozet archipelago

Eric Vidal; Pierre Jouventin; Yves Frenot

The influence of seabird colonies on a remote insular flora was investigated through the analysis of plant community patterns at the boundaries of three colonies of king penguins (Aptenodytes patagonicus) on the subantarctic Île de la Possession. This study revealed that the physical and chemical impacts of these seabirds greatly influence plant assemblages (community composition, alien and native species abundance and richness). Plant richness appears to be maximum for a moderate disturbance intensity, on areas slightly influenced by penguin activities. The abundance of alien species near penguin rookeries may be due to their ability to withstand animal-induced disturbances and to efficiently colonise the stripped areas. In addition, the diversity and abundance of alien species recorded in study plots depend on the location of the colony. The closer the colony is to the permanent scientific station, the higher the number and abundance of aliens recorded.

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Dive into the Eric Vidal's collaboration.

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Karen Bourgeois

Université Paul Cézanne Aix-Marseille III

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Elsa Bonnaud

Université Paris-Saclay

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Jérôme Legrand

Université Paul Cézanne Aix-Marseille III

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Thierry Tatoni

Aix-Marseille University

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Frédéric Médail

Université Paul Cézanne Aix-Marseille III

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Hervé Jourdan

Aix-Marseille University

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Olivier Lorvelec

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Michel Pascal

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Philip Roche

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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