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Featured researches published by Gaël Grenouillet.


PLOS ONE | 2013

A New Freshwater Biodiversity Indicator Based on Fish Community Assemblages

Joanne Clavel; Nicolas Poulet; Emmanuelle Porcher; Simon Blanchet; Gaël Grenouillet; Sandrine Pavoine; Anne Biton; Nirmala Seon-Massin; Christine Argillier; Martin Daufresne; Pauline Teillac-Deschamps; Romain Julliard

Biodiversity has reached a critical state. In this context, stakeholders need indicators that both provide a synthetic view of the state of biodiversity and can be used as communication tools. Using river fishes as model, we developed community indicators that aim at integrating various components of biodiversity including interactions between species and ultimately the processes influencing ecosystem functions. We developed indices at the species level based on (i) the concept of specialization directly linked to the niche theory and (ii) the concept of originality measuring the overall degree of differences between a species and all other species in the same clade. Five major types of originality indices, based on phylogeny, habitat-linked and diet-linked morphology, life history traits, and ecological niche were analyzed. In a second step, we tested the relationship between all biodiversity indices and land use as a proxy of human pressures. Fish communities showed no significant temporal trend for most of these indices, but both originality indices based on diet- and habitat- linked morphology showed a significant increase through time. From a spatial point of view, all indices clearly singled out Corsica Island as having higher average originality and specialization. Finally, we observed that the originality index based on niche traits might be used as an informative biodiversity indicator because we showed it is sensitive to different land use classes along a landscape artificialization gradient. Moreover, its response remained unchanged over two other land use classifications at the global scale and also at the regional scale.


Ecography | 2018

Spatial mismatch in morphological, ecological and phylogenetic diversity, in historical and contemporary European freshwater fish faunas

Lucie Kuczynski; Jessica Côte; Aurèle Toussaint; Sébastien Brosse; Laëtitia Buisson; Gaël Grenouillet

Biodiversity encompasses multiple facets, among which taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic aspects are the most often considered. Understanding how those diversity facets are distributed and what are their determinants has become a central concern in the current context of biodiversity crisis, but such multi‐faceted measures over large geographical areas are still pending. Here, we measured the congruence between the biogeographical patterns of freshwater fish morphological, ecological and phylogenetic diversity across Europe and identified the natural and anthropogenic drivers shaping those patterns. Based on freshwater fish occurrence records in 290 European river catchments, we computed richness and evenness for morphological, ecological and phylogenetic diversity using standardized effect sizes for each diversity index. We then used linear models including climatic, geo‐morphological, biotic and human‐related factors to determine the key drivers shaping freshwater fish biodiversity patterns across Europe. We found a weak spatial congruence between facets of diversity. Patterns of diversity were mainly driven by elevation range, climatic seasonality and species richness while other factors played a minor role. Finally, we found that non‐native species introductions significantly affected diversity patterns and influenced the effects of some environmental drivers. Morphological, ecological and phylogenetic diversity constitute complementary facets of fish diversity rather than surrogates, testifying that they deserve to be considered altogether to properly assess biodiversity. Although the same environmental and anthropogenic factors overall explained those diversity facets, their relative influence varied. In the current context of global change, non‐native species introductions may also lead to important reshuffling of assemblages resulting in profound changes of diversity patterns.


Global Change Biology | 2018

Community disassembly under global change: Evidence in favor of the stress-dominance hypothesis

Lucie Kuczynski; Gaël Grenouillet

Ecological theory suggests that communities are not random combinations of species but rather the results of community assembly processes filtering and sorting species that are able to coexist together. To date, such processes (i.e., assembly rules) have been inferred from observed spatial patterns of biodiversity combined with null model approaches, but relatively few attempts have been made to assess how these processes may be changing through time. Specifically, in the context of the ongoing biodiversity crisis and global change, understanding how processes shaping communities may be changing and identifying the potential drivers underlying these changes become increasingly critical. Here, we used time series of 460 French freshwater fish communities and assessed both functional and phylogenetic diversity patterns to determine the relative importance of two key assembly rules (i.e., habitat filtering and limiting similarity) in shaping these communities over the last two decades. We aimed to (a) describe the temporal changes in both functional and phylogenetic diversity patterns, (b) determine to what extent temporal changes in processes inferred through the use of standardized diversity indices were congruent, and (c) test the relationships between the dynamics of assembly rules and both climatic and biotic drivers. Our results revealed that habitat filtering, although already largely predominant over limiting similarity, became more widespread over time. We also highlighted that phylogenetic and trait-based approaches offered complementary information about temporal changes in assembly rules. Finally, we found that increased environmental harshness over the study period (especially higher seasonality of temperature) led to an increase in habitat filtering and that biological invasions increased functional redundancy within communities. Overall, these findings underlie the need to develop temporal perspectives in community assembly studies, as understanding ongoing temporal changes could provide a better vision about the way communities could respond to future global changes.


Ecography | 2013

Do stream fish track climate change? Assessing distribution shifts in recent decades

Lise Comte; Gaël Grenouillet


Ecography | 2002

Abundance and species richness as a function of food resources and vegetation structure: juvenile fish assemblages in rivers

Gaël Grenouillet; Didier Pont; Knut L. Seip


Ecography | 2015

Drivers of freshwater fish colonisations and extirpations under climate change

Lorenza Conti; Lise Comte; Bernard Hugueny; Gaël Grenouillet


Ecography | 2014

Spatial synchrony in stream fish populations: influence of species traits

Mathieu Chevalier; Pascal Laffaille; Gaël Grenouillet


Global Ecology and Biogeography | 2016

Increased taxonomic and functional similarity does not increase the trophic similarity of communities

Thomas K. Pool; Julien Cucherousset; Stéphanie Boulêtreau; Sébastien Villéger; Angela L. Strecker; Gaël Grenouillet


Ecography | 2015

The iterative ensemble modelling approach increases the accuracy of fish distribution models

Christine Lauzeral; Gaël Grenouillet; Sébastien Brosse


Ecography | 2016

Climate interacts with anthropogenic drivers to determine extirpation dynamics

Lise Comte; Bernard Hugueny; Gaël Grenouillet

Collaboration


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Bernard Hugueny

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Lise Comte

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Lucie Kuczynski

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Sébastien Brosse

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christine Lauzeral

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Emmanuelle Porcher

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jessica Côte

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Laëtitia Buisson

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Lorenza Conti

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Mathieu Chevalier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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