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Featured researches published by Gaétan Moreau.


Forensic Science International | 2009

Predicting the visitation of carcasses by carrion-related insects under different rates of degree-day accumulation.

Jean-Philippe Michaud; Gaétan Moreau

Common assumptions in forensic entomology are that insects visit and colonize carcasses following a predictable sequence, and that this succession varies among seasons. However, currently available evidence for insect succession on decomposing bodies is essentially descriptive and, to our knowledge, the fine-scale predictability of insect succession with respect to seasons has never been confirmed statistically. In this study, we test these assumptions through the sampling of carrion-related insects attracted to pig carcasses. The study was carried out during the summer and fall of 2006 in rural fields of New Brunswick, Canada. Of the five species of carrion-related insects with high enough occurrence on carcasses to allow modelling, three showed predictable occurrence with respect to degree-day accumulation and seasonal effects. This demonstrates that the occurrence probability of some carrion-related insects on carcasses can be estimated from meteorological records even across seasons with different rates of degree-day accumulation. As opposed to the prevailing idea that adult insects are not reliable for post-mortem interval estimation, the adults of some species exhibited a specific pattern of visitation that could be determined and used in forensic investigations. It is stressed, however, that the statistical predictability of species occurrence must be assessed before any species is considered as a post-mortem interval indicator.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2011

A statistical approach based on accumulated degree-days to predict decomposition-related processes in forensic studies.

Jean-Philippe Michaud; Gaétan Moreau

Abstract:  Using pig carcasses exposed over 3 years in rural fields during spring, summer, and fall, we studied the relationship between decomposition stages and degree‐day accumulation (i) to verify the predictability of the decomposition stages used in forensic entomology to document carcass decomposition and (ii) to build a degree‐day accumulation model applicable to various decomposition‐related processes. Results indicate that the decomposition stages can be predicted with accuracy from temperature records and that a reliable degree‐day index can be developed to study decomposition‐related processes. The development of degree‐day indices opens new doors for researchers and allows for the application of inferential tools unaffected by climatic variability, as well as for the inclusion of statistics in a science that is primarily descriptive and in need of validation methods in courtroom proceedings.


Oecologia | 2003

Advantages of a mixed diet: feeding on several foliar age classes increases the performance of a specialist insect herbivore

Gaétan Moreau; Dan T. Quiring; Eldon S. Eveleigh; Éric Bauce

Two field studies were carried out to determine the influence of Abies balsamea foliage age on the preference and performance of larvae of Neodiprion abietis, a specialist Diprionid sawfly. Preference was determined by examining N. abietis defoliation on all age classes of foliage. Performance was estimated using larval survival, cocoon weights and the percentage of adults that were females. Neodiprion abietis preference for, and performance on, current-year foliage was very low, peaked on 2 or 3-year-old foliage, and declined on older foliage. Thus, sawfly feeding preference was adaptive. However, survival and cocoon weight were highest when sawflies were allowed to feed on all age classes of foliage, demonstrating that an insect specialist may perform better when feeding on several age classes of foliage from a single host plant species. These results indicate that either different larval instars have different nutritional requirements, or that food mixing provides the best diet, permitting the herbivore to obtain needed nutrients while avoiding ingestion of toxic doses of secondary metabolites. In addition, our results suggest that limited availability of varied foliage has more negative consequences for N. abietis females than for males, as the percentage of survivors that were females decreased when juvenile mortality was high. Our results emphasize the importance of considering non-linear changes in foliar quality as leaves age on herbivore preference and performance, and demonstrate how a herbivore can use this variability to maximize its fitness.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2012

Sampling flies or sampling flaws? Experimental design and inference strength in forensic entomology.

Jean-Philippe Michaud; Kenneth Schoenly; Gaétan Moreau

ABSTRACT Forensic entomology is an inferential science because postmortem interval estimates are based on the extrapolation of results obtained in field or laboratory settings. Although enormous gains in scientific understanding and methodological practice have been made in forensic entomology over the last few decades, a majority of the field studies we reviewed do not meet the standards for inference, which are 1) adequate replication, 2) independence of experimental units, and 3) experimental conditions that capture a representative range of natural variability. Using a mock case-study approach, we identify design flaws in field and lab experiments and suggest methodological solutions for increasing inference strength that can inform future casework. Suggestions for improving data reporting in future field studies are also proposed.


Forensic Science International | 2010

Natural and anthropogenic changes in the insect fauna associated with carcasses in the North American Maritime lowlands.

Jean-Philippe Michaud; Christopher G. Majka; Jean-Pierre Privé; Gaétan Moreau

The insect pool available for carrion visitation and colonisation varies with geographical areas, hence the need to build a comprehensive database wherever such data could be used in forensic investigations. However, most of the geographic records on carrion-related insects are from short-term seasonal studies. Here, we provide the year-round taxonomic composition for the dominant ecosystem of the Maritime lowland ecological region that borders the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Canada, and we examine how this composition is subjected to natural (seasonal) as well as anthropogenic changes. Fresh pig carcasses, used here as human surrogates, were exposed recurrently throughout the whole annual period when carrion-related insects are active in forests and adjacent areas subjected to human-induced land cover changes from agricultural practices. A total of 130 necrophageous and predacious insect species representing 2 orders, 18 families and 75 genera were recovered from carcasses. Abundant fly species were able to visit and/or colonise carcasses exposed in both forests and agricultural fields but the species involved varied throughout the year. Conversely, the complex of abundant coleopterans found on carcasses remained stable throughout the year but differed between forests and agricultural fields. Considering the seasonal and anthropogenic changes that were observed in the complex of carrion-related insects, we stressed that inference on the taxonomic composition in relation to minimum postmortem interval should be restricted to a specific habitat and time of the year. These results also have methodological implications, suggesting that the experimental designs of forensic studies in temperate areas require adjustments to permit robust estimations of minimum postmortem intervals from the insect fauna associated with carcasses.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2013

Effect of Variable Rates of Daily Sampling of Fly Larvae on Decomposition and Carrion Insect Community Assembly: Implications for Forensic Entomology Field Study Protocols

Jean-Philippe Michaud; Gaétan Moreau

ABSTRACT Experimental protocols in forensic entomology successional field studies generally involve daily sampling of insects to document temporal changes in species composition on animal carcasses. One challenge with that method has been to adjust the sampling intensity to obtain the best representation of the community present without affecting the said community. To this date, little is known about how such investigator perturbations affect decomposition-related processes. Here, we investigated how different levels of daily sampling of fly eggs and fly larvae affected, over time, carcass decomposition rate and the carrion insect community. Results indicated that a daily sampling of <5% of the egg and larvae volumes present on a carcass, a sampling intensity believed to be consistent with current accepted practices in successional field studies, had little effect overall. Higher sampling intensities, however, slowed down carcass decomposition, affected the abundance of certain carrion insects, and caused an increase in the volume of eggs laid by dipterans. This study suggests that the carrion insect community not only has a limited resilience to recurrent perturbations but that a daily sampling intensity equal to or <5% of the egg and larvae volumes appears adequate to ensure that the system is representative of unsampled conditions. Hence we propose that this threshold be accepted as best practice in future forensic entomology successional field studies.


The Quarterly Review of Biology | 2015

Rewriting ecological succession history: did carrion ecologists get there first?

Jean-Philippe Michaud; Kenneth Schoenly; Gaétan Moreau

Ecological succession is arguably the most enduring contribution of plant ecologists and its origins have never been contested. However, we show that French entomologist Pierre Mégnin, while collaborating with medical examiners in the late 1800s, advanced the first formal definition and testable mechanism of ecological succession. This discovery gave birth to the twin disciplines of carrion ecology and forensic entomology. As a novel case of multiple independent discovery, we chronicle how the disciplines of plant and carrion ecology (including forensic entomology) accumulated strikingly similar parallel histories and contributions. In the 1900s, the two groups diverged in methodology and purpose, with carrion ecologists and forensic entomologists focusing mostly on case reports and observational studies instead of hypothesis testing. Momentum is currently growing, however, to develop the ecological framework of forensic entomology and advance carrion ecology theory. Researchers are recognizing the potential of carcasses as subjects for testing not only succession mechanisms (without assuming space-for-time substitution), but also aggregation and coexistence models, diversity-ecosystem function relationships, and the dynamics of pulsed resources. By comparing the contributions of plant and carrion ecologists, we hope to stimulate future crossover research that leads to a general theory of ecological succession.


Oecologia | 2017

Facilitation may not be an adequate mechanism of community succession on carrion

Jean-Philippe Michaud; Gaétan Moreau

The facilitation model of ecological succession was advanced by plant ecologists in the late 1970s and was then introduced to carrion ecology in the late 1980s, without empirical evidence of its applicability. Ecologists in both disciplines proposed removing early colonists, in this case fly eggs and larvae, from the substrate to determine whether other species could still colonize, which to our knowledge has never been attempted. Here, we tested the facilitation model in a carrion system by removing fly eggs and larvae from carcasses that were exposed in agricultural fields and assigned to one of the following treatment levels of removal intensity: 0, <5, 50, and 100%. Subsequent patterns of colonisation did not provide support for the applicability of the facilitation model in carrion systems. Although results showed, in part, that the removal of fly eggs and larvae decreased the decomposition rate of carcasses, the removal did not prevent colonization by secondary colonizers. Finally, we discuss future studies and make recommendations as to how the facilitation model could be improved, firstly by being more specific about the scale where facilitation is believed to be occurring, secondly by clearly stating what environmental modification is believed to be involved, and thirdly by disentangling facilitation from priority effects.


Journal of Applied Entomology | 2013

Effects of reflective groundcovers on ground beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae) in red raspberry (Rubus idaeus) cropping systems

C. Comeau; Jean-Pierre Privé; Gaétan Moreau

Reflective groundcovers are management tools used in temperate regions where light can be a limiting factor to crop productivity. Although their effects on crops have been extensively studied, little is known about their ecological impacts on ground‐dwelling organisms. Theoretically, reflective groundcovers add structural complexity to the system and thus have the potential to create refuges for ground‐dwelling invertebrates. At the same time, groundcovers can create abiotic conditions underneath them that could potentially cause declines in the abundance and richness of ground‐dwelling invertebrates. During the summers of 2006 and 2007, white, woven, reflective polymer groundcovers were placed in two red raspberry (Rubus idaeus L.) cropping systems (organic and conventional) in south‐eastern New Brunswick to assess their effects on ground beetle richness, activity density and overall assemblage structure. A total of 8723 ground beetles belonging to 23 species were collected using pitfall traps. In contrast with the combined effects of cropping systems and sampling years, the use of a groundcover accounted for a small proportion of the variance in trap catches and caused little change in ground beetle richness, activity density and overall assemblage structure. Based on these results, we suggest that reflective groundcovers constitute promising management tools to increase light environment quality in row crops without being detrimental to ground beetle species that may contribute to pest suppression.


Annals of The Entomological Society of America | 2003

Feeding Behavior of Spruce Budworm (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) Larvae Subjected to Multiple Exposures of Bacillus thuringiensis Variety kurstaki

Gaétan Moreau; Éric Bauce

Abstract Feeding behavior of the spruce budworm, Choristoneura fumiferana (Clemens), in multiple exposures to Foray 48B formulation of Bacillus thuringiensis Berliner subsp. kurstaki (Btk) was studied in the laboratory. A significant proportion of fourth- and fifth-instar larvae that were exposed to a Btk-contaminated food completely abstained from feeding on that food, even if these larvae had not previously been exposed to Btk-contaminated food. The occurrence of this behavior was higher in fourth-instar than in fifth-instar larvae and decreased with increasing fifth-instar weight. It is suggested that only larvae that have a reduced appetite can successfully abstain from feeding on the Btk-contaminated food over a 24-h period and that active ingredients of Btk or fermentation byproducts associated with the crystal/spore suspension are involved in the process. Spruce budworm did not exhibit aversion learning to Btk, which lead us to conclude that the field efficiency of multiple Btk applications should not be reduced by the behavioral response of spruce budworm larvae.

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Dan T. Quiring

University of New Brunswick

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Jean-Pierre Privé

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Christopher G. Majka

American Museum of Natural History

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Benoit Morin

Natural Resources Canada

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Christopher G. Majka

American Museum of Natural History

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