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Dive into the research topics where Georges Janeau is active.

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Featured researches published by Georges Janeau.


Comptes Rendus Biologies | 2002

Global Positioning System (GPS) location accuracy improvement due to Selective Availability removal

Irène Girard; Jean-Paul Gendner; Georges Janeau

Global Positioning System (GPS) is an important new technology for spatio-temporal behaviour studies of animals. Differential correction improves location accuracy. Previously, it mostly removed partially the influence of Selective Availability (SA). SA was deactivated in May 2000. The aim of this study was to quantify the influence of SA cancellation on location accuracy of various GPS receivers. We tested the accuracy of locations obtained from non-differential and differential GPS animal collars before and after SA removal. We found a significant improvement in accuracy for both types of GPS collars. However, differential GPS still provides more accurate locations.


Journal of Mammalogy | 2004

ASSESSING REAL DAILY DISTANCE TRAVELED BY UNGULATES USING DIFFERENTIAL GPS LOCATIONS

Dominique Pépin; Carole S. Mann; Georges Janeau

Abstract Differential Global Positioning System technology can provide series of accurate locations of free-ranging animals with a short, fixed interval. The sum of straight-line distances between valid locations (y) plotted against number of attempted fixes per day (x) should fit a hyperbolic function (i.e., y = x/[ax − b]) after removing inaccurate fixes and inactive periods. Its asymptotic value (1/a) can provide an estimate of real travel distance. The ratio of 1/a and y is a correction factor to apply to perceived straight-line distance to estimate real distance traveled. We achieved a good model fit on free-ranging adult red deer (Cervus elaphus) from data obtained every 15 min for a male and a female in winter 1997–1998, with a narrow range of correction factors. To validate this model, we used independent datasets from 3 other adult red deer roaming in the same area in winter 2000. We applied the procedure to distances perceived with fixed intervals ranging from 30 to 240 min and found consistent results in estimated real distances. Application of various steps of this analytical method could further development of a general approach to assess real distance traveled by individuals, thus offering new ways of studying habitat use or energetic requirements.


Journal of Mammalogy | 2011

Spatiotemporal dynamics of forage and water resources shape space use of West African savanna buffaloes

Daniel Cornélis; Simon Benhamou; Georges Janeau; Nicolas Morellet; Moumouni Ouedraogo; Marie-Noël De Visscher

Abstract We investigated space-use patterns of the West African savanna buffalo (Syncerus caffer brachyceros), a little-studied subspecies occurring at the northern limit of the African buffalos geographical range. This buffalo generally ranges in small herds (about 45 individuals) and has a low body mass (approximately 400 kg) relative to the Cape buffalo (S. c. caffer). We monitored the movements of 7 breeding herds in W Regional Park (Burkina Faso, Benin, Niger) using global positioning system collars and activity data loggers. Habitat selection was analyzed at both large (interseasonal) and small (intraseasonal) scales in a context where resources are segregated spatially at some times of year. Both biotic (primary production and vegetation types) and abiotic (timing of rainfall and surface water) covariates, and the extent to which neighboring herds shared space, were considered. In the dry season buffalo herds ranged close (within 5.3 ± 2.0 km, mean ± SD) to segments of permanent rivers. At the onset of the monsoon all herds but 1 (which had year-round access to suitable resources) performed a large (35 ± 10 km) directional movement in response to a large-scale gradient of primary production. Spatiotemporal dynamics of forage and water resources thus jointly stimulated interseasonal directional movements and shaped large (335 ± 167 km2) annual home ranges. Furthermore, the establishment of home ranges in the wet season appears to be conditioned by a threshold (about 10%) in the availability of perennial grasses. Habitat-selection analysis at intraseasonal scale also underlines the key role played by perennial grasses for buffaloes. The spatial arrangements of home ranges of neighboring herds also suggest that interherd behavioral avoidance is a high-level constraint on foraging processes. The ability of the African buffalo to cope with contrasting environmental conditions throughout most sub-Saharan ecosystems highlights the high behavioral plasticity of this species.


Ecological Research | 2008

Individual variation in migratory and exploratory movements and habitat use by adult red deer (Cervus elaphus L.) in a mountainous temperate forest

Dominique Pépin; Georges Janeau; Jean Joachim; Carole S. Mann

Using data from a global positioning system (GPS), seven adult red deer (Cervus elaphus L.) were tracked in the Parc National des Cévennes, southern France, between November 1998 and December 2000 to assess the factors affecting large-range movement patterns and habitat use. The home range varied from a single compact area for females to three distinct seasonal ranges for males, which used alternative migratory strategies (i.e. non-, downward- and upward-migrants). The migrants used mainly southerly and easterly aspects, and wintered in areas having steeper slopes than were used during summer or the rut season. For males, the time of rut migration was mid-September and they finally entered wintering ranges from mid-December to the beginning of January. Exploratory behaviour (i.e. individuals found outside the limits of their familiar area but returning to it a few days later) occurred in both sexes and for all individuals monitored during at least a 6-month period. Velocity and efficiency of exploratory movements were higher than usual movements. During these exploratory movements, hinds may have used different landscape attributes (elevation, slope, canopy cover) while stags did not. These results provide new empirical information that could be used for building and applying broad-scale spatial and landscape use models in ecological research.


European Journal of Wildlife Research | 2008

Red deer Cervus elaphus resting place characteristics obtained from differential GPS data in a forest habitat

Christophe Baltzinger; Georges Janeau; Dominique Pépin

We recorded 30 24-h monitoring periods with 10-min sampling intervals on seven (three female; four male) Global-Positioning-System-collared adult free-ranging red deer (Cervus elaphus), from June 1999 to December 2000, in the Parc National des Cévennes, France. We observed the duration of resting bouts (n = 385) and then microhabitat variables (aspect, slope, presence of edge and litter, visibility, abundance of vegetation consumed or not) at 178 resting places. Resting bouts were shorter during the night than during the day from June to October but did not vary between sexes. Resting place visibility was lower during the day, especially in August. Daytime resting places generally offered more litter. Females used steeper slopes than males. We found higher variability in visibility and slope during the night. Aspect used did not vary from month to month or between day and night. Observed differences between day and night resting place characteristics suggest that red deer were probably facing a tradeoff between feeding and cover. Use of cover prevailed during the daytime whereas night resting place characteristics were more variable, indicating less constrained behaviour. Thus, cover (as a protection from disturbance), as well as food, is an important factor in red deer habitat use (at least during the day in disturbed areas) and should not be neglected in forest carrying capacity management.


Wildlife Society Bulletin | 2003

GPS approach to study fine-scale site use by wild red deer during active and inactive behaviors

Hélène Verheyden-Tixier; Bruno Cargnelutti; Dominique Pépin; Georges Janeau


Acta Theriologica | 1990

Spatial strategies: an attempt to classify daily movements of wild boar

François Spitz; Georges Janeau


Canadian Journal of Zoology | 1994

Use of space by juveniles in relation to their postnatal range, mother, and siblings: an example in the wild boar Sus scrofa L.

Sylvie Cousse; François Spitz; Mark Hewison; Georges Janeau


Comptes Rendus Biologies | 2004

Performance of differential GPS collars in temperate mountain forest.

Georges Janeau; Jean Joachim; Jean-Paul Gendner; Dominique Pépin


Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde : im Auftrage der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Säugetierkunde e.V. | 1995

Ontogeny of rest-activity rhythm in the Wild boar

Georges Janeau; Sylie Cousse; Carol S Mann; Bruno Cargnelutti; Pierre Yves Quenette; Jacques Lauga

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Dominique Pépin

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Carole S. Mann

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Daniel Cornélis

Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement

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François Spitz

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Bruno Cargnelutti

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jean Joachim

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Marie-Noël De Visscher

Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement

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Jean-Paul Gendner

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Simon Benhamou

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Hélène Verheyden-Tixier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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