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Dive into the research topics where Gérard Leboucher is active.

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Featured researches published by Gérard Leboucher.


Physiology & Behavior | 1998

Effects of fadrozole on sexual displays and reproductive activity in the female canary

Gérard Leboucher; Nathalie Béguin; Robert Mauget; Michel Kreutzer

We used fadrozole, a potent inhibitor of the aromatization of androgens to estrogens, to investigate the influence of estradiol on copulation solicitation displays (CSD) and reproductive activity in female canaries (Serinus canaria). Systemic injections of fadrozole during 10 consecutive days were effective in reducing plasma estradiol concentrations in adult female canaries submitted to photostimulation. Fadrozole provides a powerful tool for limiting an individuals exposure to estradiol, and the results of this study emphasize the influence of estradiol secretion in the regulation of behavioral transitions along the reproductive cycle of the female canary. When females were injected at the beginning of photostimulation, the emergence of copulation solicitation displays in response to conspecific songs was delayed. When females were injected later, after they were sexually active, the fadrozole treatment did not affect sexual displays. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that a threshold level of estradiol is critical to activate the neural circuitry mediating the copulation solicitation displays response in the female canary. They also suggest that the magnitude of sexual response is not related in a dose-dependent manner to estrogen concentrations observed during the period of sexual responsiveness. When females were injected at the beginning of photostimulation, egg-laying was delayed; when females were injected later, after they were sexually active, the fadrozole treatment dramatically reduced egg-laying and prevented incubation.


Oecologia | 2013

A potential role for parasites in the maintenance of color polymorphism in urban birds

Lisa Jacquin; Charlotte Récapet; Anne-Caroline Prévot-Julliard; Gérard Leboucher; P. Lenouvel; N. Erin; H. Corbel; Adrien Frantz; Julien Gasparini

Urbanization is a major challenge for biodiversity conservation, yet the evolutionary processes taking place in urbanized areas remain poorly known. Human activities in cities set new selective forces in motion which need to be investigated to predict the evolutionary responses of animal species living in urban areas. In this study, we investigated the role of urbanization and parasites in the maintenance of melanin-based color polymorphism in the feral pigeon Columba livia. Using a correlative approach, we tested whether differently colored genotypes displayed alternative phenotypic responses to urbanization, by comparing body condition, blood parasite prevalence and parasite load between colored morphs along an urbanization gradient. Body condition did not vary with urbanization, but paler individuals had a higher body condition than darker individuals. Moreover, paler morphs were less often parasitized than darker morphs in moderately urbanized habitats, but their parasite prevalence increased with urbanization. In contrast, darker morphs had similar parasite prevalence along the urbanization gradient. This suggests that paler morphs did better than darker morphs in moderately urbanized environments but were negatively affected by increasing urbanization, while darker morphs performed equally in all environments. Thus, differently colored individuals were distributed non-randomly across the urban habitat and suffered different parasite risk according to their location (a gene-by-environment interaction). This suggests that melanin-based coloration might reflect alternative strategies to cope with urbanization via different exposure or susceptibility to parasites. Spatial variability of parasite pressures linked with urbanization may, thus, play a central role in the maintenance of plumage color polymorphism in this urban species.


Animal Cognition | 2000

Early tutoring and adult reproductive behaviour in female domestic canary (Serinus canaria)

Violaine Depraz; Gérard Leboucher; Michel Kreutzer

Abstract We studied the effect of early tutoring on the subsequent sexual preferences and reproductive activity of female domestic canaries (Serinus canaria). Young female canaries were exposed during the first 4 months of life to songs of either domestic or wild canaries. When adult, these females were again exposed to domestic or wild songs. In the first experiment, the sexual responses of the females to unfamiliar domestic and wild songs were quantified with the copulation solicitation display (CSD) assay. In the second experiment, the same females were tested again with modified tutoring songs. In the third experiment, song stimulation of nest-building and egg-laying was studied. Domestic-strain-tutored females gave more CSDs to domestic than to wild songs. In contrast, wild-strain-tutored females showed no sexual preference. We propose that the sexual preference of adult domestic-strain-tutored female canaries for domestic songs is the consequence of learning and categorisation processes. The discrepancy between the results of the domestic-strain-tutored females and those of the wild-strain-tutored females suggests that female canaries have a predisposition to learn songs of their own strain rather than songs of an alien strain. In the third experiment nest-building and egg-laying activities appeared to be unaffected by early tutoring conditions: there was no significant differential effect of the different tutoring and exposure conditions on nest-building and egg-laying scores. Mate attraction and stimulation of females’ reproductive activity appear to be two separate functions of male song, which may have been shaped by different evolutionary constraints.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Heaven it's my wife! Male canaries conceal extra-pair courtships but increase aggressions when their mate watches.

Davy Ung; Mathieu Amy; Gérard Leboucher

Many animals live in a communication network, an environment where individuals can obtain information about competitors or potential mates by observing interactions between conspecifics. In such an environment, interactants might benefit by changing their signalling behaviour in the presence of an audience. This audience effect seems widespread among species, has been observed during various types of interaction (e.g. intra-sexual vs. inter-sexual interaction) and varies according to the social context (e.g. gender, hierarchical or mating status of the audience). However, the way individuals might adapt their signalling behaviour to a combination of these factors remains poorly understood. To address this question, we studied how the presence of an audience affects the behaviour of male domestic canaries Serinus canaria during two types of interactions: (i) an extra-pair interaction and (ii) a male-male competition for food. Males were observed under three conditions: (a) in the absence of audience, (b) in the presence of their mate or (c) of a familiar female. Our results show that male domestic canaries minutely adapt their courting and agonistic behaviours to a combination of: (i) the type of interaction (extra-pair interaction/male-male competition), (ii) the social context (mate, familiar female or nobody in audience) and (iii) the behaviours of both the audience and the interactant. These results highlight the ability of animals to subtly adapt their behaviour to the social environment. This also raises questions about the cognitive foundations and evolution of these processes especially considering that canaries are known neither for having high cognitive abilities nor for being a typical example for the social intelligence hypothesis.


Hormones and Behavior | 2005

Social competition and plasma testosterone profile in domesticated canaries: An experimental test of the challenge hypothesis

Maëlle Parisot; Aurélie Tanvez; André Lacroix; Eric Vallet; Nathalie Béguin; Gérard Leboucher

The challenge hypothesis predicts that plasma testosterone (T) concentration is high when male-male competitions are high and decreases when males are engaged in paternal care. In monogamous species, T concentration increases at the beginning of the breeding period and decreases after egg laying. According to the challenge hypothesis, increasing competition should also lead to T increase. The aim of our study was to test this hypothesis. In a first experiment, we measured the T profile of domesticated canaries housed with their mate in separated cages without competition. In a second one, we created a competition by housing male and female domestic canaries together (in an aviary) and emphasized this competition by limiting food access. We also studied social status effect. Our results showed no effect of social status in both sexes and no differences in females T concentration. Concerning males, we obtained a clear monogamous T profile from the ones housed in a low competition situation and a polygamous profile from the others housed in high competition situation. Thus, our results support the hypothesis of the plasticity of the mechanisms controlling T concentration according to environmental conditions.


British Poultry Science | 1990

Incubation and maternal behaviour in domestic hens: influence of the presence of chicks on circulating luteinising hormone, prolactin and oestradiol and on behaviour.

Gérard Leboucher; Marie-Annick Richard-Yris; John Williams; A. Chadwick

1. The consequences of the adoption of chicks and their subsequent removal on behaviour and plasma hormone concentrations of incubating hens were investigated. Birds were divided into two group: in group A, incubating hens were given chicks for 11 d; in group B chicks were left with the hens for 3 d only. 2. Incubating hens given chicks immediately showed maternal responses. The introduction of chicks induced a gradual nest desertion. Their removal stopped nest desertion temporarily on day 4 in group B hens. 3. Plasma prolactin concentrations fell one day after introduction of chicks and continued to decline for about one week in group A hens, although there was no further significant decrease in group B hens. Circulating prolactin tended to decrease with time in both groups. 4. Plasma luteinising hormone (LH) concentrations increased concurrently with the decrease of prolactin. The increase was more abrupt in group B hens. 5. Plasma oestradiol concentrations decreased slightly on the day chicks were introduced. The decline was arrested by removal of chicks in group B; in group A the tendency was reversed about 10 days after chick introduction. 6. Irrespective of group, before chick removal hens which deserted their nest rapidly had less contact with chicks and lower prolactin concentrations.


Animal Behaviour | 2010

Influence of mating preferences on yolk testosterone in the grey partridge

V. Garcia-Fernandez; Beatrice Guasco; Aurélie Tanvez; André Lacroix; Marco Cucco; Gérard Leboucher; Giorgio Malacarne

In precocial bird species, the eggs constitute most of the maternal investment because parents do not feed the young after they hatch. Maternal testosterone in egg yolk influences the embryo’s and chick’s development. Females deposit testosterone in the eggs as a response to the environment experienced during the laying period, including the quality of their mate. To assess the relevance of the female’ sm ate selection on egg characteristics in the grey partridge, Perdix perdix, we tested breeding females in a choice trial where they were allowed to choose between two males. After the choice trials, females were mated either with their preferred male (P group) or with the nonpreferred one (NP group). Although eggs laid by females of the two groups did not differ significantly in mass, females of the P group laid eggs with a higher yolk testosterone concentration than females of the NP group. This study agrees with previous work pointing out that partner attractiveness may play an important role in the transfer of maternally derived egg components. 2010 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Ltd. Maternal effects imply that the environment and the phenotype of the mother affect the progeny’s phenotype (Mousseau & Fox 1998). In oviparous vertebrates, all the resources needed by the embryo to develop must be present in the egg laid by the female. After the eggs are laid, no further adjustments to their components


Animal Cognition | 2011

Pigeons discriminate between human feeders

Ahmed Belguermi; Dalila Bovet; Anouck Pascal; Anne-Caroline Prévot-Julliard; Michel Saint Jalme; Lauriane Rat-Fischer; Gérard Leboucher

Considered as plague in many cities, pigeons in urban areas live close to human activities and exploit this proximity to find food which is often directly delivered by people. In this study, we explored the capacity of feral pigeons to take advantage of this human-based food resource and discriminate between friendly and hostile people. Our study was conducted in an urban park. Pigeons were fed by two experimenters of approximately the same age and skin colour but wearing coats of different colours. During the training sessions, the two human feeders displayed different attitudes: one of the feeders was neutral and the second was hostile and chased away the pigeons. During the two test phases subsequent to the training phase, both feeders became neutral. Two experiments were conducted, one with one male and one female feeder and the second with two female feeders. In both experiments, the pigeons learned to quickly (six to nine sessions) discriminate between the feeders and maintained this discrimination during the test phases. The pigeons avoided the hostile feeder even when the two feeders exchanged their coats, suggesting that they used stable individual characteristics to differentiate between the experimenter feeders. Thus, pigeons are able to learn quickly from their interactions with human feeders and use this knowledge to maximize the profitability of the urban environment. This study provides the first experimental evidence in feral pigeons for this level of human discrimination.


Advances in The Study of Behavior | 2012

Studying Female Reproductive Activities in Relation to Male Song: The Domestic Canary as a Model

Gérard Leboucher; Eric Vallet; Laurent Nagle; Nathalie Béguin; Dalila Bovet; Frédérique Hallé; Tudor I. Draganoiu; Mathieu Amy; Michel Kreutzer

Abstract Birdsong in oscine birds serves both intrasexual and intersexual functions. The aim of this chapter is to contribute to a better understanding of how birdsong is involved in female reproductive activity using the domestic canary as a model. Some special song phrases containing bipartite syllables composed of abrupt frequency falls and short silences (sexy phrases) appear to be particularly efficient to elicit sexual responses. Females canaries seem predisposed to prefer sexy phrases even though early or adult acoustic experience can affect this phenomenon. Moreover, eavesdropping on singing interactions, previous reproductive experience, as well as physical condition may be involved in shaping females’ preferences. Repeated exposures to male sexy phrases during reproduction do not influence the development of nest building or egg laying but affect egg quality. From the sender perspective, the production of the complex sexy phrases needs particular skills from the peripheral motor level as well as the central nervous system level.


Physiology & Behavior | 2015

Male song quality modulates c-Fos expression in the auditory forebrain of the female canary

Marie Monbureau; Jennifer M. Barker; Gérard Leboucher; Jacques Balthazart

In canaries, specific phrases of male song (sexy songs, SS) that are difficult to produce are especially attractive for females. Females exposed to SS produce more copulation displays and deposit more testosterone into their eggs than females exposed to non-sexy songs (NS). Increased expression of the immediate early genes c-Fos or zenk (a.k.a. egr-1) has been observed in the auditory forebrain of female songbirds hearing attractive songs. C-Fos immunoreactive (Fos-ir) cell numbers were quantified here in the brain of female canaries that had been collected 30min after they had been exposed for 60min to the playback of SS or NS or control white noise. Fos-ir cell numbers increased in the caudomedial mesopallium (CMM) and caudomedial nidopallium (NCM) of SS birds as compared to controls. Song playback (pooled SS and NS) also tended to increase average Fos-ir cell numbers in the mediobasal hypothalamus (MBH) but this effect did not reach full statistical significance. At the individual level, Fos expression in CMM was correlated with its expression in NCM and in MBH but also with the frequency of calls that females produced in response to the playbacks. These data thus indicate that male songs of different qualities induce a differential metabolic activation of NCM and CMM. The correlation between activation of auditory regions and of the MBH might reflect the link between auditory stimulation and changes in behavior and reproductive physiology.

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André Lacroix

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Giorgio Malacarne

University of Eastern Piedmont

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Caroline Gilbert

École nationale vétérinaire d'Alfort

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