Guillaume Decocq
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Guillaume Decocq.
Global Change Biology | 2015
Markus Bernhardt-Römermann; Lander Baeten; Dylan Craven; Pieter De Frenne; Radim Hédl; Jonathan Lenoir; Didier Bert; Jörg Brunet; Markéta Chudomelová; Guillaume Decocq; Hartmut Dierschke; Thomas Dirnböck; Inken Dörfler; Thilo Heinken; Martin Hermy; P.W.F.M. Hommel; Bogdan Jaroszewicz; Andrzej Keczyński; Daniel L. Kelly; K. J. Kirby; Martin Kopecký; Martin Macek; František Máliš; Michael Mirtl; Fraser J.G. Mitchell; Tobias Naaf; Miles Newman; George Peterken; Petr Petřík; Wolfgang Schmidt
Global biodiversity is affected by numerous environmental drivers. Yet, the extent to which global environmental changes contribute to changes in local diversity is poorly understood. We investigated biodiversity changes in a meta-analysis of 39 resurvey studies in European temperate forests (3988 vegetation records in total, 17-75xa0years between the two surveys) by assessing the importance of (i) coarse-resolution (i.e., among sites) vs. fine-resolution (i.e., within sites) environmental differences and (ii) changing environmental conditions between surveys. Our results clarify the mechanisms underlying the direction and magnitude of local-scale biodiversity changes. While not detecting any net local diversity loss, we observed considerable among-site variation, partly explained by temporal changes in light availability (a local driver) and density of large herbivores (a regional driver). Furthermore, strong evidence was found that presurvey levels of nitrogen deposition determined subsequent diversity changes. We conclude that models forecasting future biodiversity changes should consider coarse-resolution environmental changes, account for differences in baseline environmental conditions and for local changes in fine-resolution environmental conditions.
BioScience | 2017
Kris Verheyen; Pieter De Frenne; Lander Baeten; Donald M. Waller; Radim Hédl; Michael P. Perring; Haben Blondeel; Jörg Brunet; Markéta Chudomelová; Guillaume Decocq; Emiel De Lombaerde; Leen Depauw; Thomas Dirnböck; Tomasz Durak; Ove Eriksson; Frank S. Gilliam; Thilo Heinken; Steffi Heinrichs; Martin Hermy; Bogdan Jaroszewicz; Michael A Jenkins; Sarah E Johnson; Keith Kirby; Martin Kopecký; Dries Landuyt; Jonathan Lenoir; Daijiang Li; Martin Macek; Sybryn L. Maes; František Máliš
More and more ecologists have started to resurvey communities sampled in earlier decades to determine long-term shifts in community composition and infer the likely drivers of the ecological changes observed. However, to assess the relative importance of and interactions among multiple drivers, joint analyses of resurvey data from many regions spanning large environmental gradients are needed. In this article, we illustrate how combining resurvey data from multiple regions can increase the likelihood of driver orthogonality within the design and show that repeatedly surveying across multiple regions provides higher representativeness and comprehensiveness, allowing us to answer more completely a broader range of questions. We provide general guidelines to aid the implementation of multiregion resurvey databases. In so doing, we aim to encourage resurvey database development across other community types and biomes to advance global environmental change research.
Current Forestry Reports | 2016
Guillaume Decocq; Emilie Andrieu; Jörg Brunet; Olivier Chabrerie; Pieter De Frenne; Pallieter De Smedt; Marc Deconchat; Martin Diekmann; Steffen Ehrmann; Brice Giffard; Elena Gorriz Mifsud; Karin Hansen; Martin Hermy; Annette Kolb; Jonathan Lenoir; Jaan Liira; Filip Moldan; Irina Prokofieva; Lars Rosenqvist; Elsa Varela; Alicia Valdés; Kris Verheyen; Monika Wulf
In Europe, like in many temperate lowlands worldwide, forest has a long history of fragmentation and land use change. In many places, forest landscapes consist of patches of different quality, age, size and isolation, embedded in a more or less intensively managed agricultural matrix. As potential biodiversity islets, small forest patches (SFP) may deliver several crucial ecosystem services to human society, but they receive little attention compared to large, relatively intact forest patches. Beyond their role as a biodiversity reservoir, SFP provide important in situ services such as timber and wild food (game, edible plants and mushrooms) production. At the landscape scale, SFP may enhance the crop production via physical (obstacle against wind and floods) and biological (sources of pollinators and natural enemies) regulation, but may, on the other hand, also be involved in the spread of infectious diseases. Depending on their geographic location, SFP can also greatly influence the water cycle and contribute to supply high-quality water to agriculture and people. Globally, SFP are important carbon sinks and are involved in nutrient cycles, thus play a role in climate change mitigation. Cultural services are more related to landscape values than to SFP per se, but the latter may contribute to the construction of community identity. We conclude that SFP, as local biodiversity hotspots in degraded landscapes, have the potential to deliver a wide range of ecosystem services and may even be crucial for the ecological intensification of agro-ecosystems. There is thus an urgent need to increase our knowledge about the relationships between biodiversity and ecosystem services delivered by these SFP in agricultural landscapes.
Plant Biology | 2015
M. M. Caron; P. De Frenne; Jörg Brunet; Olivier Chabrerie; Sara A. O. Cousins; L. De Backer; Guillaume Decocq; Martin Diekmann; Thilo Heinken; Annette Kolb; Tobias Naaf; Jan Plue; Federico Selvi; G. R. Strimbeck; Monica Wulf; Kris Verheyen
Climate change is acting on several aspects of plant life cycles, including the sexual reproductive stage, which is considered amongst the most sensitive life-cycle phases. In temperate forests, it is expected that climate change will lead to a compositional change in community structure due to changes in the dominance of currently more abundant forest tree species. Increasing our understanding of the effects of climate change on currently secondary tree species recruitment is therefore important to better understand and forecast population and community dynamics in forests. Here, we analyse the interactive effects of rising temperatures and soil moisture reduction on germination, seedling survival and early growth of two important secondary European tree species, Acer pseudoplatanus and A.xa0platanoides. Additionally, we analyse the effect of the temperature experienced by the mother tree during seed production by collecting seeds of both species along a 2200-km long latitudinal gradient. For most of the responses, A.xa0platanoides showed higher sensitivity to the treatments applied, and especially to its joint manipulation, which for some variables resulted in additive effects while for others only partial compensation. In both species, germination and survival decreased with rising temperatures and/or soil moisture reduction while early growth decreased with declining soil moisture content. We conclude that although A.xa0platanoides germination and survival were more affected after the applied treatments, its initial higher germination and larger seedlings might allow this species to be relatively more successful than A.xa0pseudoplatanus in the face of climate change.
Plant Ecology | 2015
Isgard Lemke; Annette Kolb; Bente J. Graae; Pieter De Frenne; Kamal Prasad Acharya; Cristina Blandino; Jörg Brunet; Olivier Chabrerie; Sara A. O. Cousins; Guillaume Decocq; Thilo Heinken; Martin Hermy; Jaan Liira; Reto Schmucki; Anna Shevtsova; Kris Verheyen; Martin Diekmann
Phenotypic trait variation plays a major role in the response of plants to global environmental change, particularly in species with low migration capabilities and recruitment success. However, little is known about the variation of functional traits within populations and about differences in this variation on larger spatial scales. In a first approach, we therefore related trait expression to climate and local environmental conditions, studying two temperate forest herbs, Milium effusum and Stachys sylvatica, along a ~1800–2500xa0km latitudinal gradient. Within each of 9–10 regions in six European countries, we collected data from six populations of each species and recorded several variables in each region (temperature, precipitation) and population (light availability, soil parameters). For each plant, we measured height, leaf area, specific leaf area, seed mass and the number of seeds and examined environmental effects on within-population trait variation as well as on trait means. Most importantly, trait variation differed both between and within populations. Species, however, differed in their response. Intrapopulation variation in Milium was consistently positively affected by higher mean temperatures and precipitation as well as by more fertile local soil conditions, suggesting that more productive conditions may select for larger phenotypic variation. In Stachys, particularly light availability positively influenced trait variation, whereas local soil conditions had no consistent effects. Generally, our study emphasises that intra-population variation may differ considerably across larger scales—due to phenotypic plasticity and/or underlying genetic diversity—possibly affecting species response to global environmental change.
BMC Ecology | 2017
Steffen Ehrmann; Jaan Liira; Stefanie Gärtner; Karin Hansen; Jörg Brunet; Sara A. O. Cousins; Marc Deconchat; Guillaume Decocq; Pieter De Frenne; Pallieter De Smedt; Martin Diekmann; Emilie Gallet-Moron; Annette Kolb; Jonathan Lenoir; Jessica Lindgren; Tobias Naaf; Taavi Paal; Alicia Valdés; Kris Verheyen; Monika Wulf; Michael Scherer-Lorenzen
BackgroundThe castor bean tick (Ixodes ricinus) transmits infectious diseases such as Lyme borreliosis, which constitutes an important ecosystem disservice. Despite many local studies, a comprehensive understanding of the key drivers of tick abundance at the continental scale is still lacking. We analyze a large set of environmental factors as potential drivers of I. ricinus abundance. Our multi-scale study was carried out in deciduous forest fragments dispersed within two contrasting rural landscapes of eight regions, along a macroclimatic gradient stretching from southern France to central Sweden and Estonia. We surveyed the abundance of I. ricinus, plant community composition, forest structure and soil properties and compiled data on landscape structure, macroclimate and habitat properties. We used linear mixed models to analyze patterns and derived the relative importance of the significant drivers.ResultsMany drivers had, on their own, either a moderate or small explanatory value for the abundance of I. ricinus, but combined they explained a substantial part of variation. This emphasizes the complex ecology of I. ricinus and the relevance of environmental factors for tick abundance. Macroclimate only explained a small fraction of variation, while properties of macro- and microhabitat, which buffer macroclimate, had a considerable impact on tick abundance. The amount of forest and the composition of the surrounding rural landscape were additionally important drivers of tick abundance. Functional (dispersules) and structural (density of tree and shrub layers) properties of the habitat patch played an important role.xa0Various diversity metrics had only a small relative importance. Ontogenetic tick stages showed pronounced differences in their response. The abundance of nymphs and adults is explained by the preceding stage with a positive relationship, indicating a cumulative effect of drivers.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that the ecosystem disservices of tick-borne diseases, via the abundance of ticks, strongly depends on habitat properties and thus on how humans manage ecosystems from the scale of the microhabitat to the landscape. This study stresses the need to further evaluate the interaction between climate change and ecosystem management on I. ricinus abundance.
Global Change Biology | 2018
Michael P. Perring; Markus Bernhardt-Römermann; Lander Baeten; Gabriele Midolo; Haben Blondeel; Leen Depauw; Dries Landuyt; Sybryn L. Maes; Emiel De Lombaerde; María M. Carón; Mark Vellend; Jörg Brunet; Markéta Chudomelová; Guillaume Decocq; Martin Diekmann; Thomas Dirnböck; Inken Dörfler; Tomasz Durak; Pieter De Frenne; Frank S. Gilliam; Radim Hédl; Thilo Heinken; P.W.F.M. Hommel; Bogdan Jaroszewicz; K. J. Kirby; Martin Kopecký; Jonathan Lenoir; Daijiang Li; František Máliš; Fraser J.G. Mitchell
The contemporary state of functional traits and species richness in plant communities depends on legacy effects of past disturbances. Whether temporal responses of community properties to current environmental changes are altered by such legacies is, however, unknown. We expect global environmental changes to interact with land-use legacies given different community trajectories initiated by prior management, and subsequent responses to altered resources and conditions. We tested this expectation for species richness and functional traits using 1814 survey-resurvey plot pairs of understorey communities from 40 European temperate forest datasets, syntheses of management transitions since the year 1800, and a trait database. We also examined how plant community indicators of resources and conditions changed in response to management legacies and environmental change. Community trajectories were clearly influenced by interactions between management legacies from over 200xa0years ago and environmental change. Importantly, higher rates of nitrogen deposition led to increased species richness and plant height in forests managed less intensively in 1800 (i.e., high forests), and to decreases in forests with a more intensive historical management in 1800 (i.e., coppiced forests). There was evidence that these declines in community variables in formerly coppiced forests were ameliorated by increased rates of temperature change between surveys. Responses were generally apparent regardless of sites contemporary management classifications, although sometimes the management transition itself, rather than historic or contemporary management types, better explained understorey responses. Main effects of environmental change were rare, although higher rates of precipitation change increased plant height, accompanied by increases in fertility indicator values. Analysis of indicator values suggested the importance of directly characterising resources and conditions to better understand legacy and environmental change effects. Accounting for legacies of past disturbance can reconcile contradictory literature results and appears crucial to anticipating future responses to global environmental change.
Journal of Vegetation Science | 2017
Jan Plue; Pieter De Frenne; Kamal Prasad Acharya; Jörg Brunet; Olivier Chabrerie; Guillaume Decocq; Martin Diekmann; Bente J. Graae; Thilo Heinken; Martin Hermy; Annette Kolb; Isgard Lemke; Jaan Liira; Tobias Naaf; Kris Verheyen; Monika Wulf; Sara A. O. Cousins
Question nBelowground processes are key determinants of aboveground plant population and community dynamics. Still, our understanding of how environmental drivers shape plant communities is mostly based on aboveground diversity patterns, bypassing belowground plant diversity stored in seed banks. As seed banks may shape aboveground plant communities, we question whether concurrently analyzing the above- and belowground species assemblages may potentially enhance our understanding of community responses to environmental variation. n nLocation nTemperate deciduous forests along a 2000 km latitudinal gradient in NW-Europe. n nMethods nHerb layer, seed bank and local environmental data including soil pH, canopy cover, forest cover continuity and time since last canopy disturbance were collected in 129 temperate deciduous forest plots. We quantified herb layer and seed bank diversity per plot and evaluated how environmental variation structured community diversity in the herb layer, seed bank and the combined herb layer-seed bank community. n nResults nSeed banks consistently held more plant species than the herb layer. How local plot diversity was partitioned across the herb layer and seed bank was mediated by environmental variation in drivers serving as proxies of light availability. The herb layer and seed bank contained an ever smaller and ever larger share of local diversity, respectively, as both canopy cover and time since last canopy disturbance decreased. Species richness and β-diversity of the combined herb layer-seed bank community responded distinctly different compared to the separate assemblages in response to environmental variation in, e.g., forest cover continuity and canopy cover. n nConclusions nThe seed bank is a belowground diversity reservoir of the herbaceous forest community, which interacts with the herb layer, though constrained by environmental variation in e.g. light availability. The herb layer and seed bank coexist as a single community by means of the so-called storage effect, resulting in distinct responses to environmental variation not necessarily recorded in the individual herb layer or seed bank assemblages. Thus, concurrently analysing above- and belowground diversity will improve our ecological understanding of how understorey plant communities respond to environmental variation. n nThis article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Science of The Total Environment | 2018
Elsa Varela; Kris Verheyen; Alicia Valdés; Mario Soliño; Jette Bredahl Jacobsen; Pallieter De Smedt; Steffen Ehrmann; Stefanie Gärtner; Elena Górriz; Guillaume Decocq
Small forest patches embedded in agricultural (and peri-urban) landscapes in Western Europe play a key role for biodiversity conservation with a recognized capacity of delivering a wide suite of ecosystem services. Measures aimed to preserve these patches should be both socially desirable and ecologically effective. This study presents a joint ecologic and economic assessment conducted on small forest patches in Flanders (Belgium) and Picardie (N France). In each study region, two contrasted types of agricultural landscapes were selected. Open field (OF) and Bocage (B) landscapes are distinguished by the intensity of their usage and higher connectivity in the B landscapes. The social demand for enhancing biodiversity and forest structure diversity as well as for increasing the forest area at the expenses of agricultural land is estimated through an economic valuation survey. These results are compared with the outcomes of an ecological survey where the influence of structural features of the forest patches on the associated herbaceous diversity is assessed. The ecological and economic surveys show contrasting results; increasing tree species richness is ecologically more important for herbaceous diversity in the patch, but both tree species richness and herbaceous diversity obtain insignificant willingness to pay estimates. Furthermore, although respondents prefer the proposed changes to take place in the region where they live, we find out that social preferences and ecological effectiveness do differ between landscapes that represent different intensities of land use. Dwellers where the landscape is perceived as more degraded attach more value to diversity enhancement, suggesting a prioritization of initiatives in these area. In contrast, the ecological analyses show that prioritizing the protection and enhancement of the relatively better-off areas is more ecologically effective. Our study calls for a balance between ecological effectiveness and welfare benefits, suggesting that cost effectiveness studies should consider these approaches jointly.
Parasites & Vectors | 2018
Steffen Ehrmann; Sanne C. Ruyts; Michael Scherer-Lorenzen; Jürgen Bauhus; Jörg Brunet; Sara A. O. Cousins; Marc Deconchat; Guillaume Decocq; Pieter De Frenne; Pallieter De Smedt; Martin Diekmann; Emilie Gallet-Moron; Stefanie Gärtner; Karin Hansen; Annette Kolb; Jonathan Lenoir; Jessica Lindgren; Tobias Naaf; Taavi Paal; Marcus Panning; Maren Prinz; Alicia Valdés; Kris Verheyen; Monika Wulf; Jaan Liira
BackgroundThe tick Ixodes ricinus has considerable impact on the health of humans and other terrestrial animals because it transmits several tick-borne pathogens (TBPs) such as B. burgdorferi (sensulato), which causes Lyme borreliosis (LB). Small forest patches of agricultural landscapes provide many ecosystem services and also the disservice of LB risk. Biotic interactions and environmental filtering shape tick host communities distinctively between specific regions of Europe, which makes evaluating the dilution effect hypothesis and its influence across various scales challenging. Latitude, macroclimate, landscape and habitat properties drive both hosts and ticks and are comparable metrics across Europe. Therefore, we instead assess these environmental drivers as indicators and determine their respective roles for the prevalence of B. burgdorferi in I. ricinus.MethodsWe sampled I. ricinus and measured environmental properties of macroclimate, landscape and habitat quality of forest patches in agricultural landscapes along a European macroclimatic gradient. We used linear mixed models to determine significant drivers and their relative importance for nymphal and adult B. burgdorferi prevalence. We suggest a new prevalence index, which is pool-size independent.ResultsDuring summer months, our prevalence index varied between 0 and 0.4 per forest patch, indicating a low to moderate disservice. Habitat properties exerted a fourfold larger influence on B. burgdorferi prevalence than macroclimate and landscape properties combined. Increasingly available ecotone habitat of focal forest patches diluted and edge density at landscape scale amplified B. burgdorferi prevalence. Indicators of habitat attractiveness for tick hosts (food resources and shelter) were the most important predictors within habitat patches. More diverse and abundant macro- and microhabitat had a diluting effect, as it presumably diversifies the niches for tick-hosts and decreases the probability of contact between ticks and their hosts and hence the transmission likelihood.ConclusionsDiluting effects of more diverse habitat patches would pose another reason to maintain or restore high biodiversity in forest patches of rural landscapes. We suggest classifying habitat patches by their regulating services as dilution and amplification habitat, which predominantly either decrease or increase B. burgdorferi prevalence at local and landscape scale and hence LB risk. Particular emphasis on promoting LB-diluting properties should be put on the management of those habitats that are frequently used by humans. In the light of these findings, climate change may be of little concern for LB risk at local scales, but this should be evaluated further.