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Dive into the research topics where Jean Clobert is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean Clobert.


Oikos | 1989

An analysis of demographic tactics in birds and mammals

Dominique Pontier; D. Allaine; Jean-Dominique Lebreton; J. Trouvilliez; Jean Clobert

Using field data on fecundity, age at first reproduction and adult life expectancy, we reconsider the so-called r-K gradient by analyzing relationships between these three demographic parameters in 80 mammal species and 114 bird species. After the allometric effect of adult body weight is removed, the three variables remain correlated. The existence of demographic tactics which are independent of adult body weight is demonstrated by multivariate analyses of these variables. These analyses confirm the importance of ecological and phylogenetic constraints. The main structure is a time-scale gradient ranking species according to turn-over, both in birds and mammals. A second gradient ranking species according to iteroparity level appears significantly both in birds and mammals. In mammals, this pattern is related to patterns of parental investment.


Nature | 2004

Physical performance and darwinian fitness in lizards

Jean-François Le Galliard; Jean Clobert; Régis Ferrière

Strong evidence for a genetic basis of variation in physical performance has accumulated. Considering one of the basic tenets of evolutionary physiology—that physical performance and darwinian fitness are tightly linked—one may expect phenotypes with exceptional physiological capacities to be promoted by natural selection. Why then does physical performance remain considerably variable in human and other animal populations? Our analysis of locomotor performance in the common lizard (Lacerta vivipara) demonstrates that initial endurance (running time to exhaustion measured at birth) is indeed highly heritable, but natural selection in favour of this trait can be unexpectedly weak. A manipulation of dietary conditions unravels a proximate mechanism explaining this pattern. Fully fed individuals experience a marked reversal of performance within only one month after birth: juveniles with low endurance catch up, whereas individuals with high endurance lose their advantage. In contrast, dietary restriction allows highly endurant neonates to retain their locomotor superiority as they age. Thus, the expression of a genetic predisposition to high physical performance strongly depends on the environment experienced early in life.


Trends in Ecology and Evolution | 1993

The statistical analysis of survival in animal populations.

Jean-Dominique Lebreton; Roger Pradel; Jean Clobert

Estimating, comparing and modelling survival rates are central to population biology. However, there are many difficulties in measuring these rates in animal populations in the wild. The most relevant information is based on samples of marked individuals, i.e. capture-recapture data. In recent years, a number of new statistical approaches to the analysis of such data have been developed, permitting more sophisticated and precise measurement of survival rates.


Biometrics | 1990

THE ESTIMATION OF AGE-SPECIFIC BREEDING PROBABILITIES FROM RECAPTURES OR RESIGHTINGS IN VERTEBRATE POPULATIONS. II: LONGITUDINAL MODELS

Jean Clobert; Jean-Dominique Lebreton; Dominique Allainé

We provide a statistical framework to estimate age-specific breeding probabilities in vertebrate populations, from recaptures or resightings of individuals marked as young. We consider data collected at one or possibly several points over time, when individual recapture histories are known, leading to models which we call longitudinal models. An example of resightings of black-headed gulls, Larus ridibundus, is considered.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2003

Mother-offspring interactions affect natal dispersal in a lizard

Jean François Le Galliard; Régis Ferrière; Jean Clobert

Interactions between relatives operate strong selective pressures on dispersal. Recently, a correlative study in the common lizard (Lacerta vivipara) suggested that natal dispersal might respond plastically to mother–offspring interactions. Here, we describe a factorial experiment supporting this observation. Two crossed treatments were applied to experimental patches of the common lizard: (i) presence versus absence of the mother, inducing a difference of kinship in offspring neighbourhoods; and (ii) high versus low patch density, resulting in two levels of conspecific abundance and modulating the effect of mother presence on the average kinship within a patch. Dispersal of the same cohort of offspring was observed at the juvenile and yearling stages. We found a sex–dependent response of offspring dispersal to the removal of the mother at the two stages. During the juvenile stage, higher dispersal was found in females in the presence of the mother, with males unaffected. During the yearling stage, the responses of both sexes to the presence of the mother opposed each other. In addition, we found a negative relationship between dispersal and patch density at the juvenile stage. No interaction between density and the presence of the mother was detected, which suggests that behavioural responses to kinship and density are disconnected and that kinship is assessed at a small social scale. We discuss the role of competition and inbreeding avoidance to explain the observed pattern.


Evolution | 2005

CONFLICT OVER MULTIPLE‐PARTNER MATING BETWEEN MALES AND FEMALES OF THE POLYGYNANDROUS COMMON LIZARDS

Patrick S. Fitze; Jean-François Le Galliard; Pierre Fédérici; Murielle Richard; Jean Clobert

Abstract The optimal number of mate partners for females rarely coincides with that for males, leading to a potential sexual conflict over multiple‐partner mating. This suggests that the population sex ratio may affect multiple‐partner mating and thus multiple paternity. We investigate the relationship between multiple paternity and the population sex ratio in the polygynandrous common lizard (Lacerta vivipara). In six populations the adult sex ratio was biased toward males, and in another six populations the adult sex ratio was biased toward females, the latter corresponding to the average adult sex ratio encountered in natural populations. In males the frequency and the degree of polygyny were lower in male‐biased populations, as expected if competition among males determines polygyny. In females the frequency of polyandry was not different between treatments, and polyandrous females produced larger clutches, suggesting that polyandry might be adaptive. However, in male‐biased populations females suffered from reduced reproductive success compared to female‐biased populations, and the number of mate partners increased with female body size in polyandrous females. Polyandrous females of male‐biased populations showed disproportionately more mating scars, indicating that polyandrous females of male‐biased populations had more interactions with males and suggesting that the degree of multiple paternity is controlled by male sexual harassment. Our results thus imply that polyandry may be hierarchically controlled, with females controlling when to mate with multiple partners and male sexual harassment being a proximate determinant of the degree of multiple paternity. The results are also consistent with a sexual conflict in which male behaviors are harmful to females.


Amphibia-reptilia | 1992

Sex identification in juveniles of Lacerta vivipara

Jane Lecomte; Jean Clobert; Manuel Massot

Sex of juveniles was identified by counting ventral scales in the lizard Lacerta vivipara. Sex can be determined accurately in more than 95 % of cases in the studied populations. Some aspects of the sexual size dimorphism are discussed.


Evolution | 1996

THE EVOLUTION OF OVIPARITY WITH EGG GUARDING AND VIVIPARITY IN LIZARDS AND SNAKES: A PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS

M. de Fraipont; Jean Clobert; Robert Barbault

This paper investigates the evolution of viviparity and of egg guarding in lizards and snakes in which three modes of reproduction can be described: oviparity without egg guarding, oviparity with egg guarding, and viviparity. All possible transitions of reproductive modes were detected in each taxon using Maddisons method. We then tested two specific hypotheses. First, egg guarding can be regarded as an alternative to viviparity. A relatively frequent association of egg guarding and viviparous species in the same taxon may be due to similar environmental conditions or species characteristics leading to two different solutions. Second, egg guarding may facilitate the evolution of viviparity. This hypothesis is supported by the high frequency of viviparous species in taxa containing egg guarding species and by a tendency for prolonged uterine retention of eggs in brooding squamates. Our analyses demonstrate that the first hypothesis is the best supported. Egg guarding and viviparity most often evolved independently. If a major benefit of egg guarding is the repulsion of potential predators, size is one of the most obvious morphological characters that should be correlated with the evolution of reproductive modes. The two reproductive traits were correlated to a reduction in body size for viviparous species and an increase in body size for egg guarding species. This could partly explain why the evolution of these reproductive modes seems almost antagonist.


Biological Conservation | 1997

Conservation measures for a population of Hermann's tortoise Testudo hermanni in southern France bisected by a major highway

Ghislaine Guyot; Jean Clobert

Abstract Between May 1989 and October 1990 a highway was constructed through the core area of one of the largest French populations of Testudo hermanni, a species seriously threatened by habitat loss and habitat fragmentation. Two general strategies were used to alleviate negative impacts of the highway on the tortoise population: first, 300 tortoises, that were directly affected by the highway construction, were temporarily maintained in outdoor enclosures and relocated after construction was completed; secondly, attempts were made to reduce traffic impacts on the tortoise population, including the use of fences to keep tortoises off the road and the construction of culverts and a tunnel under the road to provide for movements of animals between the separated habitat areas. The short-term outcome of this conservation exercise was a success: the annual survival rate of 78% observed in reintroduced tortoises was comparable to published results of translocation of other tortoise species into unfamiliar habitat; traffic mortality of tortoises in the 4 years following highway construction was low and mark-recapture results indicate a stable adult population and the use of the culverts and the tunnel by tortoises to cross the road.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2007

Condition dependence of reproductive strategy and the benefits of polyandry in a viviparous lizard

Christophe Eizaguirre; David Laloi; Manuel Massot; Murielle Richard; Pierre Fédérici; Jean Clobert

Species in which males do not contribute to reproduction beyond the provision of sperm offer good opportunities to study the potential genetic benefits that females can obtain from polyandry. Here, we report the results of a study examining the relationships between polyandry and components of female fitness in the common lizard (Lacerta vivipara). We found that polyandrous females produce larger clutches than monandrous females. Polyandrous females also lose fewer offspring during the later stages of gestation and at birth, but we did not find any relationship between polyandry and physical characteristics of viable neonates. Our results were consistent with the predictions of the intrinsic male quality hypothesis, while inbreeding avoidance and genetic incompatibility avoidance might also explain some part of the variation observed in clutch size. Moreover, the benefits of polyandry appeared to depend on female characteristics, as revealed by an interaction between reproductive strategy and female length on reproductive success. Thus, all females did not benefit equally from mating with multiple males, which could explain why polyandry and monandry coexist.

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Jean-Dominique Lebreton

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jane Lecomte

University of Paris-Sud

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Manuel Massot

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Murielle Richard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Patrick S. Fitze

Spanish National Research Council

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André Chanzy

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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