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Dive into the research topics where Jean-Paul Monge is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-Paul Monge.


Journal of Insect Behavior | 1999

Interspecific relations between two sympatric species of hymenoptera, Dinarmus basalis (Rond) and Eupelmus vuilleti (Crw), ectoparasitoids of the bruchid Callosobruchus maculatus (F)

Nathalie Gauthier; A. Sanon; Jean-Paul Monge; J. Huignard

Dinarmus basalis (Rond) and Epelmus vuilleti (Crw) are two Hymenopteran species, which are solitary ectoparasitoids of bruchid larvae. In the presence of seeds of Vigna unguiculata (Walp) containing hosts parasitized by E. vuilleti, a high percentage of D. basalis females avoided multiparasitism whatever the age of the eggs or the larvae present on the host. The least avoidance was observed when the hosts were parasitized by E. vuilleti 30 min beforehand. This avoidance behavior is adaptive and is related to the low survival chances of the D. basalis larvae when they are in interspecific competition with E. vuilleti larvae. The analysis of the behavior of D. basalis demonstrated that the avoidance of multiparasitism could be due to the perception of two signals; an external signal deposited on the surface of the seeds during the E. vuilleti oviposition phase and an internal signal due to the presence of the eggs and larvae at the surface of the hosts. E. vuilleti females did not avoid multiparasitism and multiparasitized the hosts bearing D. basalis eggs or larvae. The behavior of E. vuilleti females was not disturbed by the presence of its competitor. Under these conditions of interspecific competition, the survival chances of E. vuilleti larvae were very high whatever the age of its competitor D. basalis. The two species of parasitoids could move in a column containing healthy seeds of V. unguiculata and patches with seeds containing parasitized or unparasitized larvae. The distribution of D. basalis females introduced into these columns depended on the host quality. They avoided the patches containing the hosts parasitized E. vuilleti and were found in the patches with healthy hosts. The behavior of E. vuilleti females was very different; the distribution of the females and the parasitism and multiparasitism rates were not affected by the quality of the hosts present in the patches. The adaptive significance of the behaviors of these two species was analyzed in relation to the survival chances of their offspring.


Journal of Insect Behavior | 2004

Interspecific relationships between the solitary ectoparasitoid, Eupelmus vuilleti (Crw.) (Eupelmidae), and its sympatric species, Dinarmus basalis (Rond.) (Pteromalidae), in the presence of their host, Callosobruchus maculatus Pic (Coleoptera Bruchidae)

B. Jaloux; A. Sanon; J. Huignard; Jean-Paul Monge

The eupelmid Eupelmus vuilleti CRW. and the pteromalid Dinarmus basalis Rond. are sympatric in West Africa. The reproduction of E. vuilleti and D. basalis females was analyzed in 10, 20, and 40 host patches when present alone or together. In 10- and 20-hosts patches, the presence of E. vuilleti affected the reproduction and offspring survival chances of D. basalis. In 40-hosts patch, only the offspring survival of D. basalis was affected by the presence of E. vuilleti. In contrast, the presence of D. basalis did not influence the reproduction of E. vuilleti and the survival chances of its offspring at all host densities tested. Multiparasitism did not occur at random. In a choice test, E. vuilleti showed a preference for hosts previously parasitized by D. basalis on healthy hosts. This attraction is mediated by chemical markers deposited by D. basalis females on the surface of the seed. At high host density, the likelihood of encountering a seed containing a host previously parasitized by D. basalis was lower for E. vuilleti, affecting moderately D. basalis reproductive success.


Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 1989

Induction of reproductive diapause in Bruchidius atrolineatus during the dry season in a Sahelian zone

Jean-Paul Monge; Arsène Lenga; Jacques Huignard

Bruchidius atrolineatus (Pic) (Bruchidae: Coleoptera) is a bruchid beetle infesting Vigna unguiculata (Walp). During the dry season, adults are in reproductive diapause. Studies of adult populations in a traditional store containing contaminated pods of V. unguiculata show that the reproductive diapause is induced during the first larval instars. The temperature decrease from November to January probably is the main climatic factor inducing this diapause. The percentage of diapausing adults depends on the duration of the larval development at low temperatures. Experiments in climatic boxes confirm these results. At 12 h 25 °T–12 h 20° C 11–13 LD, a high proportion of the adults emerging from the V. unguiculata seeds are in reproductive diapause and the duration of their growth is variable. L1 L2 L3 larvae probably are sensitive stages to the thermal variations and the processes allowing emergence of diapausing adults probably are induced during these larval instars.


Journal of Insect Physiology | 2003

Life history of flight morph females of Callosobruchus maculatus F.: evidence of a reproductive diapause

E.T. Zannou; I.A. Glitho; Jacques Huignard; Jean-Paul Monge

Callosobruchus maculatus (F.) (Coleoptera : Bruchidae) is a tropical beetle that develops in the seeds of Vigna unguiculata. C. maculatus adults show an imaginal polymorphism with differences in morphological, behavioral and reproductive characteristics. Adults of the flight morph that emerge in cowpea storage systems were studied under natural climatic conditions. A large number of the flight morph females were in reproductive diapause and had a long imaginal life. These females did not synthesize vitellogenin, produced a specific diapause protein and possessed significant protein reserves. This suggests that the beetles survived in the tropical ecosystem for a long time and colonized the crops during the cowpea growing and flowering phases. Analysis of reproductive activity in females captured in the V. unguiculata crops indicates that they terminated their reproductive diapause and began to lay eggs as soon as the pods were formed. Few females of the flight morph were sexually active at the beginning of imaginal life. In this paper we discuss the adaptive significance of these two reproductive strategies in females of C. maculatus.


International Journal of Pest Management | 2006

Effects of Hyptis spicigera Lam. (Labiatae) on the behaviour and development of Callosobruchus maculatus F. (Coleoptera: Bruchidae), a pest of stored cowpeas

Antoine Sanon; Zakaria Ilboudo; Clementine L. B. Dabire; Roger C. H. Nebie; Idrissa O. Dicko; Jean-Paul Monge

Abstract The use of beni seed, Hyptis spicigera Lam. (Labiatae), to protect stored cowpeas from bruchid attacks is a widespread practice in West Africa. More knowledge about its actual effects on storage pests is needed to enhance its effectiveness. In this laboratory study, repellent and lethal effects of powder and essential oil from H. spicigera on Callosobruchus maculatus, the main pest of stored cowpeas, were studied. Repellency tests undertaken with a Y-tube olfactometer showed that powder was repulsive for C. maculatus adults. On the other hand, this product had no insecticidal activity. Essential oil had a dose-dependent insecticidal effect while sublethal doses repelled the adults. Both products reduced oviposition by 15 – 19 and 7 – 78% according to the doses of powder and essential oil, respectively, tested. Similarly, egg viability decreased with increasing doses of powder and essential oil used in a range of 40 – 75 and 24 – 86%, respectively. Only essential oil was lethal to C. maculatus larvae developing within cowpea seeds; however, oil activity was age-dependent, younger instars being more susceptible. These results are discussed with a view of controlling C. maculatus populations in stored cowpeas.


Environmental Entomology | 2006

Influence of Hyptis suaveolens (Lamiaceae) on the Host Location Behavior of the Parasitoid Dinarmus basalis (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae)

Antoine Sanon; C. Dabire; Jacques Huignard; Jean-Paul Monge

Abstract The solitary larval parasitoid Dinarmus basalis Rondani is a promising biological control of Callosobruchus maculatus F, a major insect pest of stored cowpeas in West Africa. Farmers traditionally introduce Hyptis suaveolens L. Poit. leaves in their granaries for protection of cowpea seeds against bruchid damage. However, effects of botanical treatment using this plant on host location behavior and reproduction of D. basalis remain unknown. Olfactometer studies showed that sublethal doses of volatiles emitted by the crushed leaves and the essential oils were repellent for naive females D. basalis, which had previously developed in the absence of H. suaveolens volatiles. These females were able to move in a three-dimensional device and to avoid the host patches associated with H. suaveolens volatiles. Their reproductive activity was consequently reduced in such patches. Females, which had been exposed to sublethal doses of H. suaveolens volatiles during their postembryonic development, were no longer repelled or only partially repelled by the plant volatiles. A habituation process may be involved in the behavior of these D. basalis females. The importance of this habituation process is discussed within the scope of the integrated protection of cowpea seeds during storage.


Oecologia | 2015

The effect of direct interspecific competition on patch exploitation strategies in parasitoid wasps

Rihab Mohamad; Eric Wajnberg; Jean-Paul Monge; Marlène Goubault

The presence of competitors may affect the pay-off of individuals’ foraging strategies. They should therefore modify their resource exploitation decisions accordingly. In such a direct competition situation, theory predicts that individuals should stay longer on a resource patch than when foraging alone. However, models predicting patch residence time focus on intraspecific competition without agonistic interactions. Here, we investigate the patch use strategies of females of two parasitoid species, Eupelmus vuilleti and Dinarmus basalis, attacking the same host, Callosobruchus maculatus, knowing that D. basalis is more aggressive and can exclude E. vuilleti during pairwise contests for single hosts. Our results showed that time allocation and oviposition strategies differed in relation to the species and type of competition (i.e., presence/absence of competitor, simultaneous/sequential female introduction or resident/intruder female). Eupelmus vuilleti females tended to wait in the patch surroundings for D. basalis females’ departure to return and exploit hosts parasitized by the opponent (after destruction of her eggs). In contrast, D. basalis females tended to self-superparasitize and stay motionless near the hosts. After detecting an E. vuilleti female entering the patch, they attacked and chased her permanently from the patch. Females of both species spent less time in the patch when faced with a competitor than when alone. This study is the first to test the influence of direct interspecific competition and arrival order on patch exploitation strategies in parasitoid species, and highlights the necessity to include agonistic behaviors in theoretical models predicting optimal patch residence time in competitive situations.


Journal of Insect Physiology | 2009

Reproduction in a variable environment: how does Eupelmus vuilleti, a parasitoid wasp, adjust oogenesis to host availability?

Aurélie Bodin; Bruno Jaloux; Jean-Paul Delbecque; Fabrice Vannier; Jean-Paul Monge; Nathalie Mondy

Oogenesis of the parasitoid wasp Eupelmus vuilleti is known to be dependent on host availability. However, examination of ovarian dynamics by microscopy showed that oogenesis and vitellogenesis are initiated before female eclosion and proceed 1-2 days after, independent of host presence. Oogenesis continued beyond the 2nd day only in the presence of hosts, otherwise it was replaced by egg resorption. It is thus possible to distinguish between host-independent and host-dependent periods of oogenesis. In the presence of host, each ovariole (three per ovary) contained generally three oocytes: a fully mature oocyte, a nearly mature one and an immature one. However, host deprived-females resorbed their most mature and their smallest oocytes, but kept one almost mature oocyte per ovariole. Comparison of zero, short and long host deprivation periods showed that females always had the ability to quickly lay eggs to exploit any new host. However, increased deprivation led to a reduction in the number and the viability of eggs. Enzymo-immunological measurements of ecdysteroids were made in whole females, in dissected ovaries and in newly laid eggs. Our results indicated that ecdysteroids play a major role as circulating hormones involved in the regulation of oogenesis.


Phytoparasitica | 2011

Side effects of grain protectants on biological control agents: How Hyptis plant extracts affect parasitism and larval development of Dinarmus basalis

Antoine Sanon; M. N. Ba; L. C. B. Dabiré; R. C. H. Nébié; Jean-Paul Monge

Dinarmus basalis Rondani (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae), an ectoparasitoid of bruchid pests of stored cowpeas (Vigna unguiculata), is a potential biological control agent. We investigated whether grain protectants from Hyptis spicigera and H. suaveolens (Lamiaceae) disturb parasitism and post-embryonic growth of the parasitoid. When cowpeas containing bruchid larvae were treated before being placed in the presence of D. basalis females, the rate of parasitism decreased on average up to 24% and 47% in the presence of, respectively, leaf dry powder and essential oils from both plant species. The estimated larval mortality was higher on treated (9.55 to 28.6%) than on non-treated parasitized hosts (2.8%), depending on the plant species and the plant extract tested. Additional larval mortality was higher for essential oil, and for H. suaveolens. An in-depth analysis of the pre-imaginal development in capsules adapted for this purpose showed that without treatment, mortality was recorded only for eggs and the first two larval stages. With treatment, mortality not only significantly increased on eggs but also spanned all other pre-imaginal stages. Pre-imaginal development was also significantly extended in the presence of treatment, depending on the type of extract and dose used. In conclusion, both plant species exert acute toxicity on D. basalis larvae and also act as growth inhibitors. These results provide additional information that enable us to move towards the harmonious use of allelochemical compounds from plants while protecting biocontrol agents from their adverse effects.


Journal of Insect Physiology | 2006

Importance of sterols acquired through host feeding in synovigenic parasitoid oogenesis

Nathalie Mondy; Marie-France Corio-Costet; Aurélie Bodin; Nicole Mandon; Fabrice Vannier; Jean-Paul Monge

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Marlène Goubault

François Rabelais University

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Rihab Mohamad

François Rabelais University

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Antoine Sanon

University of Ouagadougou

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Aurélie Bodin

François Rabelais University

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Fabrice Vannier

François Rabelais University

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Jacques Huignard

François Rabelais University

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A. Sanon

University of Ouagadougou

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Bruno Jaloux

François Rabelais University

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