Loı̈c Pellissier
University of Lausanne
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Publication
Featured researches published by Loı̈c Pellissier.
Ecology and Evolution | 2012
Loı̈c Pellissier; Konrad Fiedler; Anne Dubuis; Jean-Nicolas Pradervand; Antoine Guisan; Sergio Rasmann
Environmental gradients have been postulated to generate patterns of diversity and diet specialization, in which more stable environments, such as tropical regions, should promote higher diversity and specialization. Using field sampling and phylogenetic analyses of butterfly fauna over an entire alpine region, we show that butterfly specialization (measured as the mean phylogenetic distance between utilized host plants) decreases at higher elevations, alongside a decreasing gradient of plant diversity. Consistent with current hypotheses on the relationship between biodiversity and the strength of species interactions, we experimentally show that a higher level of generalization at high elevations is associated with lower levels of plant resistance: across 16 pairs of plant species, low-elevation plants were more resistant vis-à-vis their congeneric alpine relatives. Thus, the links between diversity, herbivore diet specialization, and plant resistance along an elevation gradient suggest a causal relationship analogous to that hypothesized along latitudinal gradients.
Plant Ecology | 2010
Loı̈c Pellissier; Bertrand Fournier; Antoine Guisan; Pascal Vittoz
Biological traits that are advantageous under specific ecological conditions should be present in a large proportion of the species within an ecosystem, where those specific conditions prevail. As climatic conditions change, the frequency of certain traits in plant communities is expected to change with increasing altitude. We examined patterns of change for 13 traits in 120 exhaustive inventories of plants along five altitudinal transects (520–3,100xa0m a.s.l.) in grasslands and in forests in western Switzerland. The traits selected for study represented the occupation of space, photosynthesis, reproduction and dispersal. For each plot, the mean trait values or the proportions of the trait states were weighted by species cover and examined in relation to the first axis of a PCA based on local climatic conditions. With increasing altitude in grasslands, we observed a decrease in anemophily and an increase in entomophily complemented by possible selfing; a decrease in diaspores with appendages adapted to ectozoochory, linked to a decrease in achenes and an increase in capsules. In lowlands, pollination and dispersal are ensured by wind and animals. However, with increasing altitude, insects are mostly responsible for pollination, and wind becomes the main natural dispersal vector. Some traits showed a particularly marked change in the alpine belt (e.g. the increase of capsules and the decrease of achenes), confirming that this belt concentrates particularly stressful conditions to plant growth and reproduction (e.g. cold, short growing season) that constrain plants to a limited number of strategies. One adaptation to this stress is to limit investment in dispersal by producing capsules with numerous, tiny seeds that have appendages limited to narrow wings. Forests displayed many of the trends observed in grasslands but with a reduced variability that is likely due to a shorter altitudinal gradient.
Ecology Letters | 2012
Anahí Espíndola; Loı̈c Pellissier; Luigi Maiorano; Wim Hordijk; Antoine Guisan; Nadir Alvarez
Paleoclimatic reconstructions coupled with species distribution models and identification of extant spatial genetic structure have the potential to provide insights into the demographic events that shape the distribution of intra-specific genetic variation across time. Using the globeflower Trollius europaeus as a case-study, we combined (1) Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphisms, (2) suites of 1000-years stepwise hindcasted species distributions and (3) a model of diffusion through time over the last 24,000 years, to trace the spatial dynamics that most likely fits the species current genetic structure. We show that the globeflower comprises four gene pools in Europe which, from the dry period preceding the Last Glacial Maximum, dispersed while tracking the conditions fitting its climatic niche. Among these four gene pools, two are predicted to experience drastic range retraction in the near future. Our interdisciplinary approach, applicable to virtually any taxon, is an advance in inferring how climate change impacts species genetic structures.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2012
Glenn Litsios; Loı̈c Pellissier; Félix Forest; Christian Lexer; Niklaus E. Zimmermann; Nicolas Salamin
The rate of environmental niche evolution describes the capability of species to explore the available environmental space and is known to vary among species owing to lineage-specific factors. Trophic specialization is a main force driving species evolution and is responsible for classical examples of adaptive radiations in fishes. We investigate the effect of trophic specialization on the rate of environmental niche evolution in the damselfish, Pomacentridae, which is an important family of tropical reef fishes. First, phylogenetic niche conservatism is not detected in the family using a standard test of phylogenetic signal, and we demonstrate that the environmental niches of damselfishes that differ in trophic specialization are not equivalent while they still overlap at their mean values. Second, we estimate the relative rates of niche evolution on the phylogenetic tree and show the heterogeneity among rates of environmental niche evolution of the three trophic groups. We suggest that behavioural characteristics related to trophic specialization can constrain the evolution of the environmental niche and lead to conserved niches in specialist lineages. Our results show the extent of influence of several traits on the evolution of the environmental niche and shed new light on the evolution of damselfishes, which is a key lineage in current efforts to conserve biodiversity in coral reefs.
Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2012
Loı̈c Pellissier; Sergio Rasmann; Glenn Litsios; Konrad Fiedler; Anne Dubuis; Julien Pottier; Antoine Guisan
The amount of nitrogen required to complete an insect’s life cycle may vary greatly among species that have evolved distinct life history traits. Myrmecophilous caterpillars in the Lycaenidae family produce nitrogen‐rich exudates from their dorsal glands to attract ants for protection, and this phenomenon has been postulated to shape the caterpillar’s host‐plant choice. Accordingly, it was postulated that evolution towards myrmecophily in Lycaenidae is correlated with the utilization of nitrogen‐rich host plants. Although our results were consistent with the evolutionary shifts towards high‐nutrient host plants serving as exaptation for the evolution of myrmecophily in lycaenids, the selection of nitrogen‐rich host plants was not confined to lycaenids. Butterfly species in the nonmyrmecophilous family Pieridae also preferred nitrogen‐rich host plants. Thus, we conclude that nitrogen is an overall important component in the caterpillar diet, independent of the level of myrmecophily, as nitrogen can enhance the overall insect fitness and survival. However, when nitrogen can be obtained through alternative means, as in socially parasitic lycaenid species feeding on ant brood, the selective pressure for maintaining the use of nutrient‐rich host plants is relaxed, enabling the colonization of nitrogen‐poor host plants.
Diversity and Distributions | 2011
Anne Dubuis; Julien Pottier; Vanessa Rion; Loı̈c Pellissier; Jean-Paul Theurillat; Antoine Guisan
Ecography | 2010
Loı̈c Pellissier; Kari Anne Bråthen; Julien Pottier; Christophe F. Randin; Pascal Vittoz; Anne Dubuis; Nigel G. Yoccoz; Torbjørn Alm; Niklaus E. Zimmermann; Antoine Guisan
Biological Conservation | 2010
Angela Lomba; Loı̈c Pellissier; Christophe F. Randin; Joana R. Vicente; Francisco Moreira; João Honrado; Antoine Guisan
Applied Vegetation Science | 2013
Loı̈c Pellissier; Maruska Anzini; Luigi Maiorano; Anne Dubuis; Julien Pottier; Pascal Vittoz; Antoine Guisan
Journal of Biogeography | 2012
Loı̈c Pellissier; Glenn Litsios; Konrad Fiedler; Julien Pottier; Anne Dubuis; Jean-Nicolas Pradervand; Nicolas Salamin; Antoine Guisan