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Dive into the research topics where Marc Bélisle is active.

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Featured researches published by Marc Bélisle.


Ecology | 2005

MEASURING LANDSCAPE CONNECTIVITY: THE CHALLENGE OF BEHAVIORAL LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY

Marc Bélisle

The recognition of behavior as a link between process and pattern in land- scape ecology is exemplified by the concept of functional connectivity: the degree to which the landscape facilitates or impedes movement among resource patches. In this paper, I first argue that the actual operational definitions of this concept as applied to animal move- ment are not fully consistent with its formal definition. For instance, I question that a high likelihood of movement among the different points of primary habitat implies a high con- nectivity and contend that such a view can lead to misinterpretations. I also address two more hurdles to the measurement of functional connectivity: the fact that functional con- nectivity may not be equal along all axes and directions of movement and individual variation in functional connectivity within a given landscape. These points bring me to suggest that the concept of functional connectivity be bridged to the one of travel costs used in behavioral ecology. This would help define unequivocal operational definitions of functional connectivity as its measurement would then be dictated by its ecological role within specific models (e.g., travel costs within group membership models of foraging theory). I argue further that this ecological role shall in turn determine the motivation underlying the movement of individuals, implying that the latter should preferably be standardized when measuring functional connectivity in the field. I finally present some methods to do so. These include translocation and playback experiments, food-titration and giving-up densities experiments, and manipulating feeding and breeding site locations and


Ecology | 2001

INFLUENCE OF FOREST COVER ON THE MOVEMENTS OF FOREST BIRDS: A HOMING EXPERIMENT

Marc Bélisle; André Desrochers; Marie-Josée Fortin

Habitat loss and fragmentation affect forest birds through direct loss of breeding habitats, detrimental edge effects such as increased nest predation and brood parasitism, and possibly by limiting movements among remaining forest patches. Despite indirect evidence suggesting that landscape-scale bird movements are constrained by open areas, skepticism remains because birds routinely cross inhospitable terrain during migration. Here, we report evidence from 201 independent homing trials showing that landscape composition and configuration influence the movements (1–4 km) of two neotropical migrant (Black-throated Blue Warbler, Dendroica caerulescens and the Ovenbird, Seiurus aurocapillus) and one resident (Black-capped Chickadee, Poecile atricapillus) forest bird species in Quebec, Canada. Trials consisted of translocating territorial, mated males and measuring the time they needed to return to their territories (homing time), as well as the probability with which they returned to their territories within...


Landscape Ecology | 2002

Gap-crossing decisions by forest birds: an empirical basis for parameterizing spatially-explicit, individual-based models

Marc Bélisle; André Desrochers

Spatially-explicit, individual-based models are increasingly used to evaluate the effects of habitat loss and fragmentation on habitat use and population persistence. Yet, they are criticized on the basis that they rely on little empirical data, especially regarding decision rules of moving individuals. Here we report the results of an experiment measuring the gap-crossing decisions of forest birds attracted to a recording of chickadee(Poecile atricapillus) mobbing calls, and provided with options to travel to the speaker by either crossing an open area (short cut) or taking a longer route under forest cover (detour). We performed the experiment in winter and late summer near Québec City, Québec, Canada. We recorded 1078 travel paths from 6 resident and 12 migratory species in 249 experimental sites. In both seasons, birds preferred to travel under forest cover rather than cross open areas, even when the forested detour conveyed a substantially longer route than the short cut in the open. Only when the detour under forest cover. This was considerably longer than the short-cut in the open, in both relative and absolute terms, were birds more likely to take short cuts, indicating that gap-crossing decisions are scale dependent. However, birds rarely ventured >25 m from forest edges despite having the opportunity to do so. Except for Hairy Woodpeckers (Picoides villosus) which ventured further into the open, all species showed similar gap-crossing decisions. Residents remained marginally closer to forest edges in late summer as compared to in winter. Conspecific group size had no influence on gap-crossing decisions. This experiment supports the hypothesis that forest bird movements are constrained in fragmented landscapes, and provides opportunities to calibrate spatially-explicit, individual-based models addressing the influence of landscape composition and configuration on dispersal.


Journal of Animal Ecology | 1997

Influence of Conspecific Attraction on the Spatial Distribution of Learning Foragers in a Patchy Habitat

Guy Beauchamp; Marc Bélisle; Luc-Alain Giraldeau

1. Individuals in many social species are attracted to feeding conspecifics. The profitability of conspecific attraction is negatively frequency-dependent and can be modelled as a producer-scrounger (PS) game for which the ESS solution predicts some mixture of producer (no attraction) and scrounger (attraction) tactics in the population. Current models for the spatial distribution of rate-maximizing foragers, which learn the quality of habitats as they exploit patches, ignore the possible effect of conspecific attraction on the stable distribution of foragers. 2, We used simulations of a population with ESS levels of attraction to investigate the effect of conspecific attraction on the spatial distribution of learning foragers which incur travel costs. In habitats where patches depleted slowly, ESS levels of attraction helped foragers which experienced no interference reach the expected ideal free distribution (IFD) by facilitating aggregation to the richest patches. Large aggregations also occurred with interference and thus reduced the fit to the IFD, which in this case predicts a scatter of foragers across patches of varying quality. 3. In habitats where patches depleted rapidly, ESS levels of attraction prevented foragers from reaching the IFD, irrespective of interference levels. Foragers failed to learn habitat quality and thus often aggregated in poor patches, especially in large populations which depleted patches faster and had fewer opportunities to learn quality. 4. Predictions of the model in habitats where patches deplete slowly are supported by several studies. More work is needed for habitats where patches deplete more rapidly. We conclude that conspecific attraction can have important, and often disruptive effects on spatial distributions.


Conservation Ecology | 1998

Winter Responses of Forest Birds to Habitat Corridors and Gaps

Colleen Cassady St. Clair; Marc Bélisle; André Desrochers; Susan J. Hannon

Forest fragmentation and habitat loss may disrupt the movement or dispersal of forest-dwelling birds. Despite much interest in the severity of these effects and ways of mitigating them, little is known about actual movement patterns in different habitat types. We studied the movement of wintering resident birds, lured by playbacks of mobbing calls, to compare the willingness of forest birds to travel various distances in continuous forest, along narrow corridors (fencerows), and across gaps in forest cover. We also quantified the willingness of Black-capped Chickadees ( Poecile atricapillus ) to cross gaps when alternative forested detour routes were available. All species were less likely to respond to the calls as distance increased to 200 m, although White-breasted Nuthatches ( Sitta carolinensis ) and Hairy Woodpeckers ( Picoides villosus ) were generally less likely to respond than chickadees and Downy Woodpeckers (P. pubescens ). Chickadees were as likely to travel in corridors as in continuous forest, but were less likely to cross gaps as the gap distance increased. The other species were less willing to travel in corridors and gaps relative to forest, and the differences among habitats also increased with distance. For chickadees, gap-crossing decisions in the presence of forested detours varied over the range of distances that we tested, and were primarily influenced by detour efficiency (the length of the shortcut relative to the available detour). Over short distances, birds used forested detours, regardless of their efficiency. As absolute distances increased, birds tended to employ larger shortcuts in the open when detour efficiency was low or initial distance in the open was high, but they limited their distance from the nearest forest edge to 25 m. Thus, chickadees were unwilling to cross gaps of > 50 m when they had forested alternatives, yet they sometimes crossed gaps as large as 200 m when no such choice existed. Our results suggest that the presence of corridors enhanced the movement of some, but not all, forest birds, and that even chickadees, which were less sensitive to gap width, preferred not to venture far from forest cover.


Ecological Applications | 2008

BREEDING SUCCESS OF TREE SWALLOWS ALONG A GRADIENT OF AGRICULTURAL INTENSIFICATION

Arnaud Ghilain; Marc Bélisle

The intensification of agricultural practices has been identified as the main cause of population decline in farmland birds since the 1960s in both Europe and North America. Although the links between species richness or abundance and various components of agricultural intensification are well established, the mechanisms underlying these trends have rarely been addressed along a gradient of intensification or have been quantified at only one spatial scale. Here we quantified the influence of landscape structure on the nest box occupancy and breeding success of Tree Swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) at seven spatial scales (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, and 20 km radii) over a 10 200-km2 gradient of agricultural intensification in southern Québec, Canada. A network of 400 nest boxes distributed among 40 farms was visited every two days over three breeding seasons, 2004-2006. Nest box occupancy decreased with the proportion of intensive cultures (maize, cereals, and soybeans) in the landscape, especially when manure heaps and tanks were abundant, and was also determined by local variables (i.e., nest box clearance, interspecific competition) and by previous-year fledging success. Clutch size decreased as the breeding season progressed and with the proportion of intensive cultures in the landscape, with no consistent variation across spatial scales. Hatching success was not related to any landscape variables but increased with clutch size. Both the number of fledglings and fledging probability increased with the proportion of extensive cultures (hayfields, pastures, and fallows). These effects increased with spatial scale and reached a plateau at the 5 km radius: the maximum distance from the nest reached by foraging Tree Swallows. Our results can likely be attributed to lower food availability in intensive cultures compared to extensive ones. This study suggests that several components of breeding that impact on population structure and dynamics of insectivorous birds will be negatively affected by agricultural intensification.


Health Psychology | 1987

Improving adherence to physical activity.

Marc Bélisle; Ethel Roskies; Jean-Michel Levesque

Two studies tested the efficacy of Marlatt and Gordons relapse-prevention approach in increasing attendance during an exercise program (short-term adherence) and continuation of exercise activities for 12 weeks following termination of the formal program (longer term adherence). Participants in both studies were registrants in 10-week exercise groups (jogging, aerobic dance, and pre-ski training) sponsored by the Université de Montréal Sports Centre. The intervention, designed to increase awareness of obstacles to exercise and to develop appropriate techniques for coping with them, was delivered by group leaders within the context of the regular program. Results of both studies indicate a small but consistent superiority of adherence in the experimental condition compared to the control condition. The low cost of this intervention, however, makes even small gains cost effective. Possible methods for strengthening the treatment effect are discussed.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2009

Non-random distribution of individual genetic diversity along an environmental gradient

Mélody Porlier; Marc Bélisle; Dany Garant

Improving our knowledge of the links between ecology and evolution is especially critical in the actual context of global rapid environmental changes. A critical step in that direction is to quantify how variation in ecological factors linked to habitat modifications might shape observed levels of genetic variability in wild populations. Still, little is known on the factors affecting levels and distribution of genetic diversity at the individual level, despite its vital underlying role in evolutionary processes. In this study, we assessed the effects of habitat quality on population structure and individual genetic diversity of tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) breeding along a gradient of agricultural intensification in southern Québec, Canada. Using a landscape genetics approach, we found that individual genetic diversity was greater in poorer quality habitats. This counter-intuitive result was partly explained by the settlement patterns of tree swallows across the landscape. Individuals of higher genetic diversity arrived earlier on their breeding grounds and settled in the first available habitats, which correspond to intensive cultures. Our results highlight the importance of investigating the effects of environmental variability on individual genetic diversity, and of integrating information on landscape structure when conducting such studies.


Avian Conservation and Ecology | 2012

Spatiotemporal Patterns in Nest Box Occupancy by Tree Swallows Across North America

Dave Shutler; David J. T. Hussell; D. R. Norris; David W. Winkler; Raleigh J. Robertson; Frances Bonier; Wallace B. Rendell; Marc Bélisle; Robert G. Clark; Russell D. Dawson; Nathaniel T. Wheelwright; Michael P. Lombardo; Patrick A. Thorpe; Melanie A. Truan; Robert Walsh; Marty L. Leonard; Andrew G. Horn; Carol M. Vleck; David Vleck; Alexandra P. Rose; Linda A. Whittingham; Peter O. Dunn; Keith A. Hobson; Mark T. Stanback

Data from the North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) suggest that populations of aerial insectivorous birds are declining, particularly in northeastern regions of the continent, and particularly since the mid-1980s. Species that use nest boxes, such as Tree Swallows (Tachycineta bicolor), may provide researchers with large data sets that better reveal finer-scale geographical patterns in population trends. We analyzed trends in occupancy rates for ca. 40,000 Tree Swallow nest-box-years from 16 sites across North America. The earliest site has been studied intensively since 1969 and the latest site since 2004. Nest box occupancy rates declined significantly at five of six (83%) sites east of -78° W longitude, whereas occupancy rates increased significantly at four of ten sites (40%) west of -78° W longitude. Decreasing box occupancy trends from the northeast were broadly consistent with aspects of a previous analysis of BBS data for Tree Swallows, but our finding of instances of increases in other parts of the continent are novel. Several questions remain, particularly with respect to causes of these broadscale geographic changes in population densities of Tree Swallows. The broad geographic patterns are consistent with a hypothesis of widespread changes in climate on wintering, migratory, or breeding areas that in turn may differentially affect populations of aerial insects, but other explanations are possible. It is also unclear whether these changes in occupancy rates reflect an increase or decrease in overall populations of Tree Swallows. Regardless, important conservation steps will be to unravel causes of changing populations of aerial insectivores in North America. RESUME. Les donnees provenant du Releve des oiseaux nicheurs (BBS) de l’Amerique du Nord semblent indiquer que les populations d’insectivores aeriens sont en declin, particulierement dans les regions du nord-est du continent et depuis le milieu des annees 1980. Grâce aux especes qui utilisent les nichoirs, comme l’Hirondelle bicolore (Tachycineta bicolor), les chercheurs ont acces a une grande quantite de donnees qui revelent davantage les tendances des populations a l’echelle fine. Nous avons analyse la tendance du taux d’occupation par l’Hirondelle bicolore a partir de 40 000 nichoirs-annees provenant de 16 sites repartis en Amerique du Nord. Le site le plus ancien est suivi intensivement depuis 1969 et le plus recent, depuis 2004. Le taux d’occupation des nichoirs a diminue significativement dans 5 des 6 sites (83 %) situes a l’est du 78° de longitude ouest, tandis qu’il a augmente significativement dans 4 des 10 sites (40 %) a l’ouest du 78° de longitude ouest. La tendance a la baisse de l’occupation observee dans le nord-est concorde dans les grandes lignes avec les resultats d’une analyse anterieure des donnees du BBS pour cette espece, mais les hausses que nous avons observees dans d’autres regions de l’Amerique du Nord s’averent nouvelles. Plusieurs interrogations demeurent, notamment en ce qui a trait aux causes de ces changements dans la densite des populations d’Hirondelles bicolores a grande echelle. Ces vastes tendances geographiques concordent avec l’hypothese de changements climatiques generalises qui toucheraient les aires d’hivernage, de migration ou de nidification, lesquels pourraient affecter differemment les populations d’insectes aeriens, mais d’autres explications sont aussi possibles. En outre, nous ne savons pas si ces changements du taux d’occupation refletent une hausse ou une baisse dans l’ensemble des populations d’Hirondelles bicolores. Neanmoins, pour assurer leur conservation, il sera important d’elucider les causes des changements de populations chez les insectivores aeriens en Amerique du Nord.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2014

Severe recent decrease of adult body mass in a declining insectivorous bird population

Sébastien Rioux Paquette; Fanie Pelletier; Dany Garant; Marc Bélisle

Migratory bird species that feed on air-borne insects are experiencing widespread regional declines, but these remain poorly understood. Agricultural intensification in the breeding range is often regarded as one of the main drivers of these declines. Here, we tested the hypothesis that body mass in breeding individuals should reflect habitat quality in an aerial insectivore, the tree swallow (Tachycineta bicolor), along a gradient of agricultural intensity. Our dataset was collected over 7 years (2005–2011) and included 2918 swallow captures and 1483 broods. Analyses revealed a substantial decline of the population over the course of the study (−19% occupancy rate), mirrored by decreasing body mass. This trend was especially severe in females, representing a total loss of 8% of their mass. Reproductive success was negatively influenced by intensive agriculture, but did not decrease over time. Interestingly, variation in body mass was independent of breeding habitat quality, leading us to suggest that this decline in body mass may result from carry-over effects from non-breeding areas and affect population dynamics through reduced survival. This work contributes to the growing body of evidence suggesting that declines in migratory aerial insectivores are driven by multiple, complex factors requiring better knowledge of year-round habitat use.

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Dany Garant

Université de Sherbrooke

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Fanie Pelletier

Université de Sherbrooke

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Renaud Baeta

Université de Sherbrooke

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Audrey Bourret

Université de Sherbrooke

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Jean-François Giroux

Université du Québec à Montréal

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David J. T. Hussell

Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources

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