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Dive into the research topics where Michaël Beaulieu is active.

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Featured researches published by Michaël Beaulieu.


Ecology and Evolution | 2015

Oxidative stress and life histories: unresolved issues and current needs

John R. Speakman; Jonathan D. Blount; Anne M. Bronikowski; Rochelle Buffenstein; Caroline Isaksson; Thomas B. L. Kirkwood; Pat Monaghan; Susan E. Ozanne; Michaël Beaulieu; Michael Briga; Sarah K. Carr; Louise L. Christensen; Helena M. Cochemé; Dominic L. Cram; Ben Dantzer; Jim M. Harper; Diana Jurk; Annette M. King; José C. Noguera; Karine Salin; Elin Sild; Mirre J. P. Simons; Shona Smith; Antoine Stier; Michael Tobler; Emma Vitikainen; Malcolm Peaker; Colin Selman

Abstract Life‐history theory concerns the trade‐offs that mold the patterns of investment by animals between reproduction, growth, and survival. It is widely recognized that physiology plays a role in the mediation of life‐history trade‐offs, but the details remain obscure. As life‐history theory concerns aspects of investment in the soma that influence survival, understanding the physiological basis of life histories is related, but not identical, to understanding the process of aging. One idea from the field of aging that has gained considerable traction in the area of life histories is that life‐history trade‐offs may be mediated by free radical production and oxidative stress. We outline here developments in this field and summarize a number of important unresolved issues that may guide future research efforts. The issues are as follows. First, different tissues and macromolecular targets of oxidative stress respond differently during reproduction. The functional significance of these changes, however, remains uncertain. Consequently there is a need for studies that link oxidative stress measurements to functional outcomes, such as survival. Second, measurements of oxidative stress are often highly invasive or terminal. Terminal studies of oxidative stress in wild animals, where detailed life‐history information is available, cannot generally be performed without compromising the aims of the studies that generated the life‐history data. There is a need therefore for novel non‐invasive measurements of multi‐tissue oxidative stress. Third, laboratory studies provide unrivaled opportunities for experimental manipulation but may fail to expose the physiology underpinning life‐history effects, because of the benign laboratory environment. Fourth, the idea that oxidative stress might underlie life‐history trade‐offs does not make specific enough predictions that are amenable to testing. Moreover, there is a paucity of good alternative theoretical models on which contrasting predictions might be based. Fifth, there is an enormous diversity of life‐history variation to test the idea that oxidative stress may be a key mediator. So far we have only scratched the surface. Broadening the scope may reveal new strategies linked to the processes of oxidative damage and repair. Finally, understanding the trade‐offs in life histories and understanding the process of aging are related but not identical questions. Scientists inhabiting these two spheres of activity seldom collide, yet they have much to learn from each other.


Hormones and Behavior | 2010

Should I stay or should I go? Hormonal control of nest abandonment in a long-lived bird, the Adélie penguin.

Marion Spée; Michaël Beaulieu; Antoine Dervaux; Olivier Chastel; Yvon Le Maho; Thierry Raclot

According to life-history theory, long-lived birds should favor their survival over the current reproductive attempt, when breeding becomes too costly. In seabirds, incubation is often associated with spontaneous long-term fasting. Below a threshold in body reserves, hormonal and metabolic shift characteristics of a switch from lipid to protein utilization (phase III, PIII) occur. These metabolic changes are paralleled by nest abandonment and stimulation of refeeding behavior. Parental behavior is then under control of two hormones with opposite effects: corticosterone (CORT) and prolactin which stimulate foraging and incubation behavior, respectively. The aim of this study was to determine the respective role of these two hormones in nest abandonment by Adélie penguins. To this end, plasma hormone levels were measured before egg-laying and at departure from the colony (i.e. when birds were relieved by their partner or abandoned their nest), and related to nutritional state and incubation success. We found that males abandoning their nest in PIII presented high CORT levels and low prolactin levels. Interestingly, males which presented high plasma levels of prolactin in PIII did not abandon. We show that although CORT is the first hormone to be affected by prolonged energy constraints, the combined effects of high CORT and low prolactin levels are necessary for parents to favor self-maintenance and abandon the nest. We provide insights into time-course changes of the endocrine profile as PIII proceeds and report that reaching proteolytic late fasting is not sufficient to induce nest abandonment in a long-lived bird.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2010

Foraging in an oxidative environment: relationship between δ13C values and oxidative status in Adélie penguins

Michaël Beaulieu; Yan Ropert-Coudert; Yvon Le Maho; André Ancel; François Criscuolo

The alternation of short/coastal and long/pelagic foraging trips has been proposed as a strategy for seabirds to reconcile self-feeding and parental care. Both types of foraging trips may result in different foraging efforts and diet qualities, and consequently are likely to modify the oxidative status of seabirds. We examined the relationship between the oxidative status of Adélie penguins and (i) the duration of their foraging trips and (ii) their plasma δ13C values reflecting their spatial distribution. The oxidative status did not correlate with the foraging trip duration but with the δ13C values: high values being associated with high levels of oxidative damage. This relationship is likely to be related to the prey properties of penguins as both parameters are largely determined by the diet. Two non-exclusive hypotheses can be proposed to explain this relationship: (i) penguins foraging in coastal areas feed on a diet enriched in 13C and depleted in antioxidant compounds; (ii) birds with low antioxidant capacity are constrained to forage in coastal areas. Our study is the first to show that the adoption of different foraging strategies is associated with different levels of oxidative stress. However, further studies are needed to investigate the underlying mechanisms of this intriguing relationship.


Hormones and Behavior | 2011

Exogenous corticosterone and nest abandonment: A study in a long-lived bird, the Adélie penguin

Marion Spée; Lorène Marchal; David Lazin; Yvon Le Maho; Olivier Chastel; Michaël Beaulieu; Thierry Raclot

Breeding individuals enter an emergency life-history stage when their body reserves reach a minimum threshold. Consequently, they redirect current activity toward survival, leading to egg abandonment in birds. Corticosterone (CORT) is known to promote this stage. How and to what extent CORT triggers egg abandonment when breeding is associated with prolonged fasting, however, requires further investigation. We manipulated free-living male Adélie penguins with CORT-pellets before their laying period. We then examined their behavioral response with respect to nest abandonment in parallel with their prolactin levels (regulating parental care), and the subsequent effects of treatment on breeding success in relieved birds. Exogenous CORT triggered nest abandonment in 60% of the treated penguins ~14 days after treatment and induced a concomitant decline in prolactin levels. Interestingly, prolactin levels in treated penguins that did not abandon their nest were higher at the point of implantation and also after being relieved by females, when compared with abandoning penguins. Among successful birds, the treatment did not affect the number of chicks, nor the brood mass. Our results show the involvement of CORT in the decision-making process regarding egg abandonment in Adélie penguins when incubation is associated with a natural long fast. However, we suggest that CORT alone is not sufficient to trigger nest abandonment but that 1) prolactin levels need to reach a low threshold value, and 2) a rise in proteolysis (i.e. utilization of protein as main energy substrate) seems also to be required.


Animal Behaviour | 2013

Rethinking the role of dietary antioxidants through the lens of self-medication

Michaël Beaulieu; H. Martin Schaefer

The regulation of oxidative status is critical because fluctuations in the production of aerobic by-products relative to the antioxidant capacity of the organism can have strong fitness consequences. Towards this end, organisms can use endogenous antioxidant defences, which are efficient at combating oxidative attacks but may be costly and need time to be activated. As food items vary in their antioxidant content, animals have the possibility to optimize their oxidative status, rapidly and at a low cost, by selecting food in their environment according to its antioxidant content. However, the actual role of dietary antioxidants remains contentious because their consumption entails inconsistent effects. We propose that this inconsistency stems from the lack of methodical examination of the cost–benefit ratio related to antioxidant intake, which should reflect the actual need for antioxidants by organisms. We apply the framework of self-medication to the regulation of oxidative status, which necessarily implies assessing the physiological needs of consumers. We formulate conditions under which self-medication is likely to occur, and show that most conditions are met for the regulation of oxidative stress. Linking self-medication to oxidative ecology therefore provides a novel mechanistic framework on how oxidative stress can be regulated; it highlights the transient nature of food selection upon the regulation of oxidative status, and thereby shows why indiscriminant supplementation of dietary antioxidants is likely to be misguided.


Polar Biology | 2007

Foraging movements of emperor penguins at Pointe Géologie, Antarctica

Ilka Zimmer; Rory P. Wilson; Caroline Gilbert; Michaël Beaulieu; André Ancel; Joachim Plötz

The foraging distributions of 20 breeding emperor penguins were investigated at Pointe Géologie, Terre Adélie, Antarctica by using satellite telemetry in 2005 and 2006 during early and late winter, as well as during late spring and summer, corresponding to incubation, early chick-brooding, late chick-rearing and the adult pre-moult period, respectively. Dive depth records of three post-egg-laying females, two post-incubating males and four late chick-rearing adults were examined, as well as the horizontal space use by these birds. Foraging ranges of chick-provisioning penguins extended over the Antarctic shelf and were constricted by winter pack-ice. During spring ice break-up, the foraging ranges rarely exceeded the shelf slope, although seawater access was apparently almost unlimited. Winter females appeared constrained in their access to open water but used fissures in the sea ice and expanded their prey search effort by expanding the horizontal search component underwater. Birds in spring however, showed higher area-restricted-search than did birds in winter. Despite different seasonal foraging strategies, chick-rearing penguins exploited similar areas as indicated by both a high ‘Area-Restricted-Search Index’ and high ‘Catch Per Unit Effort’. During pre-moult trips, emperor penguins ranged much farther offshore than breeding birds, which argues for particularly profitable oceanic feeding areas which can be exploited when the time constraints imposed by having to return to a central place to provision the chick no longer apply.


Conservation Physiology | 2013

Integrating oxidative ecology into conservation physiology.

Michaël Beaulieu; Anne-Mathilde Thierry; Daniel González-Acuña; Michael J. Polito

Given that oxidative balance acts on fitness components, its measurement may be valuable to conservationists to assess population health. We show that antioxidant defences reflect population trends in penguin colonies. These preliminary results suggest that oxidative balance could be used to assess the health of animal populations in their habitat.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2014

The oxidative cost of unstable social dominance

Michaël Beaulieu; Sylvère Mboumba; Eric Willaume; Peter M. Kappeler; Marie J. E. Charpentier

High social rank is expected to incur fitness costs under unstable social conditions. A disruption of the oxidative balance may underlie such effects, but how markers of oxidative stress vary in relation to social rank and stability is unknown. We examined in mandrills whether the mating season characterized by social instability between males (but not between females) affected their oxidative balance differently according to their social rank. Outside the mating season, high-ranking males showed the lowest levels of oxidative damage, while during the mating season, they were the only males to experience increased oxidative damage. In contrast, the mating season increased oxidative stress in all females, irrespective of their social rank. These results support the hypothesis that the coupling between social rank and social stability is responsible for differential costs in terms of oxidative stress, which may explain inter-individual differences in susceptibility to socially induced health issues.


Journal of Endocrinology | 2010

Lack of leptin activity in blood samples of Adélie penguin and Bar-tailed godwit

Sara Yosefi; Gideon Hen; Charles Rosenblum; David J Cerasale; Michaël Beaulieu; François Criscuolo; Miriam Friedman-Einat

Unsuccessful attempts to identify the leptin gene in birds are well documented, despite the characterization of its receptor (LEPR). Since leptin and LEPR have poor sequence conservation among vertebrates, we speculated that a functional assay should represent the best way to detect leptin in birds. Using a leptin bioassay that is based on activation of the chicken LEPR in cultured cells, blood samples from wild birds with extreme seasonal variation in voluntary food intake and fat deposition (Adélie penguins and bar-tailed godwits) were tested for leptin activity. In these experiments, blood samples collected during the pre-incubation and the chick-rearing periods of Adélie penguins, and during the migratory flight and refueling stages of bar-tailed godwits, were found to contain no detectable leptin activity, while the sensitivity of the assay to activation by human blood samples from donor subjects representing a variety of body mass indices and fat contents was clearly demonstrated. These results suggest that in birds, an alternative control mechanism to that of mammals operates in the communication between the body fat tissues and the central control on energy homeostasis.


Polar Biology | 2010

Adverse effects of instrumentation in incubating Adélie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae)

Michaël Beaulieu; Anne-Mathilde Thierry; Yves Handrich; Sylvie Massemin; Yvon Le Maho; André Ancel

The use of data-loggers has permitted to explore the biology of free-ranging animals. However, this method has also been reported to reduce reproductive success while the reasons of this deleterious effect remain poorly documented. In this study, we aimed to identify critical periods of the breeding cycle of Adélie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae) when the reproductive success may decrease because of instrumentation. For this purpose, we monitored 40 pairs, where one parent was instrumented before egg laying and 30 pairs without devices (controls). These pairs were followed at least during the incubation period but the majority was monitored during the entire breeding season. Reproductive success was affected in pairs where males were instrumented. This was not due to extra chick mortality during chick rearing but to a significantly lower hatching success. Moreover, the use of artificial eggs recording incubation temperatures and egg rotation indicated that in instrumented incubating males, eggs spent as much time at optimal incubation temperatures as control eggs but were rotated at a higher frequency. In Adélie penguins, males initiate incubation and it has been established that the early stage of incubation is one of the most critical periods for embryonic development. The low hatching rate observed in instrumented males was associated with a higher egg rotation rate, perhaps as a stress response to the presence of the instrument. Even though the causal effects remain unclear, instrumentation severely affected hatching success. For these reasons, we recommend equipping birds after the early incubation.

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André Ancel

University of Strasbourg

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Ilka Zimmer

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Joachim Plötz

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Yvon Le Maho

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Yan Ropert-Coudert

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Thierry Raclot

University of Strasbourg

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Horst Bornemann

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Caroline Gilbert

École nationale vétérinaire d'Alfort

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Klaus Fischer

University of Greifswald

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