Olivier Hamerlynck
International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources
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Featured researches published by Olivier Hamerlynck.
PLOS ONE | 2008
Jérôme Sueur; Sandrine Pavoine; Olivier Hamerlynck; Stéphanie Duvail
Biodiversity assessment remains one of the most difficult challenges encountered by ecologists and conservation biologists. This task is becoming even more urgent with the current increase of habitat loss. Many methods–from rapid biodiversity assessments (RBA) to all-taxa biodiversity inventories (ATBI)–have been developed for decades to estimate local species richness. However, these methods are costly and invasive. Several animals–birds, mammals, amphibians, fishes and arthropods–produce sounds when moving, communicating or sensing their environment. Here we propose a new concept and method to describe biodiversity. We suggest to forego species or morphospecies identification used by ATBI and RBA respectively but rather to tackle the problem at another evolutionary unit, the community level. We also propose that a part of diversity can be estimated and compared through a rapid acoustic analysis of the sound produced by animal communities. We produced α and β diversity indexes that we first tested with 540 simulated acoustic communities. The α index, which measures acoustic entropy, shows a logarithmic correlation with the number of species within the acoustic community. The β index, which estimates both temporal and spectral dissimilarities, is linearly linked to the number of unshared species between acoustic communities. We then applied both indexes to two closely spaced Tanzanian dry lowland coastal forests. Indexes reveal for this small sample a lower acoustic diversity for the most disturbed forest and acoustic dissimilarities between the two forests suggest that degradation could have significantly decreased and modified community composition. Our results demonstrate for the first time that an indicator of biological diversity can be reliably obtained in a non-invasive way and with a limited sampling effort. This new approach may facilitate the appraisal of animal diversity at large spatial and temporal scales.
Hydrological Sciences Journal-journal Des Sciences Hydrologiques | 2011
Olivier Hamerlynck; Stéphanie Duvail; Leen Vandepitte; Kassim Kindinda; Dorothy Nyingi; Jean-Luc Paul; Pius Z. Yanda; Aggrey Mwakalinga; Yunus D. Mgaya; Jos Snoeks
Abstract For seven years, village-based recorders monitored fish catches and water levels in seven floodplain-associated lakes of the Lower Rufiji, Tanzania. The lakes differ in the number of days and volume of inflows from the river, and thus provide a natural experiment to explore the links between catch composition, income per hour of fishing (IPHF) and hydrological connectivity, and to analyse the response of the users. The fishers adapt their fishing mode and equipment to achieve a rather constant IPHF of between 0.2 and 0.8 US
Society & Natural Resources | 2010
Dominique Dumas; Michel Mietton; Olivier Hamerlynck; F. Pesneaud; Alioune Kane; Adrien Coly; S. Duvail; M. L. O. Baba
/fisher/hour. In situations of low connectivity, during a series of drought years, the less well-connected lakes lost many species and became a virtual monoculture of Oreochromis urolepis. Only in one extreme case was average fish size significantly reduced, indicating a high fishing pressure. Catch was therefore highly resilient to shifts toward illegal, non-selective and active fishing techniques. Fish diversity and lake productivity were quickly re-established when the larger lakes reconnected. The potential impacts of changes in the flood hydrograph (through dams, increased abstraction or climate/land-use changes) are assessed, and management options discussed. Editor: D. Koutsoyiannis; Guest editor: M.C. Acreman Citation Hamerlynck, O., Duvail, S., Vandepitte, L., Kindinda, K., Nyingi, D.W., Paul, J.-L., Yanda, P.Z., Mwakalinga, A.B., Mgaya, Y.D. and Snoeks, J., 2011. To connect or not to connect? Floods, fisheries and livelihoods in the Lower Rufiji floodplain lakes, Tanzania. Hydrological Sciences Journal, 56 (8), 1436–1451.
EJISDC: The Electronic Journal on Information Systems in Developing Countries | 2006
Stéphanie Duvail; Olivier Hamerlynck; Revocatus Xl Nandi; Pili Mwambeso; Richard Elibariki
This article examines the environmental and socioeconomic consequences of hydraulic infrastructural changes along the Senegal River valley and estuary. During the 1980s, two dams were built along the valley floor to facilitate hydroelectrical production and regular water supply for crop irrigation. In 2003, a breach was dug across Barbary Spit to alleviate flooding in the nearby Saint-Louis city. Although these structures helped regulate the river flow, they also resulted in a series of unforeseen impacts. The study examines these, after on-site measurements (topometry, water salinity, piezometry), analysis of hydrological data, field observations, and surveys with dam managers, state regional directions, and local stakeholders. It stresses the urgency of elaborating models of hydraulic management to limit the negative consequences of the hydraulic constructions. These models should consider the variety of water uses in the middle valley and delta, and also the water safety and quality (salinity) downriver from Diama Dam.
Hydrological Sciences Journal-journal Des Sciences Hydrologiques | 2014
Stéphanie Duvail; Aggrey Mwakalinga; A. Eijkelenburg; Olivier Hamerlynck; Kassim Kindinda; Amos Majule
Tanzania has introduced legislation that allows communities to locally manage their natural resources. From 1998 to 2003, the Rufiji Environmental Management Project (REMP) promoted such a transfer of authority, from the central government to 4 pilot villages of the Rufiji District in southern Tanzania, mainly for forest resources. These communities developed Village Environmental Management Plans (VEMP). Land‐use maps have been produced by multi‐institutional teams using Landsat images, aerial photographs, detailed landscape analysis, ground‐truthing and incorporation of the results in to a GIS.
Water alternatives | 2012
Stéphanie Duvail; Claire Médard; Olivier Hamerlynck; Dorothy Nyingi
Abstract A large dam is planned at Stiegler’s Gorge in Tanzania. The change in the Rufiji River flood pattern will affect downstream ecosystems. This paper concentrates on the highly productive floodplain lakes that play a vital role in local livelihoods. A participatory monitoring system with village-based observers collected water level, rainfall, fisheries and food data from 2001 to 2011. Water balances of the lakes show dependence on the Rufiji River flood, with varying vulnerability. With the dam design flood of 2500 m3 s-1, lakes with a high threshold and small catchment will dry out quickly. Lakes with a lower threshold and substantial catchment are more robust but may still dry out during prolonged local drought. Analysis of rainfall (1923–2012) indicates a recent decrease. The data were analysed through feedback workshops with local observers, government technical staff and researchers. Through this collaborative approach, local capacity in preparing for the post-dam future was enhanced. Editor D. Koutsoyiannis; Guest editor M. Acreman Citation Duvail, S., Mwakalinga, A.B., Eijkelenburg, A., Hamerlynck, O., Kindinda, K., and Majule, A., 2014. Jointly thinking the post-dam future: exchange of local and scientific knowledge on the lakes of the Lower Rufiji, Tanzania. Hydrological Sciences Journal, 59 (3–4), 713–730.
International Journal of Biometeorology | 2007
Stéphanie Duvail; Olivier Hamerlynck
Global Environmental Change-human and Policy Dimensions | 2013
Crystèle Leauthaud; Stéphanie Duvail; Olivier Hamerlynck; Jean-Luc Paul; Hubert Cochet; Judith Nyunja; Jean Albergel; Olivier Grünberger
Archive | 2010
Olivier Hamerlynck; Judith Nyunja; Quentin Luke; Dorothy Nyingi; Delphine Lebrun; Stéphanie Duvail
The rehabilitation of the delta of the Senegal River in Mauritania: fielding the ecosystem approach. | 2003
Olivier Hamerlynck; Stéphanie Duvail
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