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Dive into the research topics where Olivier Maire is active.

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Featured researches published by Olivier Maire.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Experimental Assessment of the Effects of Temperature and Food Availability on Particle Mixing by the Bivalve Abra alba Using New Image Analysis Techniques.

Guillaume Bernard; Jean-Claude Duchêne; Alicia Romero-Ramirez; Pascal Lecroart; Olivier Maire; Aurélie Ciutat; Bruno Deflandre; Antoine Grémare

The effects of temperature and food addition on particle mixing in the deposit-feeding bivalve Abra alba were assessed using an experimental approach allowing for the tracking of individual fluorescent particle (luminophore) displacements. This allowed for the computations of vertical profiles of a set of parameters describing particle mixing. The frequency of luminophore displacements (jumps) was assessed through the measurement of both waiting times (i.e., the time lapses between two consecutive jumps of the same luminophore) and normalized numbers of jumps (i.e., the numbers of jumps detected in a given area divided by the number of luminophores in this area). Jump characteristics included the direction, duration and length of each jump. Particle tracking biodiffusion coefficients (Db) were also computed. Data originated from 32 experiments carried out under 4 combinations of 2 temperature (Te) and 2 food addition (Fo) levels. For each of these treatments, parameters were computed for 5 experimental durations (Ed). The effects of Se, Fo and Ed were assessed using PERmutational Multivariate ANalyses Of VAriance (PERMANOVAs) carried out on vertical depth profiles of each particle mixing parameter. Inversed waiting times significantly decreased with Ed whereas the normalized number of jumps did not, thereby suggesting that it constitutes a better proxy of jump frequency when assessing particle mixing based on the measure of individual particle displacements. Particle mixing was low during autumn temperature experiments and not affected by Fo, which was attributed to the dominant effect of low temperature. Conversely, particle mixing was high during summer temperature experiments and transitory inhibited by food addition. This last result is coherent with the functional responses (both in terms of activity and particle mixing) already measured for individual of the closely related clam A. ovata originating from temperate populations. It also partly resulted from a transitory switch between deposit- and suspension-feeding caused by the high concentration of suspended particulate organic matter immediately following food addition.


Aquatic Toxicology | 2018

Do trace metal contamination and parasitism influence the activities of the bioturbating mud shrimp Upogebia cf. pusilla

Annabelle Dairain; Xavier de Montaudouin; Patrice Gonzalez; Aurélie Ciutat; Magalie Baudrimont; Olivier Maire; Alexia Legeay

Mud shrimp are considered as among the most influential ecosystem engineers in marine soft bottom environments because of their significant bioturbation activity and their high density. These organisms play a key role on the physical structure of sediments through intense sediment reworking activity and also deeply influence geochemical properties of sediments via frequent bioirrigation events. The influence that mud shrimp have on the environment is related to the magnitude of bioturbation processes and subsequently depends on their physiological condition. In natural environments, several factors act together and influence the well-being of organisms. Among them, the deleterious role of parasites on the physiology and the behavior of their host is well established. Aquatic organisms are also subject to pollutants released by anthropogenic activities. However, the effect of both stressors on the fitness and bioturbation activity of mud shrimp has never been investigated yet. We conducted a 14-day ex-situ experiment to evaluate the influence of trace metal contamination (cadmium Cd) and parasitism infestation on the gene expression (molecular endpoint) and sediment reworking activity (behavioral endpoint) of the mud shrimp Upogebia cf. pusilla. At completion, mud shrimp exhibited substantial Cd bioaccumulation, with parasitized organisms showing a significantly lower contaminant burden than unparasitized specimens. Cadmium contamination induces modifications of gene expression in both unparasitized and parasitized organisms. We report an antagonistic effect of both stressors on gene expression, which cannot be fully explained by a lower Cd bioaccumulation. At the behaviour level, parasitism seems to reduce the sediment reworking activity of mud shrimp, while Cd contamination appears to stimulate this activity. This study highlights that the effects of multiple stressors may be quite different from the effects of each stressor considered individually. It should also motivate for more studies evaluating the influence of multiple stressors on different endpoints encompassing various levels of organization.


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2009

Comparison of the performances of two biotic indices based on the MacroBen database

Antoine Grémare; Céline Labrune; E. Vanden Berghe; Jean-Michel Amouroux; Guy Bachelet; Michael L. Zettler; Jan Vanaverbeke; Dirk Fleischer; Lionel Bigot; Olivier Maire; Bruno Deflandre; J.A. Craeymeersch; S. Degraer; C. Dounas; G.C.A. Duineveld; Carlos Heip; Marko Herrmann; H. Hummel; Ioannis Karakassis; Monika Kędra; M.A. Kendall; Paul F. Kingston; Jürgen Laudien; Anna Occhipinti-Ambrogi; Eike Rachor; Rafael Sardá; Jeroen Speybroeck; G. Van Hoey; Magda Vincx; P. Whomersley


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2006

Effects of food availability on sediment reworking in Abra ovata and A. nitida

Olivier Maire; Jean Claude Duchêne; Joël Braga de Mendonça; Antoine Grémare


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2010

Bioturbation, short-lived radioisotopes, and the tracer-dependence of biodiffusion coefficients

Pascal Lecroart; Olivier Maire; Sabine Schmidt; Antoine Grémare; Pierre Anschutz; Filip J. R. Meysman


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2007

Linking feeding activity and sediment reworking in the deposit-feeding bivalve Abra ovata with image analysis, laser telemetry, and luminophore tracers

Olivier Maire; Jean-Claude Duchêne; Lionel Bigot; Antoine Grémare


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2014

Comparative study of sediment particle mixing in a Zostera noltei meadow and a bare sediment mudflat

Guillaume Bernard; Marie-Lise Delgard; Olivier Maire; Aurélie Ciutat; Pascal Lecroart; Bruno Deflandre; Jean Claude Duchêne; Antoine Grémare


Limnology and Oceanography | 2017

Sedimentary oxygen dynamics in a seasonally hypoxic basin

Dorina Seitaj; Fatimah Sulu-Gambari; Laurine D. W. Burdorf; Alicia Romero-Ramirez; Olivier Maire; Sairah Y. Malkin; Caroline P. Slomp; Filip J. R. Meysman


Journal of Marine Research | 2012

Experimental assessment of particle mixing fingerprints in the deposit-feeding bivalve Abra alba (Wood)

Guillaume Bernard; Antoine Grémare; Olivier Maire; Pascal Lecroart; Filip J. R. Meysman; Aurélie Ciutat; Bruno Deflandre; Jean Claude Duchêne


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2016

How does macrofaunal bioturbation influence the vertical distribution of living benthic foraminifera

Olivier Maire; Christine Barras; Thomas Gestin; Maria-Pia Nardelli; Alicia Romero-Ramirez; Jean-Claude Duchêne; Emmanuelle Geslin

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Jean-Claude Duchêne

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Filip J. R. Meysman

Delft University of Technology

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