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Dive into the research topics where Pierre-François Pélisson is active.

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Featured researches published by Pierre-François Pélisson.


Physiological Entomology | 2012

A handbook for uncovering the complete energetic budget in insects: the van Handel's method (1985) revisited

Vincent Foray; Pierre-François Pélisson; Marie-Claude Bel-Venner; Emmanuel Desouhant; Samuel Venner; Frédéric Menu; David Giron

Insects comprise relevant biological models for investigating nutrient acquisition and allocation processes in the context of life‐history ecology and evolution. However, empirical investigations are still partly limited by the lack of availability of simple methods for simultaneously estimating the four major energetic components (i.e. lipids, free sugars, glycogen and proteins) in the same individual. In the present work, we validate a fast, reproducible and cheap method for overcoming this problem that uses different solvents successively. First, proteins are solubilized in a phosphate‐lysis buffer and then quantified according to the classical Bradford assay procedure. In a second step, a chloroform–methanol mixture is added to the aqueous phase, which allows assay of the total lipid fraction, as well as the free sugars and glycogen in the same insect homogenate. In addition, a micro‐separation procedure is adapted to partition the total lipids into neutral (mainly stored lipids) and polar (mainly structural lipids) components. Although these assays are conducted sequentially in the same individual, the sensitivity of our method remains high: the estimated amount of each energetic compartment does not differ from that obtained with former, partial methods. Our method should thus largely improve our knowledge about nutrient acquisition and allocation among insects not only in laboratory‐reared individuals, but also in animals caught in the wild. Descriptions and recommendations are given at each step of the protocol to adapt the procedure to various insect species. Finally, to prevent misinterpretation of data generated in accordance with this protocol, the limits of our method are discussed in the light of life‐history studies.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Coexistence of Insect Species competing for a pulsed resource: toward a unified theory of biodiversity in fluctuating environments

Samuel Venner; Pierre-François Pélisson; Marie-Claude Bel-Venner; François Débias; Frédéric Menu

Background One major challenge in understanding how biodiversity is organized is finding out whether communities of competing species are shaped exclusively by species-level differences in ecological traits (niche theory), exclusively by random processes (neutral theory of biodiversity), or by both processes simultaneously. Communities of species competing for a pulsed resource are a suitable system for testing these theories: due to marked fluctuations in resource availability, the theories yield very different predictions about the timing of resource use and the synchronization of the population dynamics between the competing species. Accordingly, we explored mechanisms that might promote the local coexistence of phytophagous insects (four sister species of the genus Curculio) competing for oak acorns, a pulsed resource. Methodology/Principal Findings We analyzed the time partitioning of the exploitation of oak acorns by the four weevil species in two independent communities, and we assessed the level of synchronization in their population dynamics. In accordance with the niche theory, overall these species exhibited marked time partitioning of resource use, both within a given year and between different years owing to different dormancy strategies between species, as well as distinct demographic patterns. Two of the four weevil species, however, consistently exploited the resource during the same period of the year, exhibited a similar dormancy pattern, and did not show any significant difference in their population dynamics. Conclusions/Significance The marked time partitioning of the resource use appears as a keystone of the coexistence of these competing insect species, except for two of them which are demographically nearly equivalent. Communities of consumers of pulsed resources thus seem to offer a promising avenue for developing a unifying theory of biodiversity in fluctuating environments which might predict the co-occurrence, within the same community, of species that are ecologically either very similar, or very different.


Ecological Entomology | 2013

Dispersal and dormancy strategies among insect species competing for a pulsed resource

Pierre-François Pélisson; Carlos Bernstein; Debias D. François; Frédéric Menu; Samuel Venner

Dormancy and dispersal are thought to be major adaptive mechanisms that enable short‐lived organisms to cope with environmental stochasticity. The few empirical investigations that have explored the relationship between these two strategies in disturbed environments have focused mainly on communities of annual desert plants and suggest that dispersal plays a negligible role, as compared with dormancy, in reducing the risk of genotype extinction. We predict that the relative advantage of dormancy versus dispersal is likely to be more balanced in species that disperse actively to select their reproductive locality. To examine this prediction, we explored the dormancy and dispersal capacities of four actively dispersing sibling weevil species (Curculio spp.) that exploit the same, highly variable resource (oak acorns). The ability of each species to spread risks over time was estimated from the variability of dormancy duration within cohorts, while their ability to disperse spatially was quantified by flight performance. We show that a first species, C. elephas, which was able to spread risk over time through dormancy, exhibited only medium flight capacities. In contrast, a second species, C. glandium, was able to fly over very long distances, but was hardly capable of spreading risk over time. Surprisingly, the two remaining species (C. venosus and C. pellitus) proved inefficient in spreading risk either in space or in time and seem to exhibit risk avoidance rather than risk‐spreading strategy. We conclude that this strong diversification of dispersal–dormancy strategies observed among these four sibling species might contribute to stabilising their coexistence.


The American Naturalist | 2016

Fruiting Strategies of Perennial Plants: A Resource Budget Model to Couple Mast Seeding to Pollination Efficiency and Resource Allocation Strategies

Samuel Venner; Aurélie Siberchicot; Pierre-François Pélisson; Eliane Schermer; Marie-Claude Bel-Venner; Manuel Nicolas; François Débias; Vincent Miele; Sandrine Sauzet; Vincent Boulanger; Sylvain Delzon

Masting, a breeding strategy common in perennial plants, is defined by seed production that is highly variable over years and synchronized at the population level. Resource budget models (RBMs) proposed that masting relies on two processes: (i) the depletion of plant reserves following high fruiting levels, which leads to marked temporal fluctuations in fruiting; and (ii) outcross pollination that synchronizes seed crops among neighboring trees. We revisited the RBM approach to examine the extent to which masting could be impacted by the degree of pollination efficiency, by taking into account various logistic relationships between pollination success and pollen availability. To link masting to other reproductive traits, we split the reserve depletion coefficient into three biological parameters related to resource allocation strategies for flowering and fruiting. While outcross pollination is considered to be the key mechanism that synchronizes fruiting in RBMs, our model counterintuitively showed that intense masting should arise under low-efficiency pollination. When pollination is very efficient, medium-level masting may occur, provided that the costs of female flowering (relative to pollen production) and of fruiting (maximum fruit set and fruit size) are both very high. Our work highlights the powerful framework of RBMs, which include explicit biological parameters, to link fruiting dynamics to various reproductive traits and to provide new insights into the reproductive strategies of perennial plants.


PLOS ONE | 2013

From Income to Capital Breeding: When Diversified Strategies Sustain Species Coexistence

Pierre-François Pélisson; Marie-Claude Bel-Venner; David Giron; Frédéric Menu; Samuel Venner

There is empirical evidence of many diversified ways for energy to be acquired and allocated to reproduction, notably with strategies ranging from strict income breeding (females fueling their gametes with energy gained concomitantly during reproduction) to strict capital breeding (females storing nutrients prior reproduction). Until now, the question of whether diversification of these strategies might impact the way communities are organized has not been considered. Here, we suggest that diversified resource allocation strategies among competing species may contribute to their coexistence. We examined this hypothesis by focusing on communities composed of four phytophagous insect species that coexist and compete for egg-laying sites. From wild-caught females, we determined precisely the breeding period of each species and we described their resource acquisition and allocation to reproduction dynamics. We quantified in each species the total amount of larval energy stored by newly-emerging females and then monitored the total energy budget of females caught in the field before and throughout their breeding period. We found that the four sibling weevil species are markedly segregated along the income-capital-breeding continuum, which is correlated with clear time partitioning in their laying activity. Our results suggest that diversified resource allocation strategies might contribute to time partitioning of plant resources exploitation and thus indirectly to their coexistence. This work should further encourage studies examining the extent to which competitive coexistence might be affected by diversification of income-capital breeding strategies together with the intensity of interspecific competition, and considering the divergent evolution of these strategies.


Evolution | 2015

Revisiting the link between breeding effort and oxidative balance through field evaluation of two sympatric sibling insect species

Pierre-François Pélisson; Marie-Claude Bel-Venner; Samuel Venner

The idea that oxidative stress could be a major force governing evolutionary trade‐offs has recently been challenged by experimental approaches in laboratory conditions, triggering extensive debates centered on theoretical and methodological issues. Here, we revisited the link between oxidative stress and reproduction by measuring multiple antioxidant and oxidative damages in wild‐caught females of two sibling weevil species (Curculio elephas, C. glandium). The strength of our study arised from (1) studied species that were sympatric and exploited similar resource, but displayed contrasting reproductive strategies and (2) individuals were sampled throughout adult life so as to relate oxidative status to breeding effort. We found that the short‐lived C. elephas sacrifices red‐ox homeostasis for immediate reproduction upon emergence as characterized by low antioxidant defenses and elevated oxidative damage. Comparatively, C. glandium massively invests in antioxidant and maintains low oxidative damage, which may contribute to their extended prereproductive period. Intriguingly, we also reveal, for the first time in a field study, an unexpected reactivation of antioxidant defenses with the onset of reproduction. Our results thus support the existence of a strong, but complex relationship between oxidative stress and life‐history evolution and highlight the need for a finer‐scale picture of antioxidant strategies.


Functional Ecology | 2012

Contrasted breeding strategies in four sympatric sibling insect species: when a proovigenic and capital breeder copes with a stochastic environment

Pierre-François Pélisson; Marie-Claude Bel-Venner; Lorraine Burgevin; François Martineau; François Fourel; Christophe Lécuyer; Frédéric Menu; Samuel Venner


Forest Ecology and Management | 2014

Exploiting fugitive resources: How long-lived is "fugitive"? Fallen trees are a long-lasting reward for Ips typographus (Coleoptera, Curculionidae, Scolytinae)

Marceau Louis; Jean-Claude Grégoire; Pierre-François Pélisson


Aquatic Microbial Ecology | 2009

Successional changes in bacterial community assemblages following anoxia in the hypolimnion of a eutrophic lake

Anne-Catherine Lehours; Corinne Bardot; Pierre-François Pélisson; Annie Guedon; Stéphane Pesce; Guy Demeure; Denis Sargos; Gérard Fonty


PLOS ONE | 2014

Correction: From Income to Capital Breeding: When Diversified Strategies Sustain Species Coexistence

Pierre-François Pélisson; Marie-Claude Bel-Venner; David Giron; Frédéric Menu; Samuel Venner

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David Giron

François Rabelais University

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Christophe Lécuyer

Institut Universitaire de France

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Corinne Bardot

Blaise Pascal University

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