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Dive into the research topics where Sandrine Angélibert is active.

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Featured researches published by Sandrine Angélibert.


Hydrobiologia | 2008

Biodiversity and distribution patterns of freshwater invertebrates in farm ponds of a south-western French agricultural landscape

Régis Céréghino; Antonio Ruggiero; Pierre Marty; Sandrine Angélibert

We assessed the importance for biodiversity of man-made farm ponds in an agricultural landscape in SW France lacking natural wetlands. The ponds were originally created to provide a variety of societal services (irrigation, visual amenity, water for cattle, etc.). We also assessed the environmental factors influencing invertebrate assemblages in these ponds. Only 18 invertebrate taxa out of 114 taxa occurring in the study area were common to ponds and rivers indicating that the contribution of farm ponds to freshwater biodiversity was potentially high. A Self-Organizing Map (SOM, neural network) was used to classify 36 farm ponds in terms of the 52 invertebrate families and genera they supported, and to specify the influence of environmental variables related to land-use and to pond characteristics on the assemblage patterns. The SOM trained with taxa occurrences showed five clusters of ponds, most taxa occurring only in 1–2 clusters of ponds. Abandoned ponds tended to support higher numbers of taxa, probably because they were allowed to undergo a natural succession. Nevertheless, abandoned ponds were also amongst the largest, so that it remained difficult to separate the effects of pond size and abandonment, although both factors were likely to interact to favour higher taxon richness. The invertebrate communities in the ponds appeared to be influenced mainly by widely acting environmental factors (e.g. area, regionalization of assemblages) with little evidence that pond use (e.g. cattle watering, amenity) generally influenced assemblage composition. Our results support the idea that agricultural landscapes containing man-made ponds make a significant contribution to freshwater biodiversity indicating that protection of farm ponds from threats such as in-filling and pollution can make a positive contribution to the maintenance of aquatic biodiversity. This added value for biodiversity should be considered when calculating the economic costs and benefits of constructing water bodies for human activities.


Journal of Applied Ecology | 2014

Is eutrophication really a major impairment for small waterbody biodiversity

Véronique Rosset; Sandrine Angélibert; Florent Arthaud; Gudrun Bornette; Joël Robin; Alexander Wezel; Dominique Vallod; Beat Oertli

Eutrophication remains a major stress for freshwater biodiversity. Its deleterious consequences on biodiversity are well documented for large waterbodies. However, the impact of eutrophication may differ in smaller waterbodies, such as ponds and small lakes, which generally support naturally high levels of nutrients in lowlands. Furthermore, this response could depend on the scale considered, from local (individual waterbody, alpha diversity) to regional (the network of waterbodies, gamma diversity). It is also unclear whether the richness of threatened species responds in the same way as the richness of the whole assemblage. The present study investigates local- and regional-scale consequences of eutrophication on taxonomic richness (all taxa) and conservation value (threatened taxa) in temperate lowland small waterbodies. Five taxonomic groups were investigated: macrophytes, gastropods, water beetles, adult dragonflies and amphibians, in a set of natural waterbodies and a set of enriched waterbodies covering a large nutrient gradient from mesotrophic to hypertrophic conditions. Globally, our study did not reveal consistent, systematic responses to eutrophication. For macrophytes, the richness and conservation value suffered from eutrophication at both local and regional scales. In contrast, for amphibians and gastropods, eutrophication did not impair biodiversity at the local nor the regional scale. Dragonflies and water beetles showed intermediate situations, with an impairment by eutrophication varying according to the type of waterbodies considered. At the regional scale, each trophic status, even the nutrient richest, brought an original contribution to biodiversity. Synthesis and applications. The management of eutrophication for small lowland waterbodies has to be considered differently than for lakes. For an individual waterbody (the local scale), nutrient enrichment is not necessarily a major impairment and its impact depends on the taxonomic group considered. Conversely, at the landscape scale, eutrophication is a major pressure on small waterbody biodiversity, especially because nutrient-rich small waterbodies are dominant in the landscape. Therefore, conservation efforts should integrate the notion of pond regional networks or ‘pondscapes’, where the regional biodiversity is supported by a mosaic of trophic conditions, and promote the presence of less rich waterbodies.


Hydrobiologia | 2009

Gravel pits support waterbird diversity in an urban landscape

Frédéric Santoul; A. Gaujard; Sandrine Angélibert; Sylvain Mastrorillo; Régis Céréghino

We assessed the benefit of 11 gravel pits for the settlement of waterbird communities in an urbanized area lacking natural wetlands. Gravel pits captured 57% of the regional species pool of aquatic birds. We identified 39 species, among which five were regionally rare. We used the Self-Organizing Map algorithm to calculate the probabilities of presence of species, and to bring out habitat conditions that predict assemblage patterns. The age of the pits did not correlate with assemblage composition and species richness. There was a positive influence of macrophyte cover on waterbird species richness. Larger pits did not support more species, but species richness increased with connectivity. As alternative wetland habitats, gravel pits are attractive to waterbirds, when they act as stepping stones that ensure connectivity between larger natural and/or artificial wetlands separated in space.


SIL Proceedings, 1922-2010 | 2008

Local diversity of macroinvertebrates in alpine ponds as an indicator of global change: a Gastropod case-study

Véronique Rosset; Beat Oertli; Sandrine Angélibert; Nicola Indermuehle

Anthropogenic global change is a potential threat for biodiversity worldwide. lncreasing temperatures are responsible for numerous shifts in species distributions and abundances that may lead to species-level extinctions (THOMAS et al. 2004). Regional diversity can be particularly threatened, as demonstrated in the Alps (THEURILLAT & GuiSAN 2001). Furthermore, the local diversity (e.g. ecosystem species richness) is also likely to be significantly impacted. Such consequences at the local scale are insufficiently documented, especially for areas where temperature increases are expected to be important. This is the case for high altitude regions, like the Swiss Alps, where temperature increases are predicted to be particularly high (BRADLEY et al. 2004). Ponds may play a central role in such local assessments, not only because of their small size and simple community structure (oE MEESTER et al. 2005), but also because oftheir sensitivity to physical environment changes. Aquatic macroinvertebrates are good bioindicators oftemperature changes (HoDKINsoN & JAcKSON 2005). Among them, the passive dispersers, like gastropods, are good sentinels of pond biodiversity changes because o f their complete dependency on aquatic habitats and their weak colonization ability. W e evaluated the potential response ofthe local biodiversity to global change in alpine and subalpine ponds in the Swiss Alps by modelling the changes in gastropod species richness according to 7 different global change scenarios.


Hydrobiologia | 2008

Macroinvertebrate assemblages in 25 high alpine ponds of the Swiss National Park (Cirque of Macun) and relation to environmental variables

Beat Oertli; Nicola Indermuehle; Sandrine Angélibert; Hélène Hinden; Aurélien Stoll


Hydrobiologia | 2014

Biodiversity in eutrophicated shallow lakes: determination of tipping points and tools for monitoring

Joël Robin; Alexander Wezel; Gudrun Bornette; Florent Arthaud; Sandrine Angélibert; Véronique Rosset; Beat Oertli


Limnology | 2014

Biodiversity patterns of nutrient-rich fish ponds and implications for conservation

Alexander Wezel; Beat Oertli; Véronique Rosset; Florent Arthaud; B. Leroy; R. Smith; Sandrine Angélibert; Gudrun Bornette; Dominique Vallod; Joël Robin


Limnetica | 2010

The pond biodiversity index "IBEM": a new tool for the rapid assessment of biodiversity in ponds from Switzerland. Part 1. Index development

Sandrine Angélibert; Véronique Rosset; Nicola Indermuehle; Beat Oertli


Limnetica | 2010

The pond biodiversity index “IBEM”: a new tool for the rapid assessment of biodiversity in ponds from Switzerland. Part 2. Method description and examples of application

Nicola Indermuehle; Sandrine Angélibert; Véronique Rosset; Beat Oertli


Archive | 2014

Freshwater biodiversity under warming pressure in the Alps: a methodological framework for prioritization of restoration areas for small waterbodies

Beat Oertli; Christiane Ilg; Sandrine Angélibert; Janine Bolliger; Julien Crovadore; Eliane Demierre; Claire Julliand; Andréa Finger-Stich; Christel Forré; Pierre-André Frossard; François Lefort; Mathieu Mayencourt; Umberto Piantini; Sergio Schmid

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Beat Oertli

University of Applied Sciences Western Switzerland

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Véronique Rosset

University of Applied Sciences Western Switzerland

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Pierre Marty

Paul Sabatier University

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