Serge Meusnier
Institut national de la recherche agronomique
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Serge Meusnier.
Molecular Ecology | 2004
C. Brouat; H. Chevallier; Serge Meusnier; T. Noblecourt; Jean-Yves Rasplus
Habitat specialist species are supposed to be more susceptible to variations in local environmental characteristics than generalists. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a comparative analysis on abundance and genetic diversity of forest carabids differing in their habitat requirements. Four species were sampled in forests characterized by abiotic, landscape and biotic environmental variables. A statistical framework based on canonical correspondence analysis was used for one habitat generalist and one habitat specialist species to determine the relative contribution of environmental variables in structuring inter‐ and intrapopulational genetic diversity depicted by microsatellites. Our results showed that sympatric species differed in their sensitivity to environmental variables. The same variables were found to be important in analyses of abundance and genetic data. However, specialization was not related to a greater sensitivity to local environmental characteristics. The strong impact of spatial variables on genetic data suggested that genetic variation among populations would largely reflect the response of individual species to dispersal opportunities more than the effect of habitat quality.
PLOS ONE | 2007
Laurent Pélozuelo; Serge Meusnier; Philippe Audiot; Denis Bourguet; Sergine Ponsard
Background Sex pheromone communication systems may be a major force driving moth speciation by causing behavioral reproductive isolation via assortative meeting of conspecific individuals. The ‘E’ and ‘Z’ pheromone races of the European corn borer (ECB) are a textbook example in this respect. ‘Z’ females produce and ‘Z’ males preferentially respond to a ‘Z’ pheromone blend, while the ‘E’ race communicates via an ‘E’ blend. Both races do not freely hybridize in nature and their populations are genetically differentiated. A straightforward explanation would be that their reproductive isolation is a mere consequence of “assortative meeting” resulting from their different pheromones specifically attracting males towards same-race females at long range. However, previous laboratory experiments and those performed here show that even when moths are paired in a small box – i.e., when the meeting between sexual partners is forced – inter-race couples still have a lower mating success than intra-race ones. Hence, either the difference in attractivity of E vs. Z pheromones for males of either race still holds at short distance or the reproductive isolation between E and Z moths may not only be favoured by assortative meeting, but must also result from an additional mechanism ensuring significant assortative mating at close range. Here, we test whether this close-range mechanism is linked to the E/Z female sex pheromone communication system. Methodology/Principal Findings Using crosses and backcrosses of E and Z strains, we found no difference in mating success between full-sisters emitting different sex pheromones. Conversely, the mating success of females with identical pheromone types but different coefficients of relatedness to the two parental strains was significantly different, and was higher when their genetic background was closer to that of their male partners pheromone race. Conclusions/Significance We conclude that the close-range mechanism ensuring assortative mating between the E and Z ECB pheromone races is unrelated to the difference in female sex pheromone. Although the nature of this mechanism remains elusive, our results show that it is expressed in females, acts at close range, segregates independently of the autosome carrying Pher and of both sex chromosomes, and is widely distributed since it occurs both in France and in the USA.
Molecular Ecology | 2014
Denis Bourguet; Sergine Ponsard; Réjane Streiff; Serge Meusnier; Philippe Audiot; Jing Li; Zhen-ying Wang
New agricultural pest species attacking introduced crops may evolve from pre‐existing local herbivores by ecological speciation, thereby becoming a species by becoming a pest. We compare the evolutionary pathways by which two maize pests (the Asian and the European corn borers, ACB and ECB) in the genus Ostrinia (Lepidoptera, Crambidae) probably diverged from an ancestral species close to the current Adzuki bean borer (ABB). We typed larval Ostrinia populations collected on maize and dicotyledons across China and eastern Siberia, at microsatellite and mitochondrial loci. We found only two clusters: one on maize (as expected) and a single one on dicotyledons despite differences in male mid‐tibia morphology, suggesting that all individuals from dicotyledons belonged to the ABB. We found evidence for migrants and hybrids on both host plant types. Hybrids suggest that field reproductive isolation is incomplete between ACB and ABB. Interestingly, a few individuals with an ‘ABB‐like’ microsatellite profile collected on dicotyledons had ‘ACB’ mtDNA rather than ‘ABB‐like’ mtDNA, whereas the reverse was never found on maize. This suggests asymmetrical gene flow directed from the ACB towards the ABB. Hybrids and backcrosses in all directions were obtained in no‐choice tests. In laboratory conditions, they survived as well as parental strain individuals. In Xinjiang, we found ACB and ECB in sympatry, but no hybrids. Altogether, our results suggest that reproductive isolation between ACB and ABB is incomplete and mostly prezygotic. This points to ecological speciation as a possible evolutionary scenario, as previously found for ECB and ABB in Europe.
Molecular Ecology | 2005
Réjane Streiff; R. Veyrier; Philippe Audiot; Serge Meusnier; Carine Brouat
The evolutionary importance of hybridization in wild plants and animals has become increasingly widely recognized in the last decade. In practical terms, hybridization provides an exceptionally tough set of problems for conservation biologists. We illustrate this in a case study of two Carabidae species widely used to evaluate the impact of human activities on biodiversity. These two species live in a complex mosaic of sympatry/allopatry and are known to hybridize in controlled conditions. Hybridization has not been quantified in natural populations to date due to the lack of a simple set of phenotypic traits for identifying hybrids. We thus screened for hybrids in natural populations, by multilocus genotyping at nine microsatellite loci. A high level of genetic differentiation between these two taxa was observed, as shown by allelic frequency distributions. Two Bayesian assignment procedures without obligatory pure taxon references were used to infer different classes of hybrids (F1, F2 and backcrosses) and mixture proportions between the two species. A low level of hybridization (F1 genotypes) was observed in natural populations, contrasting with results obtained in controlled conditions. A high level of introgression was, however, detected at three of 12 sites, as revealed by the detection of backcrossed genotypes. This interspecific gene flow was detected in a limited zone of the common geographical range of the two species and was not related to the pattern of sympatry/allopatry. We then considered the origin and repercussions of this introgression, based on intraspecific genetic diversity and geographical structure.
Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 2006
Carine Brouat; Serge Meusnier; Renaud Veyrier; Réjane Streiff
Carabus splendens Olivier and Carabus punctatoauratus Germar (Coleoptera: Carabidae: Carabini) are ground beetles found in sympatry in forests in the eastern Pyrénées. We investigated potential interspecific mating using crossing experiments under controlled laboratory conditions and paternity analyses based on microsatellite markers. We show that under laboratory conditions, interspecific mating produces viable and fertile offspring. Although hybrid males were sterile, females were fertile and thus reproductive isolation between the two species is far from complete. We discuss the results in relation to species integrity due to pre‐ or post‐zygotic barriers, and compare them to a previous study quantifying hybridization between the two species in natural populations.
Heredity | 2014
Réjane Streiff; Brigitte Courtois; Serge Meusnier; Denis Bourguet
We report the quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping of reproductive isolation traits between Ostrinia nubilalis (the European corn borer) and its sibling species O. scapulalis (the Adzuki bean borer), focusing on two traits: mating isolation (mi) and pheromone production (Pher). Four genetic maps were generated from two backcross families, with two maps (one chromosomal map and one linkage map) per backcross. We located 165–323 AFLP markers on these four maps, resulting in the identification of 27–31 linkage groups, depending on the map considered. No-choice mating experiments with the offspring of each backcross led to the detection of at least two QTLs for mi in different linkage groups. QTLs underlying Pher were located in a third linkage group. The Z heterochromosome was identified by a specific marker (Tpi) and did not carry any of these QTLs. Finally, we considered the global divergence between the two sibling species, distortions of segregation throughout the genome, and the location and effect of mi and Pher QTLs in light of the known candidate genes for reproductive isolation within the genus Ostrinia and, more broadly, in phytophagous insects.
Journal of Economic Entomology | 1996
Jean-Marc Labatte; Serge Meusnier; Alain Migeon; Josette Chaufaux; Yvonne Couteaudier; Guy Riba; Brigitte Got
Genetics Selection Evolution | 2001
Jean-Yves Rasplus; Stéphane Garnier; Serge Meusnier; Silvain Piry; Gwenaëlle Mondor; Philippe Audiot; Jean-Marie Cornuet
Forestry | 2004
Carine Brouat; Serge Meusnier; Jean-Yves Rasplus
Environmental Entomology | 1994
Brigitte Got; Serge Meusnier; Lionel Peypelut; Frederic Fleury