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Dive into the research topics where Sylvie Mérigoux is active.

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Featured researches published by Sylvie Mérigoux.


Environmental Biology of Fishes | 1998

Fish richness and species-habitat relationships in two coastal streams of French Guiana, South America

Sylvie Mérigoux; Dominique Ponton; Bernard de Mérona

We examined the factors controlling fish species richness and taxa-habitat relationships in the Malmanoury and Karouabo coastal streams in French Guiana between the short and long rainy seasons. The aims were to evaluate the environmental factors that describe species richness on different scales and to define the ecological requirements of fish taxa in the two streams at that period of the year. We sampled ten regularly spaced freshwater sites in each stream with rotenone. We caught a total of 7725 individuals representing 52 taxa from 21 families and 6 orders. More taxa were caught in the Malmanoury (n=46) than in the Karouabo stream (n=37). These values augmented by the number of fish taxa caught only by gill nets in a parallel survey fitted very well to a log-log model of fish richness versus catchment area in Guianese rivers. Most of the fish taxa encountered in the Malmanoury and Karouabo streams were of freshwater origin and nearly all the fish species caught in these two small coastal streams were also found in the nearby Sinnamary River with the exceptions of the cichlid Heros severus and the characid Crenuchus spirulus. Moreover, no significant relationship was found between a size-independent estimate of fish richness and distance from the Ocean. Thus, despite their coastal position, the Malmanoury and Karouabo streams contained fish assemblages with strong continental affinities. At a local scale, independently of site size, those with relatively more habitat types harbored a relatively greater number of fish taxa. Canopy cover, water conductivity and bank length were the most important environmental variables for fish assemblage composition at that period of the year. Oxygen and vegetation participated also in defining fish habitat requirements but to a lesser extent.


Biological Invasions | 2011

Potential impact of invasive amphipods on leaf litter recycling in aquatic ecosystems

Christophe Piscart; Florian Mermillod-Blondin; Chafik Maazouzi; Sylvie Mérigoux; Pierre Marmonier

The impact of biological invasions on local biodiversity is well established, but their impact on ecosystem functioning has only been sketchily documented. However, biological invasions may impede services provided by aquatic ecosystems, such as, for example, the decomposition of organic matter, a key process in most small streams. To address this question, we experimentally quantified the leaf litter breakdown activity of native and invasive amphipod species, which are keystone species in aquatic ecosystems. The breakdown rate of each species was used to estimate the potential leaf litter recycling in the Rhône and Meurthe Rivers in sites occupied solely by native species and sites dominated by invasive species. We found that invaders were not able to compensate for the activity of native species and that the replacement of native species led to a decrease of at least 66% in the rate of leaf litter recycling. Our approach provides empirical evidence of the functional impact of non-indigenous species on leaf litter recycling, using standard protocols and literature data.


Journal of Applied Ecology | 2013

Functional diversity in a large river floodplain: anticipating the response of native and alien macroinvertebrates to the restoration of hydrological connectivity

Amael Paillex; Sylvain Dolédec; Emmanuel Castella; Sylvie Mérigoux; David C. Aldridge

Summary 1. Rivers and floodplains are among the most threatened ecosystems. Hydroelectric power plants and embankments have reduced the hydrological connectivity between rivers and their floodplain channels, leading to loss of freshwater habitats and biological communities. To prevent and reverse such loss, numerous restoration programmes have aimed at rejuvenating the lateral hydrological connectivity between rivers and floodplain channels. Despite consider- able global attention, we know remarkably little about the ecological benefits of floodplain restoration programmes. 2. We analysed the functional diversity of different macroinvertebrate groups (natives and aliens) along a gradient of lateral hydrological connectivity on the Rhone river in France. We used 36 sampling sites to describe the functional diversity (Raos quadratic entropy) before and after the enhancement of the lateral hydrological connectivity by restoration. The effects of restoration on functional diversity were tested for each macroinvertebrate group and at multiple spatial levels (alpha and beta). 3. Before restoration, alpha functional diversity of the entire macroinvertebrate community peaked in sites with a high lateral connectivity. The contribution of the native groups to func- tional diversity was higher than that of the alien group. The latter was not constrained by high values of lateral hydrological connectivity and reached a maximum in highly connected sites. 4. After restoration, within-site functional diversity (alpha FD) declined linearly following the enhancement of lateral hydrological connectivity. The restoration operations increased the contribution of the aliens to functional diversity and reduced the contribution of a group of native taxa. In addition, among-sites functional diversity (beta FD) was successfully enlarged by restoration. 5. Synthesis and applications. The lateral hydrological connectivity (LHC) represents a key parameter for explaining the functional diversity (FD) of macroinvertebrates in a floodplain ecosystem. Our results demonstrate that restoration-induced changes to functional diversity can be predicted. Controversially, restoration-induced enhancement of lateral hydrological connectivity increased the functional diversity of the alien macroinvertebrates. However, these species contributed only to a small part of the total macroinvertebrate functional diversity. We recommend that restoration programmes diversify the levels of lateral hydrological con- nectivity among the channels to ensure an optimal functional diversity at the floodplain scale.


Oecologia | 1999

Predicting diversity of juvenile neotropical fish communities : patch dynamics versus habitat state in floodplain creeks

Sylvie Mérigoux; Bernard Hugueny; Dominique Ponton; Bernhard Statzner; Philippe Vauchel

Abstract The species richness of communities should largely depend on habitat variability and/or on habitat state. We evaluated the ability of habitat variability and habitat state to predict the diversity of juvenile neotropical fish communities in creeks of a river floodplain. The young-fish fauna consisted of 73 taxa, and samples were well distributed over a wide range of relevant temporal and spatial habitat variability. We were unable to demonstrate clear patterns of richness in relation to temporal and spatial habitat variability (if habitat state variables were not included), regardless of the temporal variability scale, the grouping of sites (up- and downstream sites differed in temporal variability patterns), taxonomic units or life stages considered. Using stepwise multiple regression, 36% of the variance in species richness was explained for all data, and at best 47% was explained for all taxonomic units at upstream sites using temporal and spatial habitat variability and habitat state (bank length, mean width, mean water level before fishing and/or water turbidity). Using Monte Carlo simulations, we blindly predicted 31% (all data) and at best 37% (all upstream taxa) of the observed variance in species richness from these model types. This limited precision is probably because rare species produced most of the richness patterns in our creeks. The prediction of these rare species is generally difficult for various reasons, and may be a problem in many ecosystem types.


Aquatic Conservation-marine and Freshwater Ecosystems | 2000

Impact of a dam in the neotropics: what can be learned from young-of-the-year fish assemblages in tributaries of the River Sinnamary (French Guiana, South America)?

Dominique Ponton; Sylvie Mérigoux; Gordon H. Copp

1. The aim of this paper is to assess the usefulness of surveying young fish assemblages in tributaries of the Sinnamary River (French Guiana, South America) as a means of assessing fish species diversity and monitoring environmental change in a neotropical river subjected to hydrodam operations. 2. This work confirms that the tributaries of the Sinnamary River are nurseries for more than half the fish species present in the river. 3. It shows that in natural conditions the young fish assemblages at the beginning of the dry season are overwhelmingly dominated by Characiformes, but that species of other orders are favoured in the impacted sections. 4. This study confirms that the evaluation of the reproductive success of the different fish species over large river stretches at the end of the rainy season appears to be an appropriate method for detecting the immediate effects of flow disturbances on fish communities. 5. The results suggest that it is more informative and less time-consuming to consider the abundance of juveniles only, and to group them at the order level instead of calculating diversity indices. 6. The relative abundance of Characiformes juveniles at the end of the rainy season seems a cost-efficient way of assessing the hydrological impact of the dam on the Sinnamary River, and this may be the case for other neotropical rivers where these methods may be generally applicable. Copyright O 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


Freshwater Biology | 2007

Modelling the hydraulic preferences of benthic macroinvertebrates in small European streams

Sylvain Dolédec; Nicolas Lamouroux; Ulrike Fuchs; Sylvie Mérigoux


Journal of Applied Ecology | 2009

Large river floodplain restoration: predicting species richness and trait responses to the restoration of hydrological connectivity

Amael Paillex; Sylvain Dolédec; Emmanuel Castella; Sylvie Mérigoux


Journal of Fish Biology | 1998

Body shape, diet and ontogenetic diet shifts in young fish of the Sinnamary River, French Guiana, South America

Sylvie Mérigoux; Dominique Ponton


Freshwater Biology | 2009

Invertebrate hydraulic preferences and predicted impacts of changes in discharge in a large river

Sylvie Mérigoux; Nicolas Lamouroux; Jean-Michel Olivier; Sylvain Dolédec


Limnologica | 2008

Hydraulic habitat use with respect to body size of aquatic insect larvae: Case of six species from a French Mediterranean type stream

Pierre Sagnes; Sylvie Mérigoux; Nicolas Péru

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Nicolas Lamouroux

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Bernard de Mérona

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Jean-Michel Olivier

Compagnie Nationale du Rhône

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