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Featured researches published by Vanessa Hequet.


Aob Plants | 2015

Environmental correlates for tree occurrences, species distribution and richness on a high-elevation tropical island

Philippe Birnbaum; Thomas Ibanez; Robin Pouteau; Hervé Vandrot; Vanessa Hequet; Elodie Blanchard; Tanguy Jaffré

This article focuses on the distribution of trees on a high-elevation tropical island of the New Caledonian archipelago. The aim was to determine how the variety of environments occurring on this island (in terms of elevation, rainfall, substrate and vegetation types) shapes the distribution of tree species. We analyzed the distribution of 702 native rainforest species through ca. 40,000 occurrence records and GIS environmental layers. Results showed that species exhibit high environmental tolerance while their distribution is spatially highly aggregated. We concluded that tree species distribution in New Caledonia is shaped by dispersal limitation rather than by environmental specialization.


Trees-structure and Function | 2016

Contrasted allometries between stem diameter, crown area, and tree height in five tropical biogeographic areas

Elodie Blanchard; Philippe Birnbaum; Thomas Ibanez; Thomas Boutreux; Cécile Antin; Pierre Ploton; Grégoire Vincent; Robin Pouteau; Hervé Vandrot; Vanessa Hequet; Nicolas Barbier; Vincent Droissart; Bonaventure Sonké; Nicolas Texier; Narcisse Guy Kamdem; Donatien Zebaze; Moses Libalah; Pierre Couteron

Key messageAcross five biogeographic areas, DBH-CA allometry was characterized by inter-site homogeneity and intra-site heterogeneity, whereas the reverse was observed for DBH-H allometry.AbstractTree crowns play a central role in stand dynamics. Remotely sensed canopy images have been shown to allow inferring stand structure and biomass which suggests that allometric scaling between stems and crowns may be tight, although insufficiently investigated to date. Here, we report the first broad-scale assessment of stem vs. crown scaling exponents using measurements of bole diameter (DBH), total height (H), and crown area (CA) made on 4148 trees belonging to 538 species in five biogeographic areas across the wet tropics. Allometries were fitted with power functions using ordinary least-squares regressions on log-transformed data. The inter-site variability and intra-site (sub-canopy vs. canopy trees) variability of the allometries were evaluated by comparing the scaling exponents. Our results indicated that, in contrast to both DBH-H and H-CA allometries, DBH-CA allometry shows no significant inter-site variation. This fairly invariant scaling calls for increased effort in documenting crown sizes as part of tree morphology. Stability in DBH-CA allometry, indeed, suggests that some universal constraints are sufficiently pervasive to restrict the exponent variation to a narrow range. In addition, our results point to inverse changes in the scaling exponent of the DBH-CA vs. DBH-H allometries when shifting from sub-canopy to canopy trees, suggesting a change in carbon allocation when a tree reaches direct light. These results pave the way for further advances in our understanding of niche partitioning in tree species, tropical forest dynamics, and to estimate AGB in tropical forests from remotely sensed images.


Annals of Botany | 2018

High endemism and stem density distinguish New Caledonian from other high-diversity rainforests in the Southwest Pacific

Thomas Ibanez; Elodie Blanchard; Vanessa Hequet; Gunnar Keppel; M. Laidlaw; Robin Pouteau; Hervé Vandrot; Philippe Birnbaum

Background and Aims The biodiversity hotspot of New Caledonia is globally renowned for the diversity and endemism of its flora. New Caledonias tropical rainforests have been reported to have higher stem densities, higher concentrations of relictual lineages and higher endemism than other rainforests. This study investigates whether these aspects differ in New Caledonian rainforests compared to other high-diversity rainforests in the Southwest Pacific. Methods Plants (with a diameter at breast height ≥10 cm) were surveyed in nine 1-ha rainforest plots across the main island of New Caledonia and compared with 14 1-ha plots in high-diversity rainforests of the Southwest Pacific (in Australia, Fiji, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands). This facilitated a comparison of stem densities, taxonomic composition and diversity, and species turnover among plots and countries. Key Results The study inventoried 11 280 stems belonging to 335 species (93 species ha-1 on average) in New Caledonia. In comparison with other rainforests in the Southwest Pacific, New Caledonian rainforests exhibited higher stem density (1253 stems ha-1 on average) including abundant palms and tree ferns, with the high abundance of the latter being unparalleled outside New Caledonia. In all plots, the density of relictual species was ≥10 % for both stems and species, with no discernible differences among countries. Species endemism, reaching 89 % on average, was significantly higher in New Caledonia. Overall, species turnover increased with geographical distance, but not among New Caledonian plots. Conclusions High stem density, high endemism and a high abundance of tree ferns with stem diameters ≥10 cm are therefore unique characteristics of New Caledonian rainforests. High endemism and high spatial species turnover imply that the current system consisting of a few protected areas is inadequate, and that the spatial distribution of plant species needs to be considered to adequately protect the exceptional flora of New Caledonian rainforests.


Applied Vegetation Science | 2014

Structural and floristic diversity of mixed tropical rain forest in New Caledonia: new data from the New Caledonian Plant Inventory and Permanent Plot Network (NC-PIPPN)

Thomas Ibanez; Jérôme Munzinger; Gilles Dagostini; Vanessa Hequet; Frédéric Rigault; Tanguy Jaffré; Philippe Birnbaum


Diversity and Distributions | 2015

Accounting for the indirect area effect in stacked species distribution models to map species richness in a montane biodiversity hotspot

Robin Pouteau; Élise Bayle; Elodie Blanchard; Philippe Birnbaum; Jean‐Jérôme Cassan; Vanessa Hequet; Thomas Ibanez; Hervé Vandrot


Landscape Ecology | 2017

How does forest fragmentation affect tree communities? A critical case study in the biodiversity hotspot of New Caledonia

Thomas Ibanez; Vanessa Hequet; Céline Chambrey; Tanguy Jaffré; Philippe Birnbaum


Revue Française de Photogrammétrie et de Télédétection | 2015

Prédire la structure des forêts tropicales humides calédoniennes: analyse texturale de la canopée sur des images Pléiades

Elodie Blanchard; Philippe Birnbaum; Christophe Proisy; Thomas Ibanez; Hervé Vandrot; Céline Chambrey; Vanessa Hequet; Pierre Couteron


Archive | 2009

Les espèces exotiques envahissantes de Nouvelle-Calédonie

Vanessa Hequet; Mickaël Le Corre; Frédéric Rigault; V. Blanfort


Archive | 2015

Les forêts humides de la province Nord, Nouvelle-Calédonie : synthèse des travaux de recherche 2012-2015

Philippe Birnbaum; Thomas Ibanez; Hervé Vandrot; Elodie Blanchard; Vanessa Hequet; Céline Chambrey; Robin Pouteau


Archive | 2015

distribution and richness on a high-elevation tropical island

Philippe Birnbaum; Thomas Ibanez; Robin Pouteau; Vanessa Hequet; Elodie Blanchard; Tanguy Jaffré

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Tanguy Jaffré

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Frédéric Rigault

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Pierre Couteron

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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