Véronique Lesage
Fisheries and Oceans Canada
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Featured researches published by Véronique Lesage.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Philippe Archambault; Paul V. R. Snelgrove; Jonathan A. D. Fisher; Jean-Marc Gagnon; David J. Garbary; Michel Harvey; Ellen Kenchington; Véronique Lesage; Mélanie Lévesque; Connie Lovejoy; David L. Mackas; Christopher W. McKindsey; John R. Nelson; Pierre Pepin; Laurence Piché; Michel Poulin
Evaluating and understanding biodiversity in marine ecosystems are both necessary and challenging for conservation. This paper compiles and summarizes current knowledge of the diversity of marine taxa in Canadas three oceans while recognizing that this compilation is incomplete and will change in the future. That Canada has the longest coastline in the world and incorporates distinctly different biogeographic provinces and ecoregions (e.g., temperate through ice-covered areas) constrains this analysis. The taxonomic groups presented here include microbes, phytoplankton, macroalgae, zooplankton, benthic infauna, fishes, and marine mammals. The minimum number of species or taxa compiled here is 15,988 for the three Canadian oceans. However, this number clearly underestimates in several ways the total number of taxa present. First, there are significant gaps in the published literature. Second, the diversity of many habitats has not been compiled for all taxonomic groups (e.g., intertidal rocky shores, deep sea), and data compilations are based on short-term, directed research programs or longer-term monitoring activities with limited spatial resolution. Third, the biodiversity of large organisms is well known, but this is not true of smaller organisms. Finally, the greatest constraint on this summary is the willingness and capacity of those who collected the data to make it available to those interested in biodiversity meta-analyses. Confirmation of identities and intercomparison of studies are also constrained by the disturbing rate of decline in the number of taxonomists and systematists specializing on marine taxa in Canada. This decline is mostly the result of retirements of current specialists and to a lack of training and employment opportunities for new ones. Considering the difficulties encountered in compiling an overview of biogeographic data and the diversity of species or taxa in Canadas three oceans, this synthesis is intended to serve as a biodiversity baseline for a new program on marine biodiversity, the Canadian Healthy Ocean Network. A major effort needs to be undertaken to establish a complete baseline of Canadian marine biodiversity of all taxonomic groups, especially if we are to understand and conserve this part of Canadas natural heritage.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2012
Gabriel J. Colbeck; Pierre Duchesne; Lianne D. Postma; Véronique Lesage; Mike O. Hammill; Julie Turgeon
Social structure involving long-term associations with relatives should facilitate the learning of complex behaviours such as long-distance migration. In and around Hudson Bay (Canada), three stocks of beluga whales form a panmictic unit, but have different migratory behaviours associated with different summering areas. We analysed genetic variation at 13 microsatellite loci among 1524 belugas, to test hypotheses about social structure in belugas. We found significant proportions of mother–offspring pairs throughout the migratory cycle, but average relatedness extended beyond close kinship only during migration. Average relatedness was significantly above random expectations for pairs caught at the same site but on different days or months of a year, suggesting that belugas maintain associations with a network of relatives during migration. Pairs involving a female (female–female or male–female) were on average more related than pairs of males, and males seemed to disperse from their matrilineal group to associate with other mature males. Altogether, our results indicate that relatives other than strictly parents, and especially females, play a role in maintaining a social structure that could facilitate the learning of migration routes. Cultural conservatism may limit contributions from nearby summer stocks to endangered stocks such as the Eastern Hudson Bay beluga.
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2011
Ian H. McQuinn; Véronique Lesage; Dominic Carrier; Geneviève Larrivée; Yves Samson; Sylvain Chartrand; Robert Michaud; James Theriault
The threatened resident beluga population of the St. Lawrence Estuary shares the Saguenay-St. Lawrence Marine Park with significant anthropogenic noise sources, including marine commercial traffic and a well-established, vessel-based whale-watching industry. Frequency-dependent (FD) weighting was used to approximate beluga hearing sensitivity to determine how noise exposure varied in time and space at six sites of high beluga summer residency. The relative contribution of each source to acoustic habitat degradation was estimated by measuring noise levels throughout the summer and noise signatures of typical vessel classes with respect to traffic volume and sound propagation characteristics. Rigid-hulled inflatable boats were the dominant noise source with respect to estimated beluga hearing sensitivity in the studied habitats due to their high occurrence and proximity, high correlation with site-specific FD-weighted sound levels, and the dominance of mid-frequencies (0.3-23 kHz) in their noise signatures. Median C-weighted sound pressure level (SPL(RMS)) had a range of 19 dB re 1 μPa between the noisiest and quietest sites. Broadband SPL(RMS) exceeded 120 dB re 1 μPa 8-32% of the time depending on the site. Impacts of these noise levels on St. Lawrence beluga will depend on exposure recurrence and individual responsiveness.
Environmental Research | 2017
Antoine E. Simond; Magali Houde; Véronique Lesage; Jonathan Verreault
ABSTRACT An exponential level increase of the ubiquitous halogenated flame retardant (HFR) class polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) has been documented during the 1990s in endangered belugas (Delphinapterus leucas) from the St. Lawrence Estuary (SLE), Eastern Canada. The recent worldwide bans and regulations of PBDE mixtures led to their replacement by alternative HFRs (so‐called emerging HFRs) that are increasingly being reported in various environmental compartments. There are, however, limited knowledge on the spatial and temporal trends of PBDEs and emerging HFRs in cetaceans, especially after restrictions on PBDE usage. The first objective of this study was to investigate the occurrence of HFRs (35 PBDE congeners and 13 emerging compounds) in the blubber of belugas and minke whales (Balænoptera acutorostrata) found dead in the Estuary or Gulf of St. Lawrence as well as belugas from Nunavik (Canadian Arctic) collected as part of the Inuit subsistence hunt. A second objective was to investigate the trends of HFR concentrations in SLE beluga males between 1997 and 2013. PBDEs were the most abundant HFRs in all three whale populations, while hexabromobenzene (HBB), Chlordene Plus (CPlus), Dechlorane Plus (DP), and Dechlorane 604 Component B (Dec‐604 CB) were quantified in the majority of blubber samples. Overall, concentrations of emerging HFRs were notably greater in SLE belugas compared to the two other whale populations, with the exception of DP and Dec‐604 CB that were found in greater concentrations in Canadian Arctic belugas. No significant trend in blubber PBDE concentrations was found in SLE belugas during this 17‐year period. This suggests that global PBDE regulations are too recent to observe changes in PBDE concentrations in belugas from this highly HFR‐exposed environment. In contrast, concentrations of HBB and CPlus in SLE belugas decreased slightly from 1997 to 2013, while DP increased up until 2000 and decreased slightly thereafter. The occurrence and temporal variations of PBDEs and their replacement products in these cetaceans warrant continuous monitoring. HighlightsFlame retardants were quantified in three whale populations from Eastern Canada.Greatest blubber PBDE concentrations were found in St. Lawrence Estuary belugas.Levels of two Dechlorane‐like compounds were greatest in Canadian Arctic belugas.No trend was observed for PBDE concentrations in belugas between 1997–2013.Levels of three emerging HFRs varied significantly in belugas over this period.
Behavioral Ecology | 2011
Thomas Doniol-Valcroze; Véronique Lesage; Janie Giard; Robert Michaud
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2014
Katherine Gavrilchuk; Véronique Lesage; Christian Ramp; Richard Sears; Martine Bérubé; Stuart Bearhop; Gwénaël Beauplet
Journal of Plankton Research | 2011
Corinne Pomerleau; Gesche Winkler; Akash R. Sastri; R. John Nelson; Svein Vagle; Véronique Lesage; Steven H. Ferguson
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2012
Sébastien Lefebvre; Robert Michaud; Véronique Lesage; Dominique Berteaux
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2012
Corinne Pomerleau; Véronique Lesage; Steven H. Ferguson; Gesche Winkler; S. D. Petersen; J. W. Higdon
Biological Conservation | 2011
Pia Anderwald; Anna K. Daníelsdóttir; Tore Haug; Finn Larsen; Véronique Lesage; Robert J. Reid; G.A. Vikingsson; A. Rus Hoelzel