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Roux, O.; Rossi, V.; Céréghino, R.; Compin, A.; Martin, J.-M.; Dejean, A. |
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How to coexist with fire ants: The roles of behaviour and cuticular compounds |
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Journal Article |
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2013 |
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Behavioural Processes |
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98 |
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51-57 |
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Aggressiveness; Cuticular hydrocarbons; Dear enemy phenomenon; Nasty neighbour effect; Species coexistence; Supercoloniality |
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Because territoriality is energetically costly, territorial animals frequently respond less aggressively to neighbours than to strangers, a reaction known as the “dear enemy phenomenon” (DEP). The contrary, the “nasty neighbour effect” (NNE), occurs mainly for group-living species defending resource-based territories. We studied the relationships between supercolonies of the pest fire ant Solenopsis saevissima and eight ant species able to live in the vicinity of its nests plus Eciton burchellii, an army ant predator of other ants. The workers from all of the eight ant species behaved submissively when confronted with S. saevissima (dominant) individuals, whereas the contrary was never true. Yet, S. saevissima were submissive towards E. burchellii workers. Both DEP and NNE were observed for the eight ant species, with submissive behaviours less frequent in the case of DEP. To distinguish what is due to chemical cues from what can be attributed to behaviour, we extracted cuticular compounds from all of the nine ant species compared and transferred them onto a number of S. saevissima workers that were then confronted with untreated conspecifics. The cuticular compounds from three species, particularly E. burchellii, triggered greater aggressiveness by S. saevissima workers, while those from the other species did not. © 2013 Elsevier B.V. |
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Université de Toulouse, UPS, Ecolab, 31062 Toulouse, France |
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Export Date: 1 July 2013; Source: Scopus |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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494 |
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Maia, A.C.D.; Gibernau, M.; Dötterl, S.; Do Amaral Ferraz Navarro, D.M.; Seifert, K.; Müller, T.; Schlindwein, C. |
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The floral scent of Taccarum ulei (Araceae): Attraction of scarab beetle pollinators to an unusual aliphatic acyloin |
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Journal Article |
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2013 |
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Phytochemistry |
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Phytochemistry |
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93 |
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71-78 |
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(S)-2-Hydroxy-5-methyl-3-hexanone; Araceae; Behavioral tests; Cyclocephala celata and C. cearae; Dihydro-β-ionone; Floral volatiles; Taccarum ulei |
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The strongly fragrant thermogenic inflorescences of Taccarum ulei (Araceae) are highly attractive to nightactive scarab beetles of Cyclocephala celata and C. cearae (Scarabaeidae, Cyclocephalini), which are effective pollinators of plants in the wild in northeastern Brazil. GC-MS analysis of headspace floral scent samples of T. ulei established that two constituents, (S)-2-hydroxy-5- methyl-3-hexanone (an aliphatic acyloin rarely detected in flowers) and dihydro-b-ionone (an irregular terpene) accounted for over 96% of the total scent discharge. Behavioral tests (in both field and cages) showed that male and female C. celata and C. cearae were attracted to traps baited with a synthetic mixture of both compounds; however, they were also responsive to (S)-2-hydroxy-5-methyl-3-hexanone alone, which thus functions as a specific attractive cue. These findings support other recent research in suggesting that angiosperms pollinated by cyclocephaline scarab beetles release floral odors of limited complexity in terms of numbers of compounds, but often dominated by unusual compounds that may ensure attraction of specific pollinator species. © 2013 Elsevier B.V. |
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Organismic Biology, Plant Ecology, Salzburg University, 5020 Salzburg, Austria |
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00319422 (Issn) |
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Export Date: 10 October 2013; Source: Scopus; Coden: Pytca; doi: 10.1016/j.phytochem.2013.03.005; Language of Original Document: English; Correspondence Address: Maia, A.C.D.; Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, Centro de Ciências Exatas e da Natureza, Departamento de Química Fundamental, Av. Jornalista Anibal Fernandes, s/n, Cidade Universita, Recife, PE 50740-560, Brazil; email: arturcamposmaia@yahoo.com.br |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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504 |
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Michalet, S.; Rohr, J.; Warshan, D.; Bardon, C.; Roggy, J.-C.; Domenach, A.-M.; Czarnes, S.; Pommier, T.; Combourieu, B.; Guillaumaud, N.; Bellvert, F.; Comte, G.; Poly, F. |
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Phytochemical analysis of mature tree root exudates in situ and their role in shaping soil microbial communities in relation to tree N-acquisition strategy |
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Journal Article |
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2013 |
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Plant Physiology and Biochemistry |
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Plant Physiol. Biochem. |
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72 |
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169-177 |
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Chemical ecology; Denitrification; Eperua falcata; Metabolic profiling; Mycorrhizae; Plant-microbes interactions; Root exudates |
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Eperua falcata (Aublet), a late-successional species in tropical rainforest and one of the most abundant tree in French Guiana, has developed an original strategy concerning N-acquisition by largely preferring nitrate, rather than ammonium (H. Schimann, S. Ponton, S. Hättenschwiler, B. Ferry, R. Lensi, A.M. Domenach, J.C. Roggy, Differing nitrogen use strategies of two tropical rainforest tree species in French Guiana: evidence from 15N natural abundance and microbial activities, Soil Biol. Biochem. 40 (2008) 487-494). Given the preference of this species for nitrate, we hypothesized that root exudates would promote nitrate availability by (a) enhancing nitrate production by stimulating ammonium oxidation or (b) minimizing nitrate losses by inhibiting denitrification.Root exudates were collected in situ in monospecific planted plots. The phytochemical analysis of these exudates and of several of their corresponding root extracts was achieved using UHPLC/DAD/ESI-QTOF and allowed the identification of diverse secondary metabolites belonging to the flavonoid family.Our results show that (i) the distinct exudation patterns observed are related to distinct root morphologies, and this was associated with a shift in the root flavonoid content, (ii) a root extract representative of the diverse compounds detected in roots showed a significant and selective metabolic inhibition of isolated denitrifiers invitro, and (iii) in soil plots the abundance of nirK-type denitrifiers was negatively affected in rhizosphere soil compared to bulk. Altogether this led us to formulate hypothesis concerning the ecological role of the identified compounds in relation to N-acquisition strategy of this species. © 2013 Elsevier Masson SAS. |
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SOLICAZ, c/o Guyane Technopole 16 bis rue du 14 Juillet, 97300 Cayenne, French Guiana |
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09819428 (Issn) |
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Export Date: 15 November 2013; Source: Scopus; Coden: Ppbie; doi: 10.1016/j.plaphy.2013.05.003; Language of Original Document: English; Correspondence Address: Michalet, S.; Université Lyon1, CNRS, UMR5557, INRA, USC1364, Ecologie Microbienne, Centre d'Etude des Substances Naturelles, Pavillon Nétien, ISPB, 8 Avenue Rockefeller, 69373 Lyon cedex, France; email: sergemichalet@yahoo.fr |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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509 |
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Casella, T.M.; Eparvier, V.; Mandavid, H.; Bendelac, A.; Odonne, G.; Dayan, L.; Duplais, C.; Espindola, L.S.; Stien, D. |
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Antimicrobial and cytotoxic secondary metabolites from tropical leaf endophytes: Isolation of antibacterial agent pyrrocidine C from Lewia infectoria SNB-GTC2402 |
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Journal Article |
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2013 |
Publication |
Phytochemistry |
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Phytochemistry |
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96 |
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370-377 |
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Antimicrobials; Cytotoxic metabolites; Functional chemodiversity; Leaf endophytes; Lewia; Pyrrocidine C |
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Because of the symbiotic nature of endophytes, this survey aims to investigate the probability of discovering antibacterial, antifungal and cytotoxic activities in leaf endophytic microbes. We isolated 138 cultivable microbes (121 fungi, 3 bacteria and 14 unidentified or unknown microbes) from 24 plant species, a significant relative proportion of which exhibited antifungal and cytotoxic potential against Candida albicans ATCC 10213 and the human cell lines KB (uterine cervical carcinoma), MDA-MB-435 (melanoma), and MRC5 (normal human lung fibroblasts). Three active fungal extracts were fractionated, resulting in the isolation of eight compounds. Seven had been described in the literature including the following: acremonisol A, semicochliodinol A, cochliodinol, griseofulvin, pyrenocin A, novae zelandin A and alterperylenol. A previously unreported compound named pyrrocidine C was isolated from Lewia infectoria SNB-GTC2402 and identified by spectroscopic analysis. As in pyrrocidines A and B, this compound is a cis-substituted decahydrofluorene with a quaternary carbon at C-5 and opposite stereochemistry at C-8 corresponding to C-6 of pyrrocidines A and B.© 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. |
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CNRS Guyane, USR 3456, 2 Avenue Gustave Charlery, 97300 Cayenne, France |
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00319422 (Issn) |
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Export Date: 6 December 2013; Source: Scopus; Coden: Pytca; doi: 10.1016/j.phytochem.2013.10.004; Language of Original Document: English; Correspondence Address: Espindola, L.S.; Laboratório de Farmacognosia, Universidade de Brasília, Brasília, DF, Brazil; email: darvenne@unb.br; References: Arnold, A.E., Mejia, L.C., Kyllo, D., Rojas, E.I., Maynard, Z., Robbins, N., Herre, E.A., Fungal endophytes limit pathogen damage in a tropical tree (2003) Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 100 (26), pp. 15649-15654. , DOI 10.1073/pnas.2533483100; Asahina, A., Tada, Y., Nakamura, K., Tamaki, K., Colchicine and griseofulvin inhibit VCAM-1 expression on human vascular endothelial cells – Evidence for the association of VCAM-1 expression with microtubules (2001) Journal of Dermatological Science, 25 (1), pp. 1-9. , DOI 10.1016/S0923-1811(00)00097-9, PII S0923181100000979; Bacon, C.W., White, J.F., (2000) Microbial Endophytes, , Marcel Dekker Inc. New York; Brewer, D., Jerram, W.A., Meiler, D., Taylor, A., The toxicity of cochliodinol, an antibiotic metabolite of Chaetomium spp (1970) Can. J. Microbiol., 16, pp. 433-440; Cafeu, M.C., Silva, G.H., Teles, H.L., Bolzani, V.D.S., Araujo, A.R., Young, M.C.M., Pfenning, L.H., Antifungal compounds of Xylaria sp., an endophytic fungus isolated from Palicourea marcgravii (Rubiaceae) (2005) Quimica Nova, 28 (6), pp. 991-995. , http://www.scielo.br/pdf/qn/v28n6/26827.pdf; Chooi, Y.-H., Cacho, R., Tang, Y., Identification of the viridicatumtoxin and Griseofulvin gene clusters from Pennicillium aethiopicum (2010) Chem. Biol., 17, pp. 483-494; Christensen, K.B., Van Klink, J.W., Weavers, R.T., Larsen, T.O., Andersen, B., Phipps, R.K., Novel chemotaxonomic markers of the Alternaria infectoria species-group (2005) Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 53 (24), pp. 9431-9435. , DOI 10.1021/jf0513213; Clay, K., Holah, J., Fungal endophyte symbiosis and plant diversity in successional fields (1999) Science, 285 (5434), pp. 1742-1744. , DOI 10.1126/science.285.5434.1742; Debbab, A., Hassan, A.A., Edrada-Ebel, R.A., Müller, W.E.G., Mosaddak, M., Hakiki, A., Ebel, R., Proksch, P., Bioactive secondary metabolites from the endophytic fungus Chaetomium sp. Isolated from Salvia officinalis growing in Morocco (2009) Biotechnol. Agron. Soc. Environ., 13, pp. 229-234; Fredenhagen, A., Petersen, F., Tintelnot-Blomley, M., Rosel, J., Mett, H., Hug, P., Semicochliodinol A and B: Inhibitors of HIV-1 protease and EGF-R protein tyrosine kinase related to asterriquinones produced by the fungus Chrysosporium merdarium (1997) Journal of Antibiotics, 50 (5), pp. 395-401; He, H., Yang, H.Y., Bigelis, R., Solum, E.H., Greenstein, M., Carter, G.T., Pyrrocidines A and B, new antibiotics produced by a filamentous fungus (2002) Tetrahedron Letters, 43 (9), pp. 1633-1636. , DOI 10.1016/S0040-4039(02)00099-0, PII S0040403902000990; Ichihara, A., Murakami, K., Sakamura, S., Synthesis of pyrenocines A, B and pyrenochaetic acid A (1987) Tetrahedron, 43, pp. 5245-5250; Isaka, M., Rugseree, N., Maithip, P., Kongsaeree, P., Prabpai, S., Thebtaranonth, Y., Hirsutellones A-E, antimycobacterial alkaloids from the insect pathogenic fungus Hirsutella nivea BCC 2594 (2005) Tetrahedron, 61 (23), pp. 5577-5583. , DOI 10.1016/j.tet.2005.03.099, PII S0040402005005843; Jones, K.E., Patel, N.G., Levy, M.A., Storeygard, A., Balk, D., Gittleman, J.L., Daszak, P., Global trends in emerging infectious diseases (2008) Nature, 451 (7181), pp. 990-993. , DOI 10.1038/nature06536, PII NATURE06536; Kingsland, S.R., Barrow, R.A., Identification of chaetoviridin e from a cultured microfungus, Chaetomium sp. and structural reassignment of chaetoviridins B and D (2009) Aust. J. Chem., 62, pp. 269-274; Lee, J.S., Ko, K.S., Jung, H.S., Phylogenetic analysis of Xylaria based on nuclear ribosomal ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 sequences (2000) FEMS Microbiology Letters, 187 (1), pp. 89-93. , DOI 10.1016/S0378-1097(00)00181-6, PII S0378109700001816; Li, X.-W., Eara, A., Nay, B., Hirsutellones and beyond: Figuring out the biological and synthetic logics toward chemical complexity in fungal PKS-NRPS compounds (2013) Nat. Prod. Rep., 30, pp. 765-782; Mousa, W.K., Raizada, M.N., The diversity of anti-microbial secondary metabolites produced by fungal endophytes: An interdisciplinary perspective (2013) Front. Microbiol., 4 (65), pp. 1-18; Nebel, G., Dragsted, J., Vanclay, J.K., Structure and floristic composition of flood plain forests in the Peruvian Amazon II. The understorey of restinga forests (2001) Forest Ecology and Management, 150 (1-2), pp. 59-77. , DOI 10.1016/S0378-1127(00)00681-2, PII S0378112700006812; Nirma, C., Eparvier, V., Stien, D., Antifungal agents from Pseudallescheria boydii SNB-CN73 isolated from a Nasutitermes sp termite (2013) J. Nat. Prod., 76, pp. 988-991; Okuno, T., Natsume, I., Sawai, K., Structure of antifungal and phytotoxic pigments produced by Alternaria Sps (1983) Tetrahedron Letters, 24 (50), pp. 5653-5656. , DOI 10.1016/S0040-4039(00)94165-0; Pontius, A., Mohamed, I., Krick, A., Kehraus, S., Konig, G.M., Aromatic polyketides from marine algicolous fungi (2008) Journal of Natural Products, 71 (2), pp. 272-274. , DOI 10.1021/np0704710; Priest, F., Systematics and ecology of Bacillus (1993) Bacillus Subtilis and Other Gram-positive Bacteria, Biochemistry, Physiology, and Molecular Genetics, pp. 3-16. , A.L. Sonenshein, J.A. Hoch, R. Losick, ASM Press Washington; Rodrigues, A.M.S., Theodoro, P.N.E.T., Basset, C., Silva, M.R.R., Beauchêne, J., Espindola, L.S., Stien, D., Search for antifungal compounds from the wood of durable tropical trees (2010) J. Nat. Prod., 73, pp. 1706-1707; Rosenblueth, M., Martinez-Romero, E., Bacterial endophytes and their interactions with hosts (2006) Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions, 19 (8), pp. 827-837. , DOI 10.1094/MPMI-19-0827; Strobel, G.A., Endophytes as sources of bioactive products (2003) Microbes and Infection, 5 (6), pp. 535-544. , DOI 10.1016/S1286-4579(03)00073-X; Tempête, C., Werner, G.H., Favre, F., Rojas, A., Langlois, N., In vitro cytostatic activity of 9-demethoxyporothramycin B (1995) Eur. J. Med. Chem., 30, pp. 647-650; Weber, R.W.S., Stenger, E., Meffert, A., Hahn, M., Brefeldin A production by Phoma medicaginis in dead pre-colonized plant tissue: A strategy for habitat conquest? (2004) Mycological Research, 108 (6), pp. 662-671. , DOI 10.1017/S0953756204000243; White, T.J., Bruns, T., Lee, S., Taylor, J., Amplification and direct sequencing of fungal ribosomal RNA genes for phylogenetics (1990) PCR Protocols. A Guide to Methods and Applications, pp. 315-322. , M.A. Innis, D.H. Gelfand, J.J. Shinsky, T.J. White, Academic Press San Diego; Zhang, Z., Schwartz, S., Wagner, L., Miller, W., A greedy algorithm for aligning DNA sequences (2000) Journal of Computational Biology, 7 (1-2), pp. 203-214. , DOI 10.1089/10665270050081478; Zhang, X.X., Li, C.J., Nan, Z.B., Matthew, C., Neotyphodium endophyte increases Achnatherum inebrians (drunken horse grass) resistance to herbivores and seed predators (2011) Weed Res., 52, pp. 70-78 |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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515 |
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Lang, G.; Marcon, E. |
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Testing randomness of spatial point patterns with the Ripley statistic |
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2013 |
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ESAIM: Probability and Statistics |
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ESAIM PS |
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17 |
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767-788 |
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Central limit theorem, goodness-of-fit test, Höffding decomposition, null, point pattern, Poisson process, null |
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Aggregation patterns are often visually detected in sets of location data. These clusters may be the result of interesting dynamics or the effect of pure randomness. We build an asymptotically Gaussian test for the hypothesis of randomness corresponding to a homogeneous Poisson point process. We first compute the exact first and second moment of the Ripley K-statistic under the homogeneous Poisson point process model. Then we prove the asymptotic normality of a vector of such statistics for different scales and compute its covariance matrix. From these results, we derive a test statistic that is chi-square distributed. By a Monte-Carlo study, we check that the test is numerically tractable even for large data sets and also correct when only a hundred of points are observed |
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Perrin, A.-S.; Fujisaki, K.; Petitjean, C.; Sarrazin, M.; Godet, M.; Garric, B.; Horth, J.-C.; Balbino, L.C.; Filho, A.S.; de Almeida Machado, P.L.O.; Brossard, M. |
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Conversion of forest to agriculture in Amazonia with the chop-and-mulch method: Does it improve the soil carbon stock? |
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2014 |
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Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment |
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Agric. Ecosyst. Environ. |
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184 |
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101-114 |
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Annual crops; Brachiaria; Deforestation; Fire-free; French Guiana; No-tillage |
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Fire-free forest conversion with organic inputs as an alternative to slash-and-burn could improve agro-ecosystem sustainability. We assessed soil carbon mass changes in a sandy-clayey and well-drained soil in French Guiana after forest clearing by the chop-and-mulch method and crop establishment. At the experimental site of Combi, native forest was cut down in October 2008; woody biomass was chopped and incorporated into the top 20cm of soil. After about one year of legume and grass cover, three forms of land management were compared: grassland (Urochloa ruziziensis), maize/soybean crop rotation with disk tillage and in direct seeding without tillage. There were four replicates. We measured 14.16kgm-2 of carbon in 2mm-sieved soil down to 2m depth for the initial forest. Forest clearing did not induce significant soil compaction; neither did any specific agricultural practice. In converted soils, C stocks were measured in the 0-30cm layer after each crop for three years. Carbon mass changes for soil fractions <2mm (soil C stock) and >2mm (soil C pool) in the 0-5, 5-10, 10-20 and 20-30cm soil layers were assessed on an equivalent soil mass basis. One year and 1.5 years after deforestation, higher C stocks (+0.64 to 1.16kgCm-2yr-1) and C pools (+0.52 to 0.90kgCm-2yr-1) were measured in converted soils, compared to those of the forest into the top 30cm of soil. However, the masses of carbon in these converted soils declined later. The highest rates of carbon decrease were measured between 1.5 and 2 years after forest conversion in the <2mm soil fraction, from 0.46kgCm-2yr-1 (in grassland soils) to 0.71kgCm-2yr-1 (in cropland under no tillage). The carbon pool declined during the third year at rates of 0.41kgCm-2yr-1 (cropland under disk tillage) to 0.76kgCm-2yr-1 (grassland soils). Three years after forest conversion, C masses in the top 30cm of soils for grassland showed similar values than for forest. In comparison, the carbon stock in cropped soils managed under no tillage in direct seeding (without mulch) was significantly 17% and 16% lower than in forest and grassland soils, respectively. None of the studied agricultural practices succeeded in accumulating carbon from the chopped forest biomass. © 2013 Elsevier B.V. |
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EMBRAPA Arroz e Feijao, Cx Postal 179, CEP 75375-000 Santo Antonio de Goias, GO, Brazil |
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Export Date: 2 January 2014; Source: Scopus; Coden: Aeend; doi: 10.1016/j.agee.2013.11.009 |
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Groc, S.; Delabie, J.H.C.; Fernández, F.; Leponce, M.; Orivel, J.; Silvestre, R.; Vasconcelos, H.L.; Dejean, A. |
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Leaf-litter ant communities in a pristine Guianese rainforest: stable functional structure versus high species turnover |
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2013 |
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Myrmecological News |
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Myrmecol. News |
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19 |
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43-51 |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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523 |
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Leroy, C.; Gril, E.; Si Ouali, L.; Coste, S.; Gérard, B.; Maillard, P.; Mercier, H.; Stahl, C. |
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Water and nutrient uptake capacity of leaf-absorbing trichomes vs. roots in epiphytic tank bromeliads |
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2019 |
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Environmental and Experimental Botany |
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Environ. Exp. Bot. |
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163 |
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112-123 |
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15 N labelling; Carbon metabolism; Nutrient uptake; Plant performance; Tank bromeliad; Water status; Aechmea |
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The water and nutrient uptake mechanisms used by vascular epiphytes have been the subject of a few studies. While leaf absorbing trichomes (LATs) are the main organ involved in resource uptake by bromeliads, little attention has been paid to the absorbing role of epiphytic bromeliad roots. This study investigates the water and nutrient uptake capacity of LATs vs. roots in two epiphytic tank bromeliads Aechmea aquilega and Lutheria splendens. The tank and/or the roots of bromeliads were watered, or not watered at all, in different treatments. We show that LATs and roots have different functions in resource uptake in the two species, which we mainly attributed to dissimilarities in carbon acquisition and growth traits (e.g., photosynthesis, relative growth rate, non-structural carbohydrates, malate), to water relation traits (e.g., water and osmotic potentials, relative water content, hydrenchyma thickness) and nutrient uptake (e.g., 15 N-labelling). While the roots of A. aquilega did contribute to water and nutrient uptake, the roots of L. splendens were less important than the role played by the LATs in resource uptake. We also provide evidenced for a synergistic effect of combined watering of tank and root in the Bromelioideae species. These results call for a more complex interpretation of LATs vs. roots in resource uptake in bromeliads. © 2019 Elsevier B.V. |
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INRA, UMR EcoFoG, CNRS, CIRAD, AgroParisTech, Université des Antilles, Université de Guyane, Kourou, 97310, France |
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Elsevier B.V. |
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00988472 (Issn) |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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871 |
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Rockwell, C.A.; Kainer, K.A.; d'Oliveira, M.V.N.; Staudhammer, C.L.; Baraloto, C. |
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Logging in bamboo-dominated forests in southwestern Amazonia: Caveats and opportunities for smallholder forest management |
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2014 |
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Forest Ecology and Management |
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For. Ecol. Manage. |
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315 |
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202-210 |
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Bamboo; Community forest management; Guadua; Logging; Timber management; Tropical forest |
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Guadua sarcocarpa and Guadua weberbaueri (Poaceae: Bambuseae) have a negative influence on tree regeneration and recruitment in bamboo-dominated forests of southwestern Amazonia. The lack of advanced regeneration and sparse canopy in this forest type present a considerable challenge for developing sustainable timber management plans. We conducted field studies in the Porto Dias Agroextractive Settlement Project in Acre, Brazil to assess influences of logging in bamboo-dominated forest sites. Taxonomic composition, stand structure, aboveground biomass, commercial timber volume, and commercial tree seedling and bamboo culm density were compared between five logged vs. unlogged sites in different landholdings, using modified 0.5. ha Gentry plots. No differences in taxonomic composition, aboveground biomass, adult and juvenile stem density, or woody seedling and bamboo culm density were detected between paired logged and unlogged sites. Commercial timber volume, however, was reduced by almost two-thirds in logged plots, suggesting that long-term timber management goals in this forest type are compromised since so few future crop trees remained onsite. Our findings indicate that in order to maximize local management objectives, community forest managers must approach logging in bamboo-dominated forests with caution. We suggest an integration of non-timber forest product extraction with low harvest intensity and low-impact logging, tending of natural regeneration, and diversification of commercial species. © 2014 Elsevier B.V. |
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INRA, UMR Ecologie des Forêts de Guyane, 97387 Kourou Cedex, French Guiana |
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03781127 (Issn) |
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Export Date: 15 February 2014; Source: Scopus; Coden: Fecmd; Language of Original Document: English; Correspondence Address: Rockwell, C.A.; School of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, United States; email: rockwell_cara@yahoo.com; Funding Details: DGE-0221599, NSF, National Science Foundation |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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528 |
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Groc, S.; Delabie, J.H.C.; Fernández, F.; Leponce, M.; Orivel, J.; Silvestre, R.; Vasconcelos, H.L.; Dejean, A. |
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Leaf-litter ant communities (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in a pristine Guianese rain-forest: Stable functional structure versus high species turnover |
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2014 |
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Myrmecological News |
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Myrmecological News |
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19 |
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43-51 |
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Diversity gradient; Functional groups; Habitat heterogeneity; Litter-dwelling ant communities; Local scale; Pristine Amazonian rainforest; Taxonomic and functional structure |
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We compared the ant assemblages from four very heterogeneous habitats over a short-distance elevational gradient of vegetation (due to the presence of an inselberg) at the Nouragues Research Station, French Guiana. We focused on litter-dwelling ants, combining the use of pitfall traps and the Winkler method according to the Ants of the Leaf Litter Proto-col. This permitted us to note (1) a high leaf-litter ant diversity overall and a decreasing diversity gradient from the lowland rainforest to the top of the inselberg, and (2) differences in species density, composition and functional struc-ture. While the ant assemblages on the plateau and inselberg can be considered functionally similar and typical of an Amazonian rainforest, that of the transition forest, relatively homogenous, rather corresponded to an ant fauna typical of open areas. By contrast, the liana forest assemblage was unexpectedly richer and denser than the others, sheltering a litter-dwelling ant fauna dominated by numerous and abundant cryptic species. These taxonomical and functional dissi-milarities may reflect the influence of the environmental heterogeneity, which, through variable abiotic conditions, can contribute to maintaining a notably rich ant biodiversity in these Neotropical habitats. |
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Université de Toulouse, UPS (Ecolab), 118 route de Narbonne, 31062 Toulouse Cedex 9, France |
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19944136 (Issn) |
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Export Date: 10 March 2014; Source: Scopus; Language of Original Document: English; Correspondence Address: Groc, S.; Instituto de Biologia, Universidade Federal de Uberlândia (UFU), 38400-902 Uberlândia, Minas Gerais, Brazil; email: groc.sarah@gmail.com |
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EcoFoG @ webmaster @ |
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534 |
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