

My research focuses on the relationships between animals, their environment and parasitism. It focuses in particular on animal responses to the many constraints and changes in the environment (weather conditions, availability of habitats, parasitism) and in human activities (tourism, hunting, livestock farming), and their consequences for the health and dynamics of animal populations. More recently, I have developed a number of research projects on the transmission of parasites between domestic and wild animals, as well as on the problems of parasite resistance to antiparasitic drugs.
- Eco-epidemiology of parasitism
In a population in equilibrium with its environment (e.g. no over-density), the level of infestation of individuals within the same population is highly variable, with the majority of individuals being lightly parasitised and a small proportion heavily parasitised and heavily contaminating the environment and other animals ('super-excretors' or 'super-spreaders'). Identifying the factors behind this individual variability in susceptibility to pathogens and their spread (and therefore the risk of them contaminating other individuals) is a major issue for the health and management of wild and domestic species.
Over the last few decades, wild ungulate populations have increased in density and species are increasingly overlapping. At the same time, they are facing changes in their environment (climate, habitats and available food resources). In addition, most of these species are hunted, sometimes with strong hunting pressure and selection of the animals shot, which can lead to phenotypic and genetic changes in the population. The increased density of individuals and the overlapping of species are conducive to the transmission of pathogens between individuals. Similarly, poor body condition of individuals (e.g. high density, lack of resources) makes them more susceptible to parasitism.
Hosts are not the only ones affected by environmental change. These changes also affect the dynamics of parasite populations. The movement of people and animals and/or their interactions can lead to changes in existing parasite populations, such as the arrival or exchange of new species or treatment-resistant strains. In a world of variable environmental conditions and ever-increasing constraints, it is important to determine the causes of changes in the balance between the host and its parasites, as well as the consequences for the dynamics of host and parasite populations, in order to propose the most effective solutions.
- Resistance to anthelmintics and cross-transmission of parasites between domestic and wild ungulates
Gastrointestinal strongyles are cosmopolitan parasites of ungulates, causing production losses, clinical disorders and major economic losses in livestock. The development and use of antiparasitic molecules has been a major advance in animal health, initially leading to better control of parasitism and its medical and economic impact. However, their widespread and repeated use throughout the world has encouraged the development of parasite strains resistant to the main families of antiparasitics available (e.g. benzimidazoles [BDZ], macrocyclic lactones [LM]), with resistance levels that are sometimes very high and worrying for the livestock industry, particularly in small ruminants. BDZs have very high levels of resistance in small ruminants, but resistance to LMs and multi-drug resistance are increasingly being described.
As a result of ongoing global changes, contact between wildlife, domestic animals and humans is tending to increase. This means that wildlife can be contaminated by pathogens from domestic animals, including parasites that are pathogenic and/or resistant to anthelmintics, and in turn participate in their dissemination.
In recent work, we have been able to show the presence of BDZ-resistant parasites in significant proportions in ibex, despite the fact that sheep had been absent from pastures for several months. These results show that resistant strains are maintained in the environment and/or in ibex from one year to the next in the absence of sheep. This raises the question of the role of wildlife in the dynamics of resistant parasite strains: are they victims of contamination of their environment by domestic animals or are they more “responsible” for maintaining resistant strains (reservoir role)? Understanding the role of wildlife in the dynamics of resistant parasites at the domestic animal-wildlife interface is an important issue for integrative resistance management.
Publications
Display of 31 to 60 publications on 92 in total
From ecological roots to molecular determinants of orthonairovirus emergence
Journée Ecofect2 .
Conference paper
see the publicationA survey on anthelmintic efficacy in dairy goat farms in South East of France
13th International Conference on Goats .
Conference paper
see the publicationParasitized or non-parasitized, why? A study of factors influencing tick burden in roe deer neonates
PLoS ONE . 17 ( 7 ) : 18
Journal article
see the publicationNon-native Nematode Ashworthius sidemi Currently Dominates the Abomasal Parasite Community of Cervid Hosts in the Czech Republic
Frontiers in Veterinary Science . 9
Journal article
see the publicationMouflon Ovis gmelini Blyth, 1841
Terrestrial Cetartiodactyla . : 487-521
Book chapter
see the publicationNew insights into the past and recent evolutionary history of the Corsican mouflon (Ovis gmelini musimon) to inform its conservation
Conservation Genetics . 23 ( 1 ) : 91 - 107
Journal article
see the publicationEfficacy of a targeted selective treatment in dairy herds affected by clinical dictyocaulosis.
31st WORLD BUIATRICS CONGRESS .
Conference paper
see the publicationLack of efficacy of fenbendazole against Giardia duodenalis in a naturally infected population of dogs in France
Parasite . 29 : 49
Journal article
see the publicationPrevalence of major digestive and respiratory helminths in dogs and cats in France: results of a multicenter study
Parasites & Vectors . 15
Journal article
see the publicationGiardiose des carnivores domestiques. Diagnostic, traitement et prévention
Pratique Veterinaire . ( 190 ) : 34-37
Journal article
see the publicationÉvaluation des alternatives à la gestion médicamenteuse du parasitisme digestif chez les bovins : essai d’un bolus à base de plantes, de minéraux et de vitamines chez des génisses laitières en première saison de pâturage
Rencontres GTV Rhône-Alpes .
Conference paper
see the publicationBiologie et écologie des principales espèces de tiques chez les carnivores domestiques
Le Nouveau Praticien Vétérinaire. Canine-Féline . 18 ( 79 ) : 44-52
Journal article
see the publicationParasitic nematode abundance and diversity variation in bighorn sheep populations across southwestern Canada
28th International Conference of the World Association for the Advancement of Veterinary Parasitology .
Poster
see the publicationInteractions entre ruminants domestiques et sauvages - Parasitisme partagé et résistances
Journées Nationales des GTV .
Conference paper
see the publicationApports des technologies GPS et du biologging pour une meillleure compréhension de l’écologie des ongulés de montagne dans un contexte de changements globaux
38èmes Rencontres du GEEFSM .
Conference paper
see the publicationInvestigating the transmission of gastro intestinal nematodes between livestock and roe deer using deep sequencing analyses
69th WDA / 14th EWDA - Joint Virtual Conference, Aug 31 - Sept. 2, 2021 .
Conference paper
see the publicationITS-2 rDNA metabarcoding in two isolated populations of roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) reveals variation in the nemabiome among age classes
28th International Conference of the World Association for the Advancement of Veterinary Parasitology .
Conference paper
see the publicationTick risk in roe deer fawns : what links with environment and individual characteristics
69th WDA / 14th EWDA - Joint Virtual Conference .
Poster
see the publicationReproductive females and young mouflon ( Ovis gmelini musimon × Ovis sp.) in poor body condition are the main spreaders of gastrointestinal parasites
Parasitology . 148 ( 7 ) : 809-818
Journal article
see the publicationYoung and mature males have similar energy expenditure during the rut in a trophy-hunted population of Mediterranean mouflon
Mammalian Biology: Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde . 101 ( 1 ) : 35 - 42
Journal article
see the publicationReproductive females and young mouflon ( Ovis gmelini musimon × Ovis sp.) in poor body condition are the main spreaders of gastrointestinal parasites
Parasitology . 148 ( 7 ) : 809-818
Journal article
see the publicationParasitized, non-parasitized, why? A study of factors influencing tick burden in roe deer neonates
EvoLyon .
Poster
see the publicationMetabarcoding in two isolated populations of wild roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) reveals variation in gastrointestinal nematode community composition between regions and among age classes
Parasites & Vectors . 14 : 594
Journal article
see the publicationNote technique sur la reprise progressive des activités de médecine préventive à la levée du confinement le 11 mai – Gestion des protocoles vaccinaux
Revue Vétérinaire Clinique . 55 ( 3 ) : 73-93
Journal article
see the publicationEvidence for wild cervids as transmission vectors of small ruminant drug resistant gastrointestinal nematode parasites
American Association of Veterinary Parasitologists, 65th Annual Meeting .
Conference paper
see the publicationToxoplasmose, chat et femme enceinte
Pratique Veterinaire . ( 55 ) : 196-201
Journal article
see the publicationPrévalence des pathogènes portés par les tiques chez les ongulés de montagne dans 4 régions de France
37ème rencontres du GEEFSM .
Conference paper
see the publicationImmune senescence in two populations of a wild mammal, the roe deer
Annual Meeting ECOFECT .
Conference paper
see the publicationMaladies vectorisées par les tiques chez les ongulés sauvages de montagne : revue systématique
37èmes Rencontres du GEEFSM .
Conference paper
see the publicationUn cas d’echec de traitement sélectif de la dictyocaulose avec de l’éprinomectine injectable dans un troupeau de vaches laitières
Bulletin des G.T.V. . 94 : 105-114
Journal article
see the publication