Evolution, Behaviour, Adaptation Group
Members
Maîtresse de conférences
UCBL
Tel: 33 04 72 43 26 33
Assistante ingénieure CDD
CNRS
Doctorante
CNRS
Professeure des universités
VetAgro-Sup
Tel: 04 78 87 25 71
Maîtresse de conférences
UCBL
Tel: 04 72 44 80 67
Professeur des universités
UCBL
Tel: 33 04 72 43 26 33
Directrice de recherche
CNRS
Tel: 33 04 72 43 14 04
Chargée de recherche
CNRS
Tel: 04 72 44 81 42
Post-doc
UCBL
Maître de conférences
UCBL
Tel: 33 04 72 43 13 37
Maîtresse de conférences
UCBL
Tel: 04 72 43 12 86
Directrice de recherche
CNRS
Tel: 33 04 72 43 29 10
Doctorant
UCBL
Tel: 04 72 44 81 42
Doctorante
UCBL
Professeur des universités
UCBL
Tel: 33 04 72 43 29 03
Directeur de recherche
CNRS
Tel: 04 72 44 81 42
Maître de conférences
UCBL
Tel: 33 04 72 43 27 85
Post-doc
UCBL
The Evolution, Adaptation and Behavior group aims at studying the evolution of phenotypic and behavioral traits through a combination of long-term monitoring of natural populations, of field and lab experiments, of molecular analyses, and of mathematical and computational modeling. Our research mainly focuses on animals, in particular mammals (alpine marmot, giraffe), birds (white-throated dipper, collared flycatcher, great tit) and insects (various Drosophila species, the parasitoid wasp Venturia canescens).
We study the evolution of fitness-related traits in interaction, either selective or plastic, with an individual’s biotic and abiotic environment. Interactions between individuals have a special importance in our reasoning and are thus the object of a first axis of research on group dynamics and social interactions. We also consider the environment as providing resources and informative signals through two other axes, one on phenotypic plasticity and the other on resource allocation and the sensitivity to environmental variables. In both, we consider the impact of stress factors caused by human activities — such as global warming, artificial lighting or invading species — or by the presence of pathogens.
Group dynamics and social interaction. The environment encountered by numerous animals contains, on top of resources and other elements, other individuals. Social interactions vary immensely between species, from a solitary lifestyle to such an extreme degree of cooperation that a part of the group sacrifices their reproduction at the benefit of others, specialized in this task. In this axis, we try to understand how groups form and how social structures are maintained, at various scales extending from unicellular organisms to cooperative mammals.
Here are a few examples of questions that we address:
- Evolution of sociality: what are the consequences of climate change on the benefits of group living (in the alpine marmot)? How does that impact group composition and the probability and age of dispersal?
- Group dynamics: how does the size and composition of familial groups evolve in the context of climate change? In giraffes, how do temporary groups form, and what role do kinship play in the probability and duration of pairing?
- Which evolutionary trajectories have led to multicellular organisms expressing differentiated cell types, a part of which sacrifice their reproduction?
- What are the neurogenomic determinants that signal the presence of related individuals in solitary individuals, triggering altruistic behaviors?
Phenotypic plasticity. Evolution by natural selection can drive phenotype changes on short timescales, in the order of a few generations. Yet it remains inefficient to track more frequent environmental changes. Phenotypic plasticity is a means to buffer such environmental variations, either through informed decisions or fixed reaction norms, which are the object of study in this axis.
Here are a few examples of questions that we address:
- How do individual characteristics, in particular personality traits, shape the use of information on the environment for decision-making?
- Is there a trade-off between the speed of decision making and its accuracy? What conditions favor genotypes that make fast, error-prone decisions, or slower, more accurate genotypes?
- What types of environmental variations select for plastic genotypes?
- Do changes in gene expression observed during environmental fluctuations induce behavioral changes?
Resource allocation and sensitivity to environmental variables. Organisms make other decisions throughout their lives as they decide how much resources to allocate to various traits, such as survival, growth, reproduction or immunity. This differential allocation of resources relies on complex systems, or instance the endocrine system in animals, that we study. These systems can be disturbed by anthropogenic changes that disrupt the long-term ecological setting in which they have evolves, resulting in major phenotype perturbations.
Here are a few examples of questions that we address:
- How do endocrine systems — that allow the communication between tissues and control the differential allocation of resources — evolve?
- How do chemical pollutants affect physiological processes, ageing and thereby life-history strategies in response to environmental variation?
- What role do climatic fluctuations play in the heterogeneity of parasite infection, especially at stages that go through the external environment?
Publications
Display of 421 to 449 publications on 449 in total
Oviposition pattern of phytophagous insects: on the importance of host population heterogeneity.
Oecologia . 114 : 382-388
Journal article
see the publicationDesiccation and starvation tolerance of adults Drosophila : opposite latitudinal clines in natural populations of three different species
Evolution - International Journal of Organic Evolution . 52 : 825-831
Journal article
see the publicationSelection of fruits for oviposition by the chestnut weevil Curculio elephas
Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata . 86 : 71-78
Journal article
see the publicationLight body pigmentation in Indian D. melanogaster : a likely adaptation to a hot and arid climate
Journal of Genetics . 77 : 13-20
Journal article
see the publicationDescribing the evolution of reaction norm shape : body pigmentation in Drosophila
Evolution - International Journal of Organic Evolution . 52 : 1501-1506
Journal article
see the publicationPhenotypic plasticity of body pigmentation in Drosophila : correlated variations between segments
Genetics Selection Evolution . 30 : 181-194
Journal article
see the publicationPhenotypic plasticity and developmental temperature in Drosophila : analysis and significance of reaction norms of morphometrical traits
Journal of Thermal Biology . 22 : 441-451
Journal article
see the publicationGenetic variability of quantitative traits in Drosophila melanogaster (fruit fly) natural populations: analysis of wild-living flies and of several laboratory generations
Heredity . 80 : 326-335
Journal article
see the publicationCold stress tolerance in Drosophila : analysis of chill coma recovery in D. melanogaster
Journal of Thermal Biology . 5 : 291-299
Journal article
see the publicationStratégies de ponte et traits d`histoire de vie chez les insectes
incollection . -- : 445-450
Journal article
see the publicationEffect of temperature and photoperiod on diapause development in a Douglas fir seed chalcid Megastigmus spermotrophus
Oecologia . 111 : 172-177
Journal article
see the publicationEffect of temperature and photoperiod on diapause development in a Douglas fir seed chalcid, Megastigmus spermotrophus
Oecologia . ( 111 ) : 172-177
Journal article
see the publicationBalanced dispersal between spatially varying local populations: an alternative to the source-sink model
The American Naturalist . 150 : 425-445
Journal article
see the publicationThoracic trident pigmentation in Drosophila melanogaster : latitudinal and altitudinal clines in Indian populations
Genetics Selection Evolution . 29 : 601-610
Journal article
see the publicationEvolutionary changes of non linear reaction norms according to thermal adaptation : a comparison of two Drosophila species
Comptes rendus de l’Académie des sciences. Série III, Sciences de la vie . 320 : 833-841
Journal article
see the publicationLatitudinal clines for morphometrical traits in Drosophila kikkawai : a study of natural populations from the Indian subcontinent
Genetical Research . 71 : 31-38
Journal article
see the publicationLa ponte chez le balanin de la châtaigne /Curculio elephas/ (Gyll.) (Coléoptère : Curculionidae)
Annales de la Société Entomologique de France . 32 : 445-450
Journal article
see the publicationInterference at several temporal scales between two chestnut insects
Oecologia . 108 : 151-158
Journal article
see the publicationCold Shock and Cold Acclimation Proteins in the Psychrotrophic Bacterium Arthrobacter globiformis SI55
Journal of Bacteriology . 178 ( 11 ) : 2999-3007
Journal article
see the publicationDrosophilids from an arid Afrotropical country the Republic of the Niger : faunistics and phenotypic plasticity
Drosophila Information Service . 77 : 115-117
Journal article
see the publicationCold shock and cold acclimation proteins in the psychrotrophic bacterium Arthrobacter globiformis SI 55
Journal of Bacteriology . 178 ( 11 ) : 2999-3007
Journal article
see the publicationGrowth temperature and adult pigmentation in two Drosophila sibling species : an adaptive convergence of reaction norms in sympatric populations ?
Evolution - International Journal of Organic Evolution . 50 : 2346-2353
Journal article
see the publicationNew discriminating traits between females of two sibling species: textit Drosophila melanogaster and D. simulans (Diptera Drosophilidae)
Annales de la Société Entomologique de France . 31 : 249-257
Journal article
see the publicationLarval development variation and adult emergence in the chestnut weevil Curculio elephas Gyllenhal (Col. Curculionidae)
J. Appl. Ent. . 119 : 279-284
Journal article
see the publicationStrategies of emergence in the chestnut weevil Curculio elephas (Coleoptera: Curculionidae)
Oecologia . 96 : 383-390
Journal article
see the publicationDiapause development in the chesnut weevil Curculio elephas
Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata . 69 : 91-96
Journal article
see the publicationCoin-flipping plasticity and prolonged diapause in insects : example of the chestnut weevil Curculio elephas (Coleoptera: Curculionidae)
Oecologia . 93 : 367-373
Journal article
see the publicationDiapause prolongée et démographie chez le Balanin de la châtaigne Curculio elephas Gyll. (Col. Curculionidae)
incollection . 52 : 151-158
Journal article
see the publication
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