About
85
Publications
33,231
Reads
How we measure 'reads'
A 'read' is counted each time someone views a publication summary (such as the title, abstract, and list of authors), clicks on a figure, or views or downloads the full-text. Learn more
1,444
Citations
Introduction
My general interrests are behavioural and chemical filters that allow insects to detect, evaluate or recognize organisms with which they establish specific interactions. Mutualism and their hackers, parasitism and predation and their evolution are of particular interrest.
Phenotypic plasticity of behavioural and physiological traits as well as trade-offs in life history traits in the context of biotic and abiotic stresses are also some of my main interests
Current institution
Additional affiliations
December 2010 - November 2012
IRD
Position
- PostDoc Position
December 2008 - November 2010
September 2005 - August 2007
Publications
Publications (85)
Malaria mosquitoes mate in swarms, but how these swarms are formed and maintained remains poorly understood. We characterized three-dimensional spatiotemporal flight kinematics of Anopheles coluzzii males swarming at sunset above a ground marker. The location, shape, and volume of swarms were highly stereotypic, consistent over the complete swarmin...
Complex coordinated group behaviors such as bird flocking and fish schooling often rely on intricate interactions among individuals. In these groups, neighbors exhibit strong mutual attraction, alignment, and collision avoidance. Here, we tested whether insect swarms arise from similar simple behavioral rules. Using high-speed videography and agent...
Tsetse flies (Diptera: Glossinidae) are the cyclical vectors of human and animal trypanosomes. This viviparous insect develops and produces a single larva at 10-day intervals deposited in specific sites. In some species aggregation of larvae has been shown and seems to be mediated by both physical factors and volatile semiochemicals of larval origi...
Tsetse flies (Diptera: Glossinidae) are the cyclical vectors of human and animal trypanosomes. This viviparous insect develops and produces a single larva at 10-day intervals deposited in specific sites. In some species aggregation of larvae has been shown and seems to be mediated by both physical factors and volatile semiochemicals of larval origi...
Malaria mosquitoes mate in swarms. Here, they must rely on multiple sensory cues in shaping their individual responses, such as during mate recognition, swarm maintenance, and collision avoidance. While male mosquitoes are known to use faint female flight tones for recognizing their mates, the role of other sensory modalities remains less explored....
Anopheles mosquitoes mate at sunset in aerial swarms. The development of mating-based methods for effective malaria vector control requires a good knowledge of the flight behaviour of Anopheles species in mating swarms. However, the process of how swarms are formed and maintained remains poorly understood. Here, we characterized the three-dimension...
There was an error in J. Exp. Biol. (2022) 225, jeb243535 (doi:10.1242/jeb.243535).
The axis labels and key in Fig. 5C are incorrect. The corrected and original versions of Fig. 5C are shown below. Both the online full text and PDF versions of the paper have been corrected. The authors apologise to the readers for this error, which does not impact...
Cues involved in mate seeking and recognition prevent hybridization and can be involved in speciation processes. In malaria mosquitoes, females of the two sibling species Anopheles gambiae s.s. and An. coluzzii mate in monospecific male swarms and hybrids are rare. Long-range sex pheromones driving this behaviour have been debated in literature but...
Mosquitoes of many species mate in station-keeping swarms. Mating chases ensue as soon as a male detects the flight tones of a female with his auditory organs. Previous studies of hearing thresholds have mainly used electrophysiological methods that prevent the mosquito from flying naturally. The main aim of this study was to quantify behaviourally...
The mating behaviour of the malaria vector Anopheles gambiae complex is an important aspect of its reproduction biology. The success of mosquito release programmes based on genetic control of malaria crucially depends on competitive mating between both laboratory-reared and wild individuals, and populations from different localities. It is known th...
Mosquitoes of many species mate in station-keeping swarms. Mating chases ensue as soon as a male detects the flight tones of a female with his auditory organs. Previous studies of hearing thresholds have mainly used electrophysiological methods that prevent the mosquito from flying naturally. The main aim of this study was to quantify behaviourally...
Supplementary methods, supplementary information, supplementary figures, supplementary tables, Videos, Sounds
For species lacking parental care, selection of a suitable habitat for their offspring, with a limited predation risk, is important. The ability of two African malaria mosquito females to detect a predation threat for their larvae was assessed through an oviposition choice test design.
Our results suggest that gravid females of both Anopheles gambi...
Given the unsurpassed sound sensitivity of mosquitoes among arthropods and the sound source power required for long-range hearing, we investigated the distance over which female mosquitoes detect species-specific cues in the sound of station-keeping mating swarms. A common misunderstanding, that mosquitoes cannot hear at long range because their he...
1.Under predation stress, individuals increase their metabolic rate and adopt different resource allocation strategies to favor their direct survival to the detriment of growth, reproduction and self-maintenance. Species and sexes are both faced with different physiological and life history demands and should adopt different strategies which lead t...
1. Tsetse flies (Diptera: Glossinidae) are K‐strategist species and deposit a single larva at 10‐day intervals in specific sites. As larviposition site selection strongly impacts reproductive success, the selection of larviposition sites is unlikely to be random and will be subject to strong selective processes, probably mediated by specific cues....
Given the unsurpassed sound-sensitivity of mosquitoes among arthropods and the sound-source power required for long-range hearing, we investigated the distance over which female mosquitoes detect species-specific cues in the sound of station-keeping mating swarms. A common misunderstanding, that mosquitoes cannot hear at long-range because their he...
A bstract
Cues involved in mate seeking and recognition prevent hybridization and can be involved in speciation processes. In malaria mosquitoes, females of the two sibling species Anopheles gambiae s.s. and An. coluzzii mate in monospecific male swarms and hybrids are rare. Long-range sex pheromones driving this behavior have been debated in liter...
Background:
The sterile insect technique (SIT) is a vector control strategy relying on the mass release of sterile males into wild vector populations. Current sex separation techniques are not fully efficient and could lead to the release of a small proportion of females. It is therefore important to evaluate the effect of irradiation on the abili...
1. Tsetse flies (Diptera: Glossinidae) are K‐strategist species and deposit a single larva at 10‐day intervals in specific sites. As larviposition site selection strongly impacts reproductive success, the selection of larviposition sites is unlikely to be random and will be subject to strong selective processes, probably mediated by specific cues.2...
Background:
Mating swarm segregation in closely related insect species may contribute to reproductive isolation. Visual markers are used for swarm formation; however, it is unknown whether they play a key role in swarm location, species segregation and sex aggregation.
Methods:
Using two sympatric closely related species of the Anopheles gambiae...
Tsetse flies ( Diptera: Glossinidae ) are the cyclical vectors of trypanosomes, the causative agents of African animal trypanosomosis or nagana in animals and human African trypanosomosis or sleeping sickness in humans. Tsetse flies are K-strategist species with the deposition of a single larva at 10 days intervals in specific sites. As larvipositi...
Background:
The recent resurgence of interest in sterile insect techniques to control vector mosquitoes has renewed interest in novel methods for observing mating behavior. Malarial vectors of the Anopheles gambiae complex are known to mate in swarms at specific locations at dawn and dusk. Most knowledge of mosquito swarming behavior is derived fr...
Abstract The role of aquatic predators in controlling the anopheline aquatic stage has been known for decades. Recently, studies have highlighted that exposition to predation stress during aquatic development can have a profound impact on life-history traits (e.g. growth rate, fecundity and longevity) and consequently on the ability of adults to tr...
No PDF available
ABSTRACT
Males of many mosquito species aggregate in station-keeping swarms, waiting for the arrival of conspecific females to mate with. We test whether audition could be used by a female to locate male swarms and to assess whether the males are conspecific. The sound level resulting from thousands of wing flaps could be loud enou...
Background
The sterile insect technique (SIT) aims at suppressing or decreasing insect pest populations by introducing sterile insects into wild populations. SIT requires the mass-production of insects and their sterilization through, for example, radiation. However, both mass-rearing and radiation can affect the life history traits of insects maki...
Reflex bleeding is an effective defensive mechanism against predators. When attacked, some insects emit hemolymph, which coagulates, quickly entangling their aggressor. Bleeding occurs at weak intersegmental membranes or through dedicated organs which can be associated or not with glandular cells. Here, we describe the behavior and morphological st...
Species engaged in multiple, simultaneous mutualisms are subject to tradeoffs in their mutualistic investment if the traits involved in each interaction are overlapping, which can lead to conflicts and affect the longevity of these associations. We investigate this issue via a tripartite mutualism involving an ant plant, two competing ant species a...
Exposure to stress during an insect’s larval development can have carry-over effects on adult life history
traits and susceptibility to pathogens. We investigated the effects of larval nutritional stress for the
first time using field mosquito vectors and malaria parasites. In contrast to previous studies, we show
that larval nutritional stress may...
Accumulating evidence indicates that species interactions such as competition and predation can indirectly alter interactions with other community members, including parasites. For example, presence of predators can induce behavioural defences in the prey, resulting in a change in susceptibility to parasites. Such predator-induced phenotypic change...
Supercolonies of the red fire ant Solenopsis saevissima (Smith) develop in disturbed environments and likely alter the ant community in the native range of the species. For example, in French Guiana only 8 ant species were repeatedly noted as nesting in close vicinity to its mounds. Here, we verified if a shared set of biological, ecological, and b...
Background
Understanding the factors that account for male mating competitiveness is critical to the development of the sterile insect technique (SIT). Here, the effects of partial sterilization with 90 Gy of radiation on sexual competitiveness of Anopheles coluzzii allowed to mate in different ratios of sterile to untreated males have been assesse...
In the Neotropics where it was introduced, the invasive ant Pheidole megacephala counterattacked raids by the army ants Eciton burchellii or E. hamatum. The Eciton workers that returned to their bivouac were attacked and spread-eagled and most of them killed by their outgoing colony-mates. Little by little the zone where returning and outgoing Ecit...
Predation is a major evolutionary force driving speciation. The threat-sensitive response hypothesis predicts that prey adjust and balance the time spent on a costly anti-predator response with other activities that enhance their fitness. Thus, prey able to develop an anti-predator response proportional to risk intensity should have a selective adv...
We tested if nesting habits influence ant feeding preferences and predatory behavior in the monophyletic genus Pseudomyrmex (Pseudomyrmecinae) which comprises terrestrial and arboreal species, and, among the latter, plant-ants which are obligate inhabitants of myrmecophytes (i.e., plants sheltering so-called plant-ants in hollow structures). A cafe...
The diversion of a host’s energy by a symbiont for its own benefit is a major source of instability in horizontally-transmitted mutualisms. This instability can be counter-balanced by the host’s retaliation against exploiters. Such responses are crucial to the maintenance of the relationship. We focus on this issue in an obligate ant–plant mutualis...
Supercolonies of the red fire ant Solenopsis saevissima (Smith) develop in disturbed environments and likely alter the ant community in the native range of the species. For example, in French Guiana only eight ant species were repeatedly noted as nesting in close vicinity to its mounds. Here, we verified if a shared set of biological, ecological an...
Predation has been shown to play a key role in structuring communities and can have a direct impact on prey species range and distribution. Furthermore, predation is a major selective force fostering the evolution of morphological and behavioural characteristics of animals, and may ultimately drive diversification and speciation. In West Africa, li...
Zelus annulosus is an assassin bug species mostly 28 noted on Hirtella physophora, a myrmecophyte specifically associated with the ant Allomerus decemarticulatus known to build traps on host tree twigs to ambush insect prey. The females lay egg clutches protected by a sticky substance. To avoid being trapped, the first three instars of Z. annulosus...
1. Predation is a major evolutionary force driving speciation. Identifying the stimuli prompting anti-predator responses is essential for unravelling the proximate mechanisms of anti-predator adaptations and in understanding how predation impacts species diversification.
2. Here, we explore for the first time the divergence in the use of cues of pr...
Mutualisms, or interactions between species that lead to net fitness benefits for each species involved, are stable and ubiquitous in nature mostly due to "byproduct benefits" stemming from the intrinsic traits of one partner that generate an indirect and positive outcome for the other. Here we verify if myrmecotrophy (where plants obtain nutrients...
In the mutualisms involving the myrmecophyte Cecropia obtusa and Azteca ovaticeps or A. alfari, both predatory, the ants defend their host trees from enemies and provide them with nutrients (myrmecotrophy). A. ovaticeps provisioned with prey and then (15)N-enriched food produced more individuals than did control colonies (not artificially provision...
Here we show that trying to rob prey (cleptobiosis) from a highly specialized predatory ant species is risky. To capture prey, Allomerus decemarticulatus workers build gallery-shaped traps on the stems of their associated myrmecophyte, Hirtella physophora. We wondered whether the frequent presence of immobilized prey on the trap attracted flying cl...
Myrmecophiles are species that usually have developed specialized traits to cope with the aggressiveness of ants enabling them to live in their vicinity. Many coccinellid species are predators of Hemiptera; the latter is also often protected by ants. Therefore these ladybirds frequently interact with ants, and some species have become myrmecophilou...
Caterpillars on Cecropia treelets. a Upper part of a young Cecropia obtusa sheltering Pseudocabina guianalis caterpillars. Strands of silk produced by the caterpillars keep the stipules of two leaves against the trunk (yellow arrow). An entrance hole gnawed by a caterpillar is visible (white arrow). Note that the leaves were not attacked by defolia...
In mutualisms, each interacting species obtains resources from its partner that it would obtain less efficiently if alone, and so derives a net fitness benefit. In exchange for shelter (domatia) and food, mutualistic plant-ants protect their host myrmecophytes from herbivores, encroaching vines and fungal pathogens. Although selective filters enabl...
The algae Bumilleriopsis sp. under light microscopy (A) and epifluorescence microscopy (B) found in the tanks of Vriesea splendens and Catopsis berteroniana located on the inselberg of the Nouragues Research Station, French Guiana. Red color in (B) is due to the autofluorescence of chlorophyll a content under blue light excitation. Bars represent 5...
Mean abundances (± SD) of aquatic microbial communities in five species of tank-bromeliads situated in the Neotropical primary rainforest around the Nouragues Research Station, French Guiana.
(DOC)
We assessed the occurrence of algae in five species of tank-bromeliads found in contrasting environmental sites in a Neotropical, primary rainforest around the Nouragues Research Station, French Guiana. The distributions of both algal abundance and biomass were examined based on physical parameters, the morphological characteristics of bromeliad sp...
To determine if a type of unicoloniality exists in the fire ant Solenopsis saevissima in its native range, we conducted intraspecific aggressiveness tests in French Guiana between workers originating from 15 human-disturbed sites. We identified two "colonial groups" spread over 54 km and 12.5 km, respectively. Workers from the same group never atta...
Climatic changes result in an increased in mean temperature and in a higher incidence of extreme
weather events such as heat and cold waves. For ectotherms, such as insect parasitoids, the ability to remain active under extreme climatic conditions is a significant key to fitness. The body size of individuals, and in particular their surface to volum...
Because insects are ectotherms, their physiology, behaviour and fitness are influenced by the ambient temperature. Any changes in environmental temperatures may impact the fitness and life history traits of insects and, thus, affect population dynamics. Here, we experimentally tested the impact of heat shock on the fitness and life history traits o...
Myrmecophytes offer plant-ants a nesting place in exchange for protection from their enemies, particularly defoliators. These obligate ant-plant mutualisms are common model systems for studying factors that allow horizontally transmitted mutualisms to persist since parasites of ant-myrmecophyte mutualisms exploit the rewards provided by host plants...
Tropical plants frequently live in association with ants that protect their foliage from defoliators. Among them, myrmecophytes have evolved mutualisms with a limited number of plant-ants that they shelter and feed, and, in return, benefit from some protection. Hirtella physophora (Chrysobalanaceae), for example, houses Allomerus decemarticulatus (...
Plant-ants live in a mutualistic association with host plants known as "myrmecophytes" that provide them with a nesting place and sometimes with extra-floral nectar (EFN) and/or food bodies (FBs); the ants can also attend sap-sucking Hemiptera for their honeydew. In return, plant-ants, like most other arboreal ants, protect their host plants from d...
Video showing the capture of a moth.
(8.87 MB MOV)
In Oecophylla, an ant genus comprising two territorially dominant arboreal species, workers are known to (1) use anal spots to mark their territories, (2) drag their gaster along the substrate to deposit short-range recruitment trails, and (3) drag the extruded rectal gland along the substrate to deposit the trails used in long-range recruitment. H...
A variety of arthropods, particularly insects, have developed myrmecophilous interactions with ants to gain access to resources and/or for protection. Among these myrmecophiles, only a few examples have been documented in the Coccinellidae, most of them involving species able to feed on ant-tended Hemiptera. We report here a new case of obligate my...
Interspecific relationships among insects are often mediated by chemical cues, including non-volatile cuticular compounds. Most of these compounds are hydrocarbons that necessitate the use of solvents for their extraction, identification, and manipulation during behavioral assays. The toxicity of these solvents often precludes the removal and reapp...
The ontogeny of the cuticular hydrocarbons of three dipterans of importance to forensic entomology, Calliphora vomitoria (Linné), Calliphora vicina (Robineau-Desvoidy) and Protophormia terraenovae (Robineau-Desvoidy) (Diptera: Calliphoridae), was explored using gas chromatography analysis. The stages examined ranged from eggs to 8-day-old adults. C...
The diamondback moth (DBM), Plutella xylostella (L.) is considered as the most destructive pest of Brassicaceae crops world-wide. Its migratory capacities and development of insecticide resistance in many populations leads to more difficulties for population management. To control movement of populations and apparitions of resistance carried by res...
Cotesia plutellae is a specialist parasitoid of Plutella xylostella. This specificity is potentially under the control of several factors before and after oviposition. Thereby, the stimuli
that lead female parasitoids to host locations and to oviposition, might be at the basis of the specificity. We explore here
the response of C. plutellae females...
Parasitoid wasps lay their eggs in or on the body of their hosts, mostly arthropods. This paper presents the antennal sensilla used by female parasitoids to locate and evaluate these hosts. A variety of olfactory,
gustatory (taste), mechanoreceptor (tactile) and thermo-hygroreceptive sensilla can be found on the
antennae of female parasitoids. The...
Genetic variation among 14 populations of Plutella xylostella (Linnaeus) from USA (Geneva, New York), Brazil (Brasilia), Japan (Okayama), The Philippines (Caragan de Oyo), Uzbekistan (Tashkent), France (Montpellier), Benin (Cotonou), South Africa (Johannesburg), Réunion Island (Montvert), and five localities in Australia (Adelaide, Brisbane, Mareeb...
Cuticular compounds of three species of blowfly, Calliphora vomitoria (Linnaeus), Calliphora vicina (Robineau-Desvoidy) and Protophormia terraenovae (Robineau-Desvoidy), were analysed during ontogeny (eggs to 8-day-old adults) by gas chromatography. Discrimination among species is mainly due to quantitative rather than qualitative variations. Two d...
Behaviour of the larval dispersal of Calliphoridae flies prior pupation was often noted in
the literature but rarely investigated statistically. The aim of this study was to explore with original mathematical tools such larval dispersal of a necrophagous Diptera: Protophormia terraenovae (Robineau-Desvoidy 1830) (Calliphoridae, Chrysomyiinae). The...
Although several species of the genus Cotesia are used in biological control programs against insect caterpillars throughout the world, little is known of their oviposition behavior. We describe here the types and distribution of antennal sensilla in Cotesia plutellae, a larval parasitoid of Plutella xylostella, and we analyze its oviposition behav...
Questions
Questions (9)
I would like to know if someone knows an insect species known for it absence of sexual pheromone
I would like to video-record insects under IR light (850nm) in a way to see insects white on a dark background. However, a black material is prohibited because it impact the behavior I would like to observe. Consequently I am searching for a white, light grey or transparent material which does not reflect IR.
Does anybody know where I can find very large fresnel lenses (at least 1m x 1m) with an optical quality (not for solar use)?
I would like to measure the oxidative stress in a mosquito. I plan to measure the total anti-oxidant capacity and at least one damage (on DNA, proteins or lipids). Among DNA, proteins and lipids, which one is the most susceptible to oxidation?
Hello,
I would like to make a mosquito diet (for adults) including different vitamins. However, some of these vitamins are not soluble in water. I would like to use an emulsifier like Polysorbate 80 (or tween®80) to stabilize the mixture.
Does someone know if Polysorbate was already used in mosquito diet?
What is the ideal proportion of Plysorbate/water in the mixture?
Thanks in advance