Publications by authors named "P Clergeau"

Biomimicry is a design framework with growing interests in sustainable architectural and urban design practice. Nevertheless, there is a significant lack of studies and knowledge regarding its practical application. In 2020, a French workgroup called Biomim'City Lab published a document identifying and describing 16 urban projects designed by French teams integrating biomimicry at various levels.

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The world human population is more and more urban and cities have a strong impact on the biosphere. This explains the development of urban ecology. In this context, the goal of our work is fourfold: to describe the diversity of scientific questions in urban ecology, show how these questions are organized, to assess how these questions can be built in close interactions with stakeholders, to better understand the role urban ecology can play within ecological sciences.

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There is an increasing interest in measuring loss of phylogenetic diversity and evolutionary distinctiveness which together depict the evolutionary history of conservation interest. Those losses are assessed through the evolutionary relationships between species and species threat status or extinction probabilities. Yet, available information is not always sufficient to quantify the threat status of species that are then classified as data deficient.

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Interference competition has proved to be a factor of successful establishment of invasive species. This type of competition may have a stronger impact when native species have temporal niche overlap with the invasive species. The ring-necked parakeet has been successfully introduced in many countries and its interspecific agonistic behavior has already been reported.

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Article Synopsis
  • The Red-whiskered bulbul is a successful invasive species with notable morphological differences linked to its environment on Reunion Island, indicating a rapid capacity for local adaptation.
  • Researchers investigated the invasion histories of the bulbul populations on Reunion Island, Mauritius, and Oahu to understand the connection between these histories and the birds' morphological changes.
  • Findings revealed that while the invasive populations share a similar origin, their morphology has diverged, highlighting the influence of both neutral evolution and environmental adaptation on the species across different islands.
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