Publications by authors named "Pierre Elie"

Article Synopsis
  • Some fish like salmon and eels can live in both fresh water and the ocean and have a special way of reproducing called semelparity, where they only breed once before they die.
  • The timing of when these fish mature can change based on things like how many fish are around, danger from predators, and the costs of breeding.
  • In a study of European eels, it was found that if the eels grow slowly, they mature faster and leave their home waters to spawn, and eels that grow well tend to get bigger before they migrate to breed.
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Identifying specific effects of contaminants in a multi-stress field context remain a challenge in ecotoxicology. In this context, "omics" technologies, by allowing the simultaneous measurement of numerous biological endpoints, could help unravel the in situ toxicity of contaminants. In this study, wild Atlantic eels were sampled in 8 sites presenting a broad contamination gradient in France and Canada.

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There is increasing evidence that pollutants may cause diseases via epigenetic modifications. Epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation participate in the regulation of gene transcription. Surprisingly, epigenetics research is still limited in ecotoxicology.

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Since the 1980s, the eel population has been decreasing dangerously. Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) such as Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs) are one of the suspected causes of this decline. A preliminary study of PCB contamination carried out on different fish from the Gironde estuary (southwest of France, Europe) has shown a relatively high level of contamination of eel muscles.

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Shrimps of the Palaemon genus have been affected for over 15 years by a problem of exoskeletal deformities, particularly in the Gironde estuary (France). Given the large numbers of individuals affected, this study focus on a better description of the phenomenon to estimate its impact on shrimps. This study, on Palaemon longirostris and Palaemon macrodactylus, is based on samples collected from 1992 to 2007 in the Gironde estuary with particular focus on the year 2007, and on a 4-month rearing of adult shrimps in experimental system.

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Article Synopsis
  • - European eels are facing serious extinction threats, with pollution, specifically cadmium (Cd), identified as a contributing factor affecting their reproductive health.
  • - Research indicates that Cd pre-exposure disrupts ovarian development in female eels by impairing the up-regulation of genes responsible for mitochondrial metabolism, leading to underdeveloped oocytes and increased mortality.
  • - The study found that cadmium exposure triggers a rise in metallothioneins (MTs), proteins that help manage metal stress; however, this response is linked to elevated cadmium levels in the gonads and indicates a pathological adaptation rather than a healthy developmental process.
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The European eel (Anguilla anguilla L.) is severely threatened with extinction. Surprisingly, even though their unusual life cycle makes them particularly vulnerable to pollution, the possible contribution of contamination remains especially poorly known.

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Due to its status of threatened species and being heavily contaminated by metals, the European eel (Anguilla anguilla) was selected to investigate cadmium contamination levels of fish settled along a historically cadmium-contaminated hydrosystem, the Garonne-Gironde continuum (France), according to its various location sites and fish length. Results have shown an important site effect on cadmium concentrations in liver but not in gills, highlighting the possible predominance of the trophic exposure route. Subsequently, uncontaminated eels were experimentally exposed to cadmium by water uptake and/or trophic route(s).

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In order to decipher movements during freshwater eel colonization, we experimentally characterized individual locomotor behavior of two eel life history stages: elvers and yellow eels. A ramp located at the flume tank upstream side required a specific locomotor behavior to be ascended. Placing individually tagged eels in the middle of the tank three times successively tested behavioral consistency.

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European eel (Anguilla anguilla) populations are in decline. Glass eel recruitment has fallen 10-fold since the early 1980s. Estuaries play a fundamental role in the life history of eels because glass eels must pass through them to reach freshwater ecosystems.

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Because European silver eels (Anguilla anguilla) fast during their reproductive migration to the Sargasso Sea, the successful completion of their unusual life cycle depends on quantity of lipids stored beforehand. These lipids are mainly accumulated during the growth phase stage of the animals, called yellow eel, as triglycerides in muscle. They are then catabolized to provide sufficient energy to enable migration, gonad maturation and spawning.

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Pituitary gonadotropins, luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) are, in teleosts as in mammals, under the control of hypothalamic factors and steroid feedbacks. In teleosts, feedback regulations largely vary depending on species and physiological stage. In the present study the regulation of FSH and LH expression was investigated in the European eel, a fish of biological and phylogenetical interest as a representative of an early group of teleosts.

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Dispersal, one of the most important processes in population ecology, is an issue linking physiological and behavioral features. However, the endocrine control of animal dispersal remains poorly understood. Here, we tested whether and how thyroid hormones may influence dispersal in glass eels of Anguilla anguilla, by testing their influence on locomotor activity and rheotactic behavior.

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