20 results match your criteria: "Centre Manche-Mer du Nord[Affiliation]"

Objectives: Existing information on Arctic marine food web structure is fragmented. Integrating data across research programs is an important strategy for building a baseline understanding of food web structure and function in many Arctic regions. Naturally-occurring stable isotope ratios of nitrogen (δN) and carbon (δC) measured directly in the tissues of organisms are a commonly-employed method for estimating food web structure.

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Plasticity of trophic interactions in fish assemblages results in temporal stability of benthic-pelagic couplings.

Mar Environ Res

August 2021

Univ. Lille, CNRS, Univ. Littoral Côte d'Opale, UMR 8187, LOG, Laboratoire d'Océanologie et de Géosciences, station marine de Wimereux, F-59000, Lille, France.

Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how fish populations in the Eastern English Channel (EEC) are influenced by the interactions between pelagic (water column) and benthic (seafloor) habitats over five different time periods.
  • - It uses stable isotope analysis to evaluate the sources of organic matter that support fish communities and highlights that these couplings are consistent due to shallow waters and adaptable feeding behaviors.
  • - The research reveals that changes in fish species compositions do not disrupt these couplings, as many dominant species can utilize a variety of resources, enhancing our understanding of energy transfer within the ecosystem.
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Mercury (Hg) is a contaminant of global concern in marine ecosystems, notably due to its ability to accumulate and concentrate in food webs. Concentrations of total mercury (THg), methylmercury (MeHg) and inorganic mercury (IHg) were assessed and compared in different tissues (liver, muscle, and gonads) of three common fish species (hake Merluccius merluccius, red mullet Mullus surmuletus, and sole Solea solea) from the continental shelf from the southern part of the Bay of Biscay. Several studies investigated Hg concentration in fish muscle, but few assessed concentrations in other organs, despite the importance of such data to understand contaminant organotropism and metabolization.

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Article Synopsis
  • Understanding trophic interactions is vital for managing marine ecosystems, and this study focuses on the feeding behavior of whiting fish in the Eastern English Channel and Southern North Sea.
  • Researchers used stable isotopes and stomach content analyses to evaluate how the diet of whiting changes with age and season, revealing a shift from crustaceans to fish and cephalopods as they grow.
  • Results showed variations in nitrogen isotopes related to fish size and seasonal feeding patterns, emphasizing the need for integrated methods to better understand marine food webs.
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Organisms are exposed to various stressors including parasites and micropollutants. Their combined effects are hard to predict. This study assessed the trophic relationship, micropollutants bioaccumulation and infection degree in a host-parasite couple.

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The Southern Ocean (SO) is among the regions on Earth that are undergoing regionally the fastest environmental changes. The unique ecological features of its marine life make it particularly vulnerable to the multiple effects of climate change. A network of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) has started to be implemented in the SO to protect marine ecosystems.

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Use of fish otoliths as a temporal biomarker of field uranium exposure.

Sci Total Environ

November 2019

Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûreté Nucléaire (IRSN), PSE-ENV/SRTE/LECO, Cadarache, Saint Paul-lez-Durance 13115, France. Electronic address:

This study aimed to determine uranium (U) pollution over time using otoliths as a marker of fish U contamination. Experiments were performed in field contamination (~20 μg L: encaged fish: 15d, 50d and collected wild fish) and in laboratory exposure conditions (20 and 250 μg L, 20d). We reported the U seasonal concentrations in field waterborne exposed roach fish (Rutilus rutilus), in organs and otoliths.

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Temperature and individual egg size have been long studied in the development of fishes because of their direct effects on individual fitness. Here we studied the combined effects of three important factors for fish development, i.e.

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[Strengths, weaknesses, and opportunities of French research in trophic ecology].

C R Biol

October 2018

GDR CNRS 3716 GRET, Groupe de recherche en écologie trophique, 63170 Aubière, France; Université Clermont Auvergne, CNRS, LMGE, 63000 Clermont-Ferrand, France.

The French National Institute of Ecology and Environment (INEE) aims at fostering pluridisciplinarity in Environmental Science and, for that purpose, funds ex muros research groups (GDR) on thematic topics. Trophic ecology has been identified as a scientific field in ecology that would greatly benefit from such networking activity, as being profoundly scattered. This has motivated the seeding of a GDR, entitled "GRET".

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Environmental conditions, to which organisms are exposed during all their life, may cause possible adaptive responses with consequences in their subsequent life-history trajectory. The objective of this study was to investigate whether ecologically relevant combinations of hypoxia (40% and 100% air saturation) and temperature (15° and 20 °C), occurring during the larval period of European sea bass larvae (Dicentrarchus labrax), could have long-lasting impacts on the physiology of resulting juveniles. Hypoxic challenge tests were performed over one year to give an integrative evaluation of physiological performance.

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Realized niche analysis of phytoplankton communities involving HAB: Phaeocystis spp. as a case study.

Harmful Algae

February 2018

Univ. Lille, CNRS, Univ. Littoral Côte d'Opale, UMR 8187, LOG Laboratoire d'Océanologie et Géosciences, F 62930 Wimereux, France; Ifremer, Laboratoire Ressources Halieutiques, 150 Quai Gambetta BP 699, F-62321 Boulogne sur mer, France.

The link between harmful algal blooms, phytoplankton community dynamics and global environmental change is not well understood. To tackle this challenging question, a new method was used to reveal how phytoplankton communities responded to environmental change with the occurrence of an harmful algae, using the coastal waters of the eastern English Channel as a case study. The great interannual variability in the magnitude and intensity of Phaeocystis spp.

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Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) are persistent organic pollutants that have been shown to affect fish life-history traits such as reproductive success, growth and survival. At the individual level, their toxicity and underlying mechanisms of action have been studied through experimental exposure. However, the number of experimental studies approaching marine environmental situations is scarce, i.

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Whether considered as a risk for human health or as ecological tracers, contaminants' concentrations measured in fish muscles are commonly expressed relative to wet or dry mass. Comparison of results required conversion factors (CF) but accurate values are scarce and case-specific. The present paper is aimed at investigating errors linked with the use of the theoretical value.

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In June 2015, an individual of Diretmichthys parini (Post and Quero, 1981) was trawled at 530m depth, in the North Sea off Norway and donated to research. This capture, the first for this species in the North Sea was the northernmost recorded so far, and provided an opportunity to document some aspects of the biology and ecology of this data-poor species. This individual was a female, 331mm total length of 33years old, with low mercury content in muscle and liver (~0.

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Setting population targets for mammals using body mass as a predictor of population persistence.

Conserv Biol

April 2017

Department of Environmental Science, Institute for Wetland and Water Research, Faculty of Science, Radboud University, P.O. Box 9010, NL-6500 GL, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.

Conservation planning and biodiversity assessments need quantitative targets to optimize planning options and assess the adequacy of current species protection. However, targets aiming at persistence require population-specific data, which limit their use in favor of fixed and nonspecific targets, likely leading to unequal distribution of conservation efforts among species. We devised a method to derive equitable population targets; that is, quantitative targets of population size that ensure equal probabilities of persistence across a set of species and that can be easily inferred from species-specific traits.

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Article Synopsis
  • Deep marine ecosystems, despite being far from pollution sources, can still be affected by contaminants like PCBs, as seen in species of fish and sharks from the Gulf of Lions.
  • Significant variations in PCB levels were found among different species, with some like Scyliorhinus canicula showing higher levels, likely due to their unique capabilities in managing these contaminants.
  • There's a lack of understanding regarding how individual traits, such as length, age, or diet, relate to PCB accumulation, highlighting the need for more research on bioaccumulation in deep marine fish.
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Modelling marine protected areas: insights and hurdles.

Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci

November 2015

CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, GPO Box 1538, Hobart, Tasmania 7001, Australia Centre for Marine Socioecology, University of Tasmania, 20 Castray Esplanade, Battery Point, Tasmania 7004, Australia.

Models provide useful insights into conservation and resource management issues and solutions. Their use to date has highlighted conditions under which no-take marine protected areas (MPAs) may help us to achieve the goals of ecosystem-based management by reducing pressures, and where they might fail to achieve desired goals. For example, static reserve designs are unlikely to achieve desired objectives when applied to mobile species or when compromised by climate-related ecosystem restructuring and range shifts.

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Sagittal otolith morphogenesis asymmetry in marine fishes.

J Fish Biol

September 2015

IFREMER, Centre Manche Mer du Nord, Laboratoire ressources halieutiques, BP 699, Boulogne-sur-mer 62321, France.

This study investigated and compared asymmetry in sagittal otolith shape and length between left and right inner ears in four roundfish and four flatfish species of commercial interest. For each species, the effects of ontogenetic changes (individual age and total body length), sexual dimorphism (individual sex) and the otolith's location on the right or left side of the head, on the shape and length of paired otoliths (between 143 and 702 pairs according to species) were evaluated. Ontogenetic changes in otolith shape and length were observed for all species.

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Chemical contamination levels and stable isotope ratios provide integrated information about contaminant exposure, trophic position and also biological and environmental influences on marine organisms. By combining these approaches with otolith shape analyses, the aim of the present study was to document the spatial variability of Hg and PCB contamination of the European hake (Merluccius merluccius) in the French Mediterranean, hypothesizing that local contaminant sources, environmental conditions and biological specificities lead to site-specific contamination patterns. High Hg concentrations discriminated Corsica (average: 1.

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Are red mullet efficient as bio-indicators of mercury contamination? A case study from the French Mediterranean.

Mar Pollut Bull

February 2015

IFREMER, Centre de Méditerranée, CS 20330, F-83507 La Seyne sur Mer, France; ISTerre, Université Joseph Fourier, BP 53, F-38041 Grenoble, France.

Mercury (Hg) is one of the main chemicals currently altering Mediterranean ecosystems. Red mullet (Mullus barbatus and M. surmuletus) have been widely used as quantitative bio-indicators of chemical contamination.

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