Automated Author Profile

Després, Laurence

Université Grenoble Alpes

Current S-Index

3.0

Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets

Average Dataset Index per Dataset

1.5

Average Dataset Index per dataset

Total Datasets

2

Total datasets for this author

Average FAIR Score

73.1%

Average FAIR Score per dataset

Total Citations

3

Total citations to the author's datasets

Total Mentions

0

Total mentions of the author's datasets

S-Index Interpretation

S-Index Over Time

Cumulative Citations Over Time

Cumulative Mentions Over Time

Datasets

Genomic shifts, phenotypic clines and fitness costs associated with cold-tolerance in the Asian tiger mosquito (Version: 5)

Climatic variation is a key driver of genetic differentiation and phenotypic traits evolution, and local adaptation to temperature is expected in widespread species. We investigated phenotypic and genomic changes in the native range of the Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus. We first refine the phylogeographic structure based on genome-wide regions (1,901 double-digest restriction-site associated DNA single nucleotide polymophisms [ddRAD SNPs]) from 41 populations. We then explore the patterns of cold adaptation using phenotypic traits measured in common garden (wing size and cold tolerance) and genotype–temperature associations at targeted candidate regions (51,706 exon-capture SNPs) from nine populations. We confirm the existence of three evolutionary lineages including clades A (Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia, and Laos), B (China and Okinawa), and C (South Korea and Japan). We identified temperature-associated differentiation in 15 out of 221 candidate regions but none in ddRAD regions, supporting the role of directional selection in detected genes. These include genes involved in lipid metabolism and a circadian clock gene. Most outlier SNPs are differently fixed between clades A and C, whereas clade B has an intermediate pattern. Females are larger at higher latitudes yet produce no more eggs, which might favor the storage of energetic reserves in colder climates. Nondiapausing eggs from temperate populations survive better to cold exposure than those from tropical populations, suggesting they are protected from freezing damages but this cold tolerance has a fitness cost in terms of egg viability. Altogether, our results provide strong evidence for the thermal adaptation of A. albopictus across its wide temperature range.

Authors

  • Sherpa, Stéphanie ;
  • Tutagata, Jordan ;
  • Gaude, Thierry ;
  • Laporte, Frédéric ;
  • Kasai, Shinji ;
  • Ishak, Intan ;
  • Guo, Xiang ;
  • Shin, Jiyeong ;
  • Boyer, Sébastien ;
  • Marcombe, Sébastien ;
  • Chareonviriyaphap, Theeraphap ;
  • David, Jean-Philippe ;
  • Chen, Xiao-Guang ;
  • Zhou, Xiaohong ;
  • Després, Laurence
2 Citations0 Mentions77% FAIR1.5 Dataset Index
10.5061/dryad.rxwdbrvbgNovember 2022

Data from: Landscape does matter: disentangling founder effects from natural and human-aided post-introduction dispersal during an ongoing biological invasion (Version: 2)

Environmental features impacting the spread of invasive species after introduction can be assessed using population genetic structure as a quantitative estimation of effective dispersal at the landscape scale. However, in the case of an ongoing biological invasion, deciphering whether genetic structure represents landscape connectivity or founder effects is particularly challenging. We examined the modes of dispersal (natural and human-aided) and the factors (landscape or founders history) shaping genetic structure in range edge invasive populations of the Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus, in the region of Grenoble (Southeast France). Based on detailed occupancy-detection data and environmental variables (climatic, topographic, land-cover), we modelled A. albopictus potential suitable area and its expansion history since first introduction. The relative role of dispersal modes was estimated using biological dispersal capabilities and landscape genetics approaches using genome-wide SNP dataset. We demonstrate that both natural and human-aided dispersal have promoted the expansion of populations. Populations in diffuse urban areas, representing highly suitable habitat for A. albopictus, tend to disperse less, while roads facilitate long-distance dispersal. Yet demographic bottlenecks during introduction played a major role in shaping the genetic variability of these range edge populations. The present study is one of the few investigating the role of founder effects and ongoing expansion processes in shaping spatial patterns of genetic variation in an invasive species at the landscape scale. The combination of several dispersal modes and large proportions of continuous suitable habitats for A. albopictus promoted range filling of almost its entire potential distribution in the region of Grenoble only few years after introduction.

Authors

  • Sherpa, Stéphanie ;
  • Renaud, Julien ;
  • Guéguen, Maya ;
  • Besnard, Gilles ;
  • Mouyon, Loic ;
  • Rey, Delphine ;
  • Després, Laurence
1 Citation0 Mentions69% FAIR1.8 Dataset Index
10.5061/dryad.rjdfn2z7pJuly 2020