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Jean Clobert

Researcher at Centre national de la recherche scientifique

Publications -  250
Citations -  33710

Jean Clobert is an academic researcher from Centre national de la recherche scientifique. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Biological dispersal. The author has an hindex of 83, co-authored 244 publications receiving 30602 citations. Previous affiliations of Jean Clobert include Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University & Paul Sabatier University.

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Influence of connectivity on demography and dispersal in two contrasting habitats: an experimental approach

TL;DR: It is suggested that connection can directly modify demographic parameters depending on habitat quality and involving behavioural mechanisms, and confirms that conservation management, like installation of dispersal corridors, must take into account habitat characteristics and behavioural features.
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Hormonally mediated maternal effects, individual strategy and global change

TL;DR: It is suggested that hormones may be an informative index to the potential for populations to adapt to changing environments, by affecting either recruitment to the population or subsequent life-history characteristics of the offspring.
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Eco‐evolutionary dynamics in fragmented landscapes

TL;DR: The current knowledge of the eco-evolutionary dynamics in fragmented landscapes is reviewed, focusing on both theory and experimental studies, and future experimental directions are suggested to study eco- Evolving dynamics and/or feedbacks in fragmented landscape to bridge the gap between theoretical predictions and experimental validations.
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Mother-offspring interactions affect natal dispersal in a lizard.

TL;DR: A factorial experiment in the common lizard suggested that natal dispersal might respond plastically to mother–offspring interactions is described, finding a sex–dependent response of offspring dispersal to the removal of the mother at the two stages and finding a negative relationship between dispersal and patch density at the juvenile stage.
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Integrating ongoing biodiversity monitoring: potential benefits and methods

TL;DR: This contribution aims to bolster the practice and use of integration of ongoing monitoring initiatives for biodiversity assessment with an overview of avenues for integration along the four dimensions that characterize a monitoring design: sample size, biological coverage, spatial coverage and temporal coverage.