V
Vincent Bretagnolle
Researcher at University of La Rochelle
Publications - 360
Citations - 13561
Vincent Bretagnolle is an academic researcher from University of La Rochelle. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Agriculture. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 331 publications receiving 10837 citations. Previous affiliations of Vincent Bretagnolle include University of Puerto Rico & University of Aberdeen.
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Monitoring seabirds population in marine ecosystem: The use of strip-transect aerial surveys
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined bias associated with pelagic aerial strip-transects, an easily designed and low-cost survey method, to validate its use for monitoring and mapping seabird populations at sea at a very large scale.
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Manipulating Lek Size and Composition Using Decoys: An Experimental Investigation of Lek Evolution Models
TL;DR: It is suggested that these models of lek evolution actually fit within each other, ensuring the evolution, functioning, and long‐term maintenance of leks.
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Improving the breeding success of a colonial seabird: a cost-benefit comparison of the eradication and control of its rat predator
TL;DR: Eradication is recommended rather than control of non-native rat populations when feasible and confers several eco- logical advantages on more ecosystem components than Cory's shearwater alone, while control remains a useful management tool when eradication is not practicable.
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Predation on burrowing petrels by the brown skua (Catharacta skua lönnbergi) at Mayes Island, Kerguelen
TL;DR: Diet reflected local abundance ofblue petrel and thin-billed prion but the blue petrel was apparently preferred to other available prey, and the impact of the brown skuas upon the burrowing petrels on this locality is assessed.
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Ecological Intensification Through Pesticide Reduction: Weed Control, Weed Biodiversity and Sustainability in Arable Farming
Sandrine Petit,Nicolas Munier-Jolain,Vincent Bretagnolle,Vincent Bretagnolle,Christian Bockstaller,Sabrina Gaba,Stéphane Cordeau,Martin Lechenet,Delphine Meziere,Nathalie Colbach +9 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that the reduction of herbicide use is not antagonistic with crop production, provided that alternative practices are put into place, and suggest that sustainable management could possibly be achieved through changes in weed management, along a pathway starting with herbicide reduction.