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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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Black Rats, Island Characteristics, and Colonial Nesting Birds in the Mediterranean: Consequences of an Ancient Introduction

TL;DR: This article analyzed how island area, rock substrate, bird speci cies biology, and presence of an introduced species, the black rat ( Rattus rattus ), interact to explain the distri- bution and abundance of colonial nesting birds on a set of 72 islands from six archipelagos in the western Mediterranean.
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Differences of floral resource use between honey bees and wild bees in an intensive farming system

TL;DR: Investigation of whether the three bee groups typically targeted by agri-environmental schemes differ in the way they use those semi-natural habitats relative to common mass-flowering crops in an intensive agricultural farming system finds a clear segregation pattern in the use of floral resources between honey bees and wild bees.
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Spatial genetic structure of a small rodent in a heterogeneous landscape.

TL;DR: This study investigated the population genetic structure and gene flow pattern for the common vole in a heterogeneous landscape characterised by strong spatial and temporal variation, and suggests intense small‐scale dispersal associated with a large effective population size.
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Reconciling laboratory and field assessments of neonicotinoid toxicity to honeybees.

TL;DR: This study reconciles the conflicting laboratory and field toxicity assessments of neonicotinoids on honeybees and further highlights the difficulty in actually detecting non-intentional effects on the field through conventional risk assessment methods.
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The benefits of extensive agriculture to birds: the case of the little bustard

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used habitat-specific densities obtained by surveys of the Crau in 1998 and 1999 to assess how breeding male little bustards used habitats representing various levels of agricultural intensification.