Laurane Winandy
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
24 Papers
65 Citations
Laurane Winandy is an academic researcher from Centre national de la recherche scientifique. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Biological dispersal. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 19 publications. Previous affiliations of Laurane Winandy include University of Toulouse & Paul Sabatier University.
Chat about Author
Papers
Integrating Ecological and Evolutionary Context in the Study of Maternal Stress.
Michael J. Sheriff,Alison M. Bell,Rudy Boonstra,Ben Dantzer,Sophia G. Lavergne,Katie E. McGhee,Kirsty J. MacLeod,Laurane Winandy,Laurane Winandy,Cedric Zimmer,Oliver P. Love +10 more
TL;DR: To make progress, it is critical to understand the role of maternal stress in an ecological context and to do that, it must integrate across physiology, behavior, genetics, and evolution.
The aggressive personality of an introduced fish affects foraging behavior in a polymorphic newt
Laurane Winandy,Mathieu Denoël +1 more
TL;DR: Assessment of fish personality and newt personality found strong personality differences in fish and fewer newts foraged in the presence of a more aggressive fish, and paedomorphs were more affected than metamorphs.
32
Introduced goldfish affect amphibians through inhibition of sexual behaviour in risky habitats: an experimental approach.
Laurane Winandy,Mathieu Denoël +1 more
TL;DR: The results show that fish presence can affect newts in complex ways, such as through inhibition of their reproduction, and highlights that integrating behaviour in conservation studies is essential to understanding the patterns of coexistence and exclusion between introduced fish and amphibians.
The use of visual and automatized behavioral markers to assess methodologies: a study case on PIT-tagging in the Alpine newt
Laurane Winandy,Mathieu Denoël +1 more
TL;DR: It is shown that biomarkers can assess the validity of research methods, such as individual recognition, and illustrated the scientific and ethical adequacy of the targeted marking method used in amphibians.
Bottom-up and top-down control of dispersal across major organismal groups: a coordinated distributed experiment
Emanuel A. Fronhofer,Delphine Legrand,Florian Altermatt,A. Ansart,Simon Blanchet,Dries Bonte,Alexis S. Chaine,Maxime Dahirel,F Laender De,J Raedt De,L Gesu di,Staffan Jacob,Oliver Kaltz,Estelle Laurent,Chelsea J. Little,Luc Madec,F Manzi,Stefano Masier,Félix Pellerin,Frank Pennekamp,Nicolas Schtickzelle,Lieven Therry,Alexandre Vong,Laurane Winandy,Julien Cote +24 more
TL;DR: This study provides unprecedented insights into the generality of the positive resource dependency of dispersal as well as a robust experimental test of current theory predicting that predator-induced dispersal is modulated by prey and predator space use.