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Page 1: FOCUS BIODIVERSITY - Centre national de la … · scientific climate and its potential ... • Information, communication ... social and economic aspects of biodiversity

FOCUS

BIODIVERSITY

Page 2: FOCUS BIODIVERSITY - Centre national de la … · scientific climate and its potential ... • Information, communication ... social and economic aspects of biodiversity

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The Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (National Center for Scientific Research) is a government-funded research organization, under the administrative authority of France’s Ministry of Research.

CNRS IN BRIEF

FACTS…

Founded in 1939 by governmentaldecree, CNRS has the following missions:• To evaluate and carry out allresearch capable of advancingknowledge and ringing social, cultural, and economic benefits to society • To contribute to the applicationand promotion of research results• To develop scientific information• To support research training• To participate in the analysis of the national and internationalscientific climate and its potentialfor evolution in order to develop a national policy

CNRS research units are spreadthroughout France, and employ a large body of permanent researchers, engineers, technicians, and administrativestaff. Laboratories are all on four-year contracts, renewable,with bi-annual evaluations. There are two types of labs:• CNRS labs: fully funded and managed by CNRS• Joint labs: partnered with universities, other research organizations, or industry

As the largest fundamental researchorganization in Europe, CNRS

is involved in all scientific fields,organized in the following areas of research:• Life Sciences• Physics• Chemistry• Mathematics• Computer science• Earth Sciences and Astronomy• Humanities and Social Sciences• Environmental Sciences andSustainable Development• Engineering Sciences

CNRS conducts some twenty interdisciplinary programs. Onemajor objective is to promote inter-disciplinarity in order toimprove knowledge, ensure economicand technological development orsolve complex societal problems.They concern the following fields:• Life and its social challenges• Information, communication and knowledge• Environment, energy and sustainable development• Nanosciences, nanotechnologies,materials• Astroparticles

The CNRS annual budget repre-sents one-quarter of French publicspending on civilian research. This

funding comes from various sources:• Government and public funding• CNRS funds, primarily from industrial and EU research contractsand royalties on patents, licenses,and services provided.

More information at: www.cnrs.fr

CNRS pursues an active international

policy, whose implementation is the

responsibility of the Office of European

and International Relations (Direction

des relations Européennes

et Internationales, or DREI).

The DREI coordinates the international

activities of CNRS with that of other

research organizations in France and

abroad. It oversees the role of CNRS

in any international actions carried

out by the French government, working

closely to this end with the Ministries

of Research and Foreign Affairs.

The DREI also plays a role in promoting

international exchange. It proposes new

venues for collaboration, based on a

science and technology watch in other

countries. This watch is carried out with

the help of CNRS offices abroad and of

scientific attaches in French embassies.

To accomplish its task, the DREI has

offices in Paris responsible for four

geographical areas (Europe; Americas;

Africa and Middle East; Asia-Pacific)

and 9 offices in foreign countries.

Contact: Isabelle Chauvel,

[email protected]

IN NUMBERS:

Exchange agreements: 80 (with 60 countries)Foreign visiting scientists: 5,000 (PhD students, post-docs and visitingresearchers)Permanent foreign staff members:

• 1,340 researchers of whom 54% comefrom the European Union• 262 engineers and technicians• International Programs for Scientific

Cooperation (PICS): 332• International Associated Laboratories

(LEA + LIA): 54• International Research Groups

(GDRE + GDRI): 56• International Joint Units (UMI): 9Budget for 2006: €10M

…AND FIGURES

Budget for 2005€2,738 billion of which €494 millioncome from revenues generated by CNRS

Personnel26,000 permanent employees: 11,500 researchers and 14,500 engineers and technical staff

Organization• 1,145 research and service units–almost 90% are joint laboratories• €20 million devoted yearly to interdisciplinary research programs

Industrial Relations in 2005/2006• 3,901 contracts signed with industry• 35 framework agreements and 34 jointresearch units with industrial partners• €132 million of revenues generatedfrom contracts (EU contracts notincluded)• 7,450 Patents in CNRS portfolio (238 deposited and 239 PCT)• 578 Active licenses• €50 million of royalties• 220 start-ups created since 1999DREI, AN OFFICE DEVOTED

TO INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

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SOMMAIRE

page 36

SUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENT

page 04

EDITORIAL

FOCUS

BIODIVERSITY

page 06

DEBATE

page 12

UNDERSTANDING

BIODIVERSITY

page 18

ECOSYSTEM

DYNAMICS

page 24

THE IMPACT ON HEALTH

page 30

BIODIVERSITY

IN DANGER

page 43

BIODIVERSITY:

A FEW STATISTICS

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RESEARCH ON BIODIVERSITY

The huge variety of life on Earth is one of the great puzzles of modern science.

Why do so many species coexist? Is such diversity inevitable given the laws of evo-

lution? What is the history of life? How did species diverge and succeed one anoth-

er over the course of evolutionary history? What impact have dominant species had

on the formation of today’s environment? What role do they currently play in the

modification of environmental processes? These questions have fascinated biolo-

gists for many decades and are at the heart of one of the greatest intellectual adven-

tures of our time. Since the Rio de Janeiro conference in 1992 biodiversity has also

become a social issue and its maintenance one of the major challenges for sustain-

able development. Biodiversity needs to be protected and managed, but why? The

simple answer to this question is that life on our planet depends on biodiversity.

Humans draw upon it for the food and the raw materials necessary for their survival.

Biodiversity is a source both of concern and of hope. It is a source of concern due

to the incredibly fast rate at which species are vanishing today, which leads the gen-

eral public, understandably, to ask about the seriousness of the situation. In scien-

tific terms, this issue is fueling a huge debate about the functional value of

biodiversity. For instance, we need to define the role that species play in the bio-

physicochemical organizations of which they are a part, or put another away, their

position in ecosystem structure and function. We also need to determine whether a

minimum number of species is required for ecosystem survival and whether or not

genetic diversity plays the same role as species diversity with respect to ecosystem

performance.

These problems are not only of theoretical interest to ecologists. They also have

a direct bearing on the quality of our environment. One only has to consider the key

role played by biodiversity in what are called ecosystem services, i.e. the ecological

functions listed in the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, which affect the chemi-

cal composition of water and the atmosphere, the spread of disease, etc. Or the

response of ecosystems to climate change, which will depend above all on the num-

ber of species present in a given ecosystem, the nature of the interactions and rela-

tionships among the species, their ability to disperse and the impact of such

changes on genetic variability. For instance, the amazing plasticity of genomes such

as microbial genomes represents an evolutionary response to the spatially and tem-

porally variable environment in which humans live. The future of our planet will thus

depend on our capacity to manage this biodiversity.

Biodiversity is also a source of hope. Firstly, there is nothing inevitable about the

loss of species. It can be slowed down or even halted by using innovative methods

of land management and species reintroduction based on the most recent research

findings. Secondly, living organisms are an almost inexhaustible source of mole-

cules of interest to the pharmaceutical and chemical industries, which every day

enable us to fight disease or produce a number of substances which are essential

to industry. Knowledge of natural substances, their variability and how they change

in space and time is also an investment for the future. Finally, manipulating popu-

lations of plants, animals or micro-organisms in situ makes it possible to rehabili-

tate degraded environments or maximize certain of their characteristics or

functions, depending on the environmental problems, as well as issues related to

the exploitation of natural resources, which arise.

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THE ACTIVITY OF CNRS

CNRS, in partnership with universities, the Muséum national d’histoire naturelle(French National Museum of Natural History, MNHN), Inra (National Institute for

Agricultural Research), IRD (Institute for Research into Development), Cirad (French

Agricultural Research Center for International Development), Ifremer (French

Research Institute for Marine Resources), and others, is totally committed to research

into biodiversity. Aware of its responsibilities with regard to giving sustainable devel-

opment a scientific basis, CNRS has made this issue one of its top priorities. In con-

crete terms, CNRS encourages theoretical and empirical innovation in four broad

fields: the analysis and management of biodiversity, mechanisms for the emergence

and maintenance of biodiversity, interactions between biodiversity and the environ-

ment, and the cultural, social and economic aspects of biodiversity. CNRS develops

this activity on the basis of studies carried out in collaboration with researchers from

various regions of the world, especially French Guiana and the French overseas

departments and territories, southern Africa (South Africa and Madagascar), Asia,

etc. To this end, CNRS relies on ca. 2,300 people, of whom about a thousand are CNRS

staff members, both in its own laboratories and in laboratories associated with uni-

versities and various partner organizations (MNHN, Inra, IRD, Cirad, Ifremer). All the

research departments of CNRS are concerned by the issue of biodiversity because of

its multidisciplinary nature. The recently created Department of Environmental

Sciences and Sustainable Development directly manages the laboratories which are

the most involved, looks after training and promotion of scientific activities in biodiver-

sity, and organizes research and equipment development programs.

CNRS defines its policies in partnership with the other national bodies and insti-

tutions. A body which has traditionally adopted an integrated approach is the Institutnational des sciences de l’Univers (National Institute of Earth Sciences and

Astronomy), which plays a major role in financing research into the diversity of marine

organisms, interactions between the biosphere, the atmosphere and the hydrosphere,

and paleobiodiversity. CNRS is also a member of two scientific consortiums, the

Institut français de la biodiversité (French Institute for Biodiversity) and the Bureaudes ressources génétiques (Genetic Resources Institute), which regularly issue calls

for research proposals, represent France in a number of European and international

bodies and propose national programs on different themes. CNRS contributes to var-

ious bodies of the Agence nationale de la recherche (French National Research

Agency), the main funding agency in France. It also supports European organizations

such as the European Science Foundation via Eurocore Eurodiversity, as well as net-

works of excellence such as Marine Genomics.

Some of the major challenges currently facing researchers are the long-term

study of model populations, communities and ecosystems; the continuous monitoring

of variations in the environment (including its biological aspects); modeling evolution

and ecosystem functioning; and experimenting on biological assemblages of varying

complexity. However, an ever increasing number of results published throughout the

world on the dynamics of biodiversity are based on technical facilities especially ded-

icated to such approaches. There is therefore a strategic dimension to the develop-

ment of such tools in France. CNRS gives financial support and provides staff for

diverse environmental research projects in specific areas where long term research

is being undertaken, an example being the experimental station at Nouragues in

French Guiana. CNRS has also initiated an ambitious Ecotron program (one in

Montpellier and one near Fontainebleau) whose objective is to conduct experimental

research on natural and artificial ecosystems within a confined environment.

René Bally and Luc Abbadie, Deputy Scientific Directors of the Department of Environmental Sciences and Sustainable Development

Bernard Delay, Scientific Director of the Department of Environmental Sciences and Sustainable Development

04-05

EDITORIAL

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the Book of Genesis when Noah saves

each species by only keeping a single

couple of individuals. Darwin revolution-

ized the way we view this classification.

He introduced the idea that diversity with-

in species and diversity between species

are of a similar nature. In other words,

that diversity between species is simply a

development of diversity within species.

HERVÉ LE GUYADER: Biodiversity can be

defined at three levels: biodiversity of

genes, biodiversity of organisms and

biodiversity of ecosystems. What Pierre-

Henri Gouyon has just said shows that

biodiversity between species and biodi-

versity between genes are totally con-

nected. We should also remember that

all this takes place over time and in

space. We know little about species bio-

diversity; we haven’t described every-

thing, and I believe that we know even

less about the biodiversity of genes and

of ecosystems. We may thus have to

protect organisms that we don’t know

much about.

MICHEL VEUILLE : The word "biodiversity"

is recent. Our generation of taxonomists,

geneticists and ecologists has seen a

change in attitudes (in parallel with the

emergence of an interdisciplinary

approach to the study of biodiversity), both

with regard to cultural and social aware-

ness of biodiversity, as well as in the need

for increasing cooperation in research, as

is shown by the creation of an interdisci-

plinary department dedicated to the envi-

ronment and sustainable development

within the CNRS.

Michel Veuille is Directeur d’études at the Écolepratique des hautes études, Director of the Taxonomyand Evolution Department at the Muséum nationald’histoire naturelle and Director of the ResearchNetwork for Population Genomics.

Pierre-Henri Gouyon is a professor at the Muséumnational d’histoire naturelle (French NationalMuseum of Natural History), at INA-PG and at theÉcole polytechnique. He is a researcher at theLaboratory for Functioning and Evolution ofEcological Systems.

Hervé Le Guyader is a professor at the Universityof Paris 6, and Director of the Research Unit forTaxonomy, Adaptation and Evolution.

06DEBATE

DESPITE ITS POPULARITY, THE CONCEPT OF BIODIVERSITY IS COM-

PLEX. TO DEMONSTRATE THE WIDE RANGE OF QUESTIONS IT RAISES,

FIVE RESEARCHERS IN ECOLOGY, TAXONOMY, GENETICS, ETC GOT

TOGETHER WITH RENÉ BALLY, DEPUTY SCIENTIFIC DIRECTOR OF THE

ENVIRONMENT AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT AT

THE CNRS. IN WHAT FOLLOWS WE REPORT THEIR DISCUSSION, WHICH

ALTHOUGH CONTROVERSIAL AT TIMES, IS INSTRUCTIVE THROUGHOUT.

ROUND TABLE WITH LUC ABBADIE, ROBERT BARBAULT, PIERRE-

HENRI GOUYON, HERVÉ LE GUYADER AND MICHEL VEUILLE.

WHAT IS BIODIVERSITY?

PIERRE-HENRI GOUYON : Humans

became aware of biodiversity very early

on. The idea of classifying the untidy,

messy thing called Nature was bound to

catch on. Living things are classified in

every known culture. The way they’re

classified, however, varies from one cul-

ture to another.

Our initial view of biodiversity was exclu-

sively based on classification by species.

Linnaeus stated that all species were cre-

ated by the hand of an all-powerful

Creator, and that when these species

reproduced they remained confined to

their own type. He gave no credit to the

importance of within-species variability.

That was the Western view of the world in

the 18th century. You find the same view in

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06-07

DEBATE

ROBERT BARBAULT : I believe that the

word "biodiversity" first emerged within

the context of the Rio Conference,

although the word was actually used sev-

eral years earlier in scientific circles

where the talks were being organized.

From 1992 onwards, the entire scientific

community has adopted the word "biodi-

versity".

MICHEL VEUILLE : The word biodiversity is

an extremely valuable portmanteau

word. It reflects our ignorance. Linnaeus

knew of about forty thousand species.

Today, more than a century after Darwin,

about 1.8 million species have been

described. We know that there exist five

to ten times as many organisms tradi-

tionally described as animals and plants,

in other words between 10 and 15 mil-

lion. We are only acquainted with a tiny

part of the biodiversity of bacteria and

fungi. It is currently thought that we only

know about 5 to 10% of fungi. We don’t

really have the research capability need-

ed to discover all these species. When

researchers from the National Museum

of Natural History explore an area in the

Pacific they find that 20% of the mollusks

they bring up from the sea floor are new

species.

PIERRE-HENRI GOUYON: Can we create a

concept of biodiversity which integrates

both diversity within species and diversi-

ty between species? We don’t know how

to do that today. But this is a good time to

start working on it. To construct phyloge-

nies—to understand the evolutionary

relationships among species—we can

now use gene coalescence. In this way

we can take into account genetic diversi-

ty in the study of diversity between

species. 150 years after Darwin, wouldn’t

it be possible to create an authentic con-

cept of biodiversity which combines

genetics and taxonomy?

LUC ABBADIE : It could go further and

integrate the functional aspects which

regulate the interactions between the

organization of life and the flow of mat-

ter and energy and, more generally, the

environment. There has been a lot of

work done on the functional value of

biodiversity, practically all of it at

species level. Very little notice has been

taken of the functional consequences of

genetic diversity. However, life varies

along a continuum from the gene,

through the species, to the community

of organisms.

There exists a positive connection

between biodiversity and the productivity

or stability of an ecosystem. And yet

some very old and very productive

ecosystems are lacking in species. In

such systems enhanced genetic diversity

may "substitute" for low species diversi-

ty. Any such functional equivalence

between intraspecific (genetic) and inter-

specific diversity remains to be explored.

PIERRE-HENRI GOUYON: Theories deter-

mine our descriptions. Linnaeus and

Darwin had different views of biodiversity

because they had different mechanisms

in mind. We should give up the idea that

we can describe nature without having

any theories about the way biodiversity

has evolved.

MICHEL VEUILLE : It’s obvious that if we

had a theory which explained why there

are so many species, it would also be a

theory that would better explain ecosys-

tem functioning and how we can pre-

serve third order biodiversity, i.e. that of

populations and ecosystems. This order

determines many things.

HERVÉ LE GUYADER: Let’s be clear about

this. We don’t have a theory, but there is

nonetheless a conceptual framework:

the theory of evolution. Darwin showed

that when there is selection, diversity

increases.

PIERRE-HENRI GOUYON: Although we

have a conceptual framework, we would

only really get a handle on the problem if

we were capable of saying what process-

es determine the number of genotypes

and species. We know what the process-

es are, but we don’t know how to organ-

ize them in order to explain what’s going

on at the level of the planet.

ROBERT BARBAULT : By looking at biodi-

versity from an ecological angle we can

attempt to answer these questions.

Besides kinship relations and genetic

variability, there are selective pressures.

The ecological context produces these

and enables us to understand why there

is a build-up of diversity, and why, after

each extinction crisis, biodiversity re-

establishes itself. We live in a world that

is constantly changing on all scales. So

there are no species which are adapted

to all the conditions on the planet. On

that basis, just as for genetic approach-

es, we can gradually improve our under-

standing. That’s why, when I talk about

the diversity of life, I tend to start off at a

global level. What is the diversity of life?

It’s the living fabric of the planet, of which

we are part, which is made up of species

possessing enormous genetic variability.

It’s a fabric of countless interactions

which evolve in a changing world. The

reason diversity exists is the need to

adapt to unceasing changes in space and

time.

HERVÉ LE GUYADER: We can look at bio-

diversity from three different levels.

Pierre-Henri Gouyon started off by talk-

ing about species. Robert Barbault sees

it at a planetary level, as a fabric of inter-

actions. If we had a hard-line molecular

biologist here, they would probably begin

with the genome and end up with the

diversity of genes. All biologists, whatev-

er their starting point, eventually end up

at this concept of biodiversity.

Robert Barbault is a professor at the University ofParis 6, Director of the Institute for Ecology,Biodiversity, Evolution and Environment and Directorof the Department of Ecology and BiodiversityManagement at the Muséum national d’histoirenaturelle.

Luc Abbadie is a professor at the University ofParis 6 and Director of the Research Unit forBiogeochemistry and Ecology of TerrestrialEnvironments (Bioemco).

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DO WE NEED TO PRESERVEBIODIVERSITY?

MICHEL VEUILLE : People are becoming

ever more aware of the fragility of nature.

Until recently, many biologists thought

in terms of equilibrium when they

constructed a model of population

genetics.

For these biologists, before humans

made their considerable impact, and

with the exception of a few post-glacial

fluctuations, nature was in balance. It

was invulnerable. Nowadays we know

that this does not apply to the recent his-

tory of biodiversity. We know that even

before the Neolithic, when humans first

started to have a significant influence on

nature, there had been extinctions.

PIERRE-HENRI GOUYON: The idea that

species can become extinct is a new one.

It was Cuvier’s idea and is only 200 years

old. It took us a long time to assimilate it.

Many people say that the image of the

Earth seen from the Moon played a key

role. Today, the notion of the blue planet

is meaningful for everyone.

MICHEL VEUILLE : Aside from the moral

question posed regarding the conserva-

tion of the whole living world in existence

today, some people are wondering if so

many species are necessary for function-

al groups, or whether coral reefs really

need all those butterfly fish (pantodon

buchholzi), etc. Granted, there are 15

million species, but we have never been

aware of the existence of most of them.

Do we need to keep them all? Are they all

useful for the preservation of ecosys-

tems?

PIERRE-HENRI GOUYON: I am one of

those who think that there is actually no

ecological need to have a huge amount of

biodiversity. I believe that there are

enough species, and enough genotypes

for species, to keep things ticking over

nicely. But that’s a personal impression. I

can’t prove it. Nor can those who think

otherwise.

ROBERT BARBAULT: There’s no proof, but

there is nonetheless some evidence for it.

PIERRE-HENRI GOUYON : For me, the

question is above all a moral one. I’m in

favor of the preservation of biodiversity.

We’re making a moral problem depend-

ent on a scientific result. It’s the same

thing as saying that you shouldn’t be

racist because there are no genetic dif-

ferences between ethnic groups. But if

we did find a genetic difference, would

that mean that we could be racist? The

problem is to know what role the human

species sees itself playing in the man-

agement of the Earth. This question

should be kept separate from that of

knowing whether we need lots of species

on the grounds of ecology or sustainabil-

ity. Yes, I’m in favor of preserving biodi-

versity, first of all on moral grounds, and

then, if there are practical, concrete rea-

sons as well, so much the better.

LUC ABBADIE : I agree with you, there are

first of all moral grounds for preserving

biodiversity. But there are also more

objective reasons. If I go back to what

we’ve just been saying, current biodiver-

sity is basically the result of a piling up of

past events, of a series of reactions of

each species to pre-existing environ-

ments and to the presence of other

species. Certain organisms were abun-

dant at one time. They are less so today,

but they might make a massive come-

back, depending on changes in the envi-

ronment.

The time scale is important. Some scien-

tific results can be, and are, wrongly

interpreted. You hear conclusions such

as ‘There are many species which serve

no purpose Ecosystems could function

with fewer species.’ The trouble is that

we only see a snapshot of biodiversity. A

species which today appears redundant,

not essential, might become vital to the

ecosystem in some future phase because

the environment will have changed,

� Photograph of the Earth as seen fromspace (1968). For many people, seeing theEarth as it looks from space made them

question the idea that nature is all-powerfull,and to assimilate the ntion that nature is fragileand that species can disappear.

� Only a tiny proportion of the world’s speciesare known. 1,600 marine species arediscovered and described every year. Tropicalregions, and especially coral reefs, areexceptional reserves of unknown species.During six weeks of intensive fieldwork, thePanglao Marine Biodiversity Project (Muséumnational d’histoire naturelle/Universiy of SanCarlo/National University of Singapore)discovered several hundred new species ofshellfish, and nearly a thousand new speciesof mollusk.

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08-09

DEBATE

result. The high degree of disturbance in

South America formed refugia, and that

was certainly the reason why biodiversity

increased. Disturbances can have com-

pletely opposite effects depending on

their type.

HOW CAN WE MANAGE BIODIVERSITY?

MICHEL VEUILLE: I’d like to come back to

the little blue globe on which humans,

together with biodiversity, are traveling

through space. Since humans take up a

lot of room, there’s less room for biodi-

versity. The spread of invasive species is

another factor which is eroding biodiver-

sity. Those which are human-commensal

species displace native or endemic

ecosystems by installing a kind of

McDonald’s ecosystem, which we’re soon

going to be finding in every corner of the

planet.

In a certain way, humans are now manag-

ing biodiversity like a garden. Until now,

biodiversity was self-sufficient.

Henceforth it will only exist insofar as we

leave it the room to do so. With regard to

biodiversity, humans are a bit like some-

one who’s packing a suitcase and who

has to decide what to take. Should you

take a wide variety of different types of

clothes, or a large number of clothes of

similar type? Should we keep many

because it will have rained a little bit

more or less, for instance.

Biodiversity is a storeroom of responses

of living things to changes in the environ-

ment, which have been tested in the past

over thousands and millions of years. If

we reduce the content of this storeroom,

there will be a gap between the varia-

tions in the environment and the range of

possible responses. Every species has

probably had, at one moment or another,

a major impact on the environment. The

notion of key species is a dangerous one,

since a given species is only critical

("key") at a particular moment in time.

HERVÉ LE GUYADER : The Earth has

extraordinary stability. At the end of the

Permian, 80% of species vanished, and

yet this disturbance was absorbed. We’ve

always wondered why biodiversity, in the

western Pacific for instance, is far greater

than in the Mediterranean. Yet again it’s a

question of stability. Tropical ecosystems

have been very stable from an environ-

mental point of view, whereas in the

Mediterranean, whether we’re talking

about glacials or about the evaporation of

the sea during the Neocene, there were

major fluctuations. Biodiversity frequent-

ly declined suddenly and never returned

to the level found in tropical ecosystems.

That’s one possible interpretation.

PIERRE-HENRI GOUYON: Events such as

these dry periods were widespread. If you

compare the diversity of plants in Africa

and South America you find the opposite

species, each with little genetic variabili-

ty, or should we keep few species, each

with a great deal of genetic variability, so

that they have the most chances of evolv-

ing? We don’t yet have the conceptual

tools to answer this kind of question.

PIERRE-HENRI GOUYON: We all agree that

this conceptual work needs to

be done. That said, once we

have the answer, the question

will no longer be stated in the

same terms. You don’t manage

biodiversity in the same way as

you pack a suitcase. Oddly

enough, it’s the most deter-

ministic sciences from which

we can learn. Today, physicists

and chemists who are working

in nanotechnology get objects

to self-assemble in order to

make systems, rather than try-

ing to make each element in

the system one after another. In evolution-

ary biology and in the ecology of biodiver-

sity, where everything is interaction and

where we work with very complex sys-

tems, we’re still wondering whether we

should keep species X or species Y. We all

work with this concept of self-organiza-

tion even if we don’t always realize it. We

can try to manage the whole self-organ-

ized system, but certainly not each

species one by one.

ROBERT BARBAULT : The expression

"managing biodiversity" is totally exces-

sive when you look at what we are capa-

ble of. On the other hand, we can

establish rules for preserving the diversi-

ty of large ecosystems without having to

intervene within those ecosystems.

In nature, there are parasites and

pathogens as well as food resources and

medicines. So it’s a struggle. But it’s a

judo-style struggle, which relies on

forces that already exist. In this way,

there can be an adjustment of the rela-

tionship between the development of

human societies and the preservation of

a biosphere in good working order.

However, to imagine that we’re going to

be running things as if we were some

kind of planetary super gardeners is not

on the cards.

There’s a difference between what we

have to do and what we decide to do. We

have to decide what kind of society we

� Mediterranean and Pacific sea floors. Tropicalecosystems have undergone little disturbance,which is why biodiversity is greater there than inthe Mediterranean.

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want. We could single out showcase

areas of biodiversity such as coral reefs,

and focus all our efforts on preserving

them. As if the diversity of the tundra or

of Europe’s cold regions, which get less

media coverage, were of no interest to

the people who live there! We should try

not to confuse scientific analysis with

social or political choices.

LUC ABBADIE: Management basically

involves setting up a partially artificial

system which we think we can control.

However, we don’t have the intellectual

means for this control. Let me take a

specific example, that of farming sys-

tems. They often perform poorly despite

being supplied with huge quantities of

energy and nutrients. The reason for this

is that we have changed some of the

players and some of the processes with-

out verifying that these alterations fit the

overall logic of the ecosystem. This logic

is difficult to detect: natural systems,

which are sustainable, diversified and

productive, provide an ideal situation to

define the proper logic.

Although we now more or less under-

stand the principles of evolutionary

mechanisms, the subsequent interac-

tions that they generate are hugely com-

plex. Throughout the history of the

planet, a vast number of "biodiversity-

environment" scenarios have been test-

ed and live on in the way biodiversity is

currently organized. I think we should

try to preserve this potential, even

though I’m also a keen supporter

of ecological engineering. There

are natural models which we

would do well to think about.

HERVÉ LE GUYADER: Here are

three current examples of

action being taken for biodi-

versity conservation. First, the

‘Apple-eaters’ Association’.

What are they doing? Well,

they’re in the process of "sav-

ing" all the varieties of apple

which are disappearing. Here

we’re talking about intraspecific

variability, i.e. within one

species.

Some people fight to save dolphins

and whales. They focus on one

species, usually a charismatic one,

because it’s big, it’s beautiful and it’s

pretty exceptional.

Let’s take a third example: the Austra-

lians and the Great Barrier Reef. Now

imagine that the fish in the coral reefs

weren’t as brightly colored. I’m not sure

that we’d hear about them as much.

I chose these three examples because

they represent the three levels of biodi-

versity. It’s obvious we could never "man-

age" all the species in the way the

Apple-eaters do. Actually, coral reefs

really are showcase ecosystems, but that

doesn’t mean that the tundra ecosystem

is any the less extraordinary.

BIODIVERSITY: ETHICAL VALUEOR ECONOMIC VALUE?

PIERRE-HENRI GOUYON: I compare the

ethical issue of biodiversity with the

issue of the death penalty. You can find a

lot of rational arguments in favor of the

death penalty. But a society which gives

itself the right to kill people is simply a

society which devalues itself. As far as

I’m concerned, a society which gave

itself the right to destroy all the living

species which were of no use to it would

be in the same category. We can talk

about the usefulness of biodiversity to

humans —and I think that it’s a good

thing to talk about it— but that’s not the

main issue. The most important thing is

how we see ourselves in our relationship

with nature, from which we came, and to

which we belong. Today, we live in a

social, economic and political system

which has trouble taking this kind of

dimension into consideration. Unless we

succeed in giving ethical values an eco-

nomic value, I fear that the attitude

which consists in systematically giving

everything, including biodiversity, an

economic value won’t let us take into

account the most fundamental dimen-

sion of this question.

MICHEL VEUILLE: Since 1992, the Rio

Convention on Biological Diversity has

given us a framework for thinking about

biodiversity which is different from an

absolute or, if you like, philosophical one.

The interesting thing about the Convention

was that it brought together nations which

see biodiversity in different ways: as an

esthetic resource, as a material resource

or even as a potentially economic

resource. The Rio Conference made it pos-

sible to think about these issues collec-

tively, to escape from the sterile

discussion about the value of biodiversity

per se, and in so doing confront us with

our responsibilities.

ROBERT BARBAULT : I think that the first

thing that should be said when someone

asks what biodiversity is for —an irritat-

ing and poorly formulated question,

because they don’t say what biodiversity

should be for— is that the diversity of the

living world is the result of four billion

years of evolution. Species have invented

quite a few things. Over several millions

of years, they have been solving prob-

lems in order to survive, to reproduce

and so on. That should earn our respect.

Any wanton destruction of them is an

attack on our own status as the human

species. Once you’ve said that, you’ve

made the fundamental point. Then you

can say that we depend on the diversity of

� Gold medal struck in India the elephantmoving to the right, eastwards, is a directreference to the conquest of India and to thevictory over the elephants of Porus in 326 BC.

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living things and on all the interactions

that it entails. We depend on it not only

for the esthetic and spiritual values that

are associated with it, but also for food,

for health and so on. It isn’t necessary to

give everything an economic value. Some

people are worried about the disappear-

ance of species. First of all, it isn’t total-

ly irreversible. In fact, the biodiversity

crisis is an opportunity for the human

species to react and to reconsider its

goals regarding development. This

brings us back to the need for lasting,

sustainable development, except that for

the moment it’s more a case of "let’s

hope it lasts" development.

LUC ABBADIE : Biodiversity is a symbol of

sustainability and adaptability. Our mode

of development is not sustainable

because it is not adapted to the finite

nature of resources and because it

ignores the role that other species play

in the regulation of our environment.

Civilization has reached a real crisis

point. We have to re-think the world; in

this respect, the history of life could pro-

vide some good ideas.

ROBERT BARBAULT : The ecological serv-

ice concept, irritating though it is,

nonetheless has the merit of making

people understand that certain things

which are important for our well-being

may not be subject to market forces, and

that they can deteriorate to the point that

it becomes essential to take technical

measures to replace them. This can be

an extremely expensive business. The

large water companies are well aware

that it is cheaper to preserve the quality

of ecosystems, and therefore biodiversi-

ty, than to build and maintain huge water

treatment plants.

PIERRE-HENRI GOUYON: You often hear

people say, ‘Scientists will find a solu-

tion.’ Here I think it’s important to say

that we’re not going to find the solution

that people are expecting. We have a the-

oretical solution to the problem, but this

solution isn’t the one that people are

hoping for. It’s more about regulating

consumption, expenditure and so on.

MICHEL VEUILLE : Like Socrates would

say, the first act of reason is to be aware

of one’s own ignorance. Science can’t do

everything, and in particular it can’t

accurately predict the future, even

though one of its roles is to enlighten the

public about future changes. The other

area of society where predictions are

made is in politics. You can always go on

about unkept promises, and about the

actual consequences of what politicians

do. Nevertheless, when you put all those

political acts end to end the result is

called History. Somehow or other, it

marches on. That’s more or less the

image of what we can modestly hope to

have during the 21st century to preserve

biodiversity. However, whatever we do or

don’t do, consciously or not, whether it

be interventionist or laissez-faire, will be

decisive for the preservation of biodiver-

sity. Science still underpins our thinking,

even though we need to oppose absolute

faith in science.

PIERRE-HENRI GOUYON: That applies to

technology more than science!

HERVÉ LE GUYADER: I’d like to come

back to the problem of the notion of time.

In the 18th century, foresters managed

the forest for future generations. They

grew oaks to make ships. They knew they

would never see the oaks that were

planted used during their own lifetime.

Today, politicians only think in terms of

the next few years, i.e. until the next elec-

tion.

MICHEL VEUILLE : Biodiversity is charac-

terized by its cross-disciplinary nature,

which is now also true at CNRS. But

obviously, for it to be cross-disciplinary

there has to be something there for it to

cross! In fact, there are scientific founda-

tions to this cross-disciplinary field. The

interesting thing about an institution like

CNRS is precisely that it combines fun-

damental research with a cross-discipli-

nary approach which brings everything

together.

10-11

DEBATE

THE CONVENTION ON BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY

The Convention on Biological Diversity is a historic commitment. It is the first treaty concluded at worldlevel which tackles all aspects of biological diversity. It concerns not only the protection of species butalso of ecosystems and the gene pool, as well as the sustainable use of natural resources. It is the firsttreaty to recognize that the conservation of biological diversity is a ‘common concern of humankind’and that it is an integral part of any sustainable socio-economic development.� Open for signature at the Earth Summit, at Rio de Janeiro, 5 June 1992.� Came into force on 29 December 1993, 90 days after the 30th ratification.� Ratified by 188 countries.

� A caterpillar, Vettius tertianus, at the finalstage of development. This caterpillar is aparasite in gardens inhabited by the antPachycondyla goeldii.

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� Kiwa hirsuta was discovered by aresearcher at Ifremer in March 2005. Duringthe first weeks of March 2006 the mediaquite unexpectedly took the story up. Withina few days, the number of pages about thisanimal on the Goggle search engine jumpedfrom a mere handful to 200,000.

12UNDERSTANDING BIODIVERSITY

FROM GENETIC VARIABILITY TO THE WEALTH OF FAUNA AND FLORA,

FROM THE DIVERSITY OF SPECIES TO THE DIVERSITY OF ECOSYSTEMS

AND LANDSCAPES: UNDERSTANDING BIODIVERSITY MEANS FIRST OF

ALL IDENTIFYING, LISTING AND CLASSIFYING THE BIOLOGICAL ENTI-

TIES THAT MAKE IT UP. IN ADDITION IT ALSO MEANS ANALYZING THE

GENETIC STRUCTURE OF THEIR POPULATIONS, RECREATING THE

HISTORY OF EVOLUTIONARY LINEAGES AND UNDERSTANDING THE

EFFECTS AND SCOPE OF PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY. FINALLY, IT

MEANS INVESTIGATING THE WEALTH OF INTERACTIONS AMONG

SPECIES, WHICH MAKE UP THE ECOLOGICAL FABRIC OF WHAT IS

PROPERLY CALLED BIODIVERSITY DYNAMICS.

� HOW MANY SPECIES ARE THERE ON EARTH?

From time to time, the announcement of the discovery of a plant or an animal

becomes widely reported in the media, rather than remaining confined to specialist

circles. For instance, the discovery of both the world’s smallest vertebrate,

Paedocypris progenetica, a fish from the mangrove swamps of Sumatra less than eight

millimeters long, and a species which represents a new family of crustaceans from

the Eastern Pacific, Kiwa hirsuta, have received a great deal of media coverage.

Away from the spotlight of the media, the inventory of our planet continues, with

16,000 new species described every year. Even in Europe, new species continue to be

discovered, with 600 descriptions of animal species being added per year, a rate that

hasn’t slowed down since the beginning of the 20th century. In fact, the only thing that

we’ve become sure of in the last twenty years is that the total number of living species

is one, or even two, orders of magnitude greater than the 1.8 million species already

described. Tropical forests, coral reefs, the large ocean basins and parasites as a

whole make up the main reserves of unknown species. For unicellular eukaryotes,

new types of organization (new classes and orders) doubtless remain to be discovered.

Completing the inventory of vertebrates, phanerogams and a few rare groups of inver-

tebrates (butterflies and odonates) is no doubt by and large within our reach with the

human resources at our disposal. For most groups, however, the human and method-

ological means needed to describe species diversity is woefully inadequate, and will

also need to be upgraded by one or two orders of magnitude.

At the current rate at which new species are being listed, most of them will have

become extinct before they can be described and named. Viewed in this light, although

the molecular revolution drastically altered the taxonomy of prokaryotes as early as

the 1970s, its contribution to the taxonomy of eukaryotes currently remains marginal.

The impact of international initiatives such as the Bar code of Life, which consists in

sequencing the gene that codes for Cytochrome oxidase 1 in order to recognize and

separate species, is still a subject of debate among the scientific community.

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12-13

UNDERSTANDING

BIODIVERSITY

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� HOW CAN SPECIES BE CLASSIFIED?

Given the huge number of living species, biodiversity can only be made sense of by

using concepts. The role of classifications is to create these concepts as well as words

with generally accepted meanings. Classifications are arbitrary. Their function is to

meet pre-established specifications. Objects are grouped together in order to account

for certain specific properties: for example, our culinary needs (seafood, game, etc.).

In the field of biological sciences, the aim of a classification can also be to create

groups which reproduce the unity of species as regards their functional relationships

in environments (e.g. phytoplankton, zooplankton). A good classification accounts for

properties which have been agreed on.

Over the last 150 years, within the framework of the theory of evolution, the goal

of taxonomy (the science of classifying species) has been to create concepts known as

taxa which reproduce the relative degrees to which species are related to each other.

For a century, phylogeny has been the "tree of life" which depicts these relationships.

The role of taxonomy is not just to identify species and give them names. It pieces

together kinship relationships on the basis of comparative anatomy and by comparing

homologous genes. On a phylogenetic tree, each branch of the tree is given the name

of a particular taxon, and contains all the subsequent branches. A phylogenetic clas-

sification is a system of taxa nested within one another. We have only been able to cre-

ate such phylogenies for about fifty years.

This way of classifying living things represents the culmination of a truly

Copernican revolution, the seeds of which were already to be found in Darwin’s ideas.

Rather than reflecting the central place in the Universe that humans liked to think

they had, it revealed the degree to which all living beings are related.

� A DIVERSITY FIRMLY ROOTED IN GENETICS

Most of the mechanisms which can be used to explain diversity with regard to species

—chance, natural selection and migration— also operate at the level of populations.

Mutations, which take place randomly in the genome of individual organisms, provide the

basic variation on which the other evolutionary forces can work.

� Phylogeny of tetrapods.

STRATEGIC DATA BASES

Just as with meteorology, modeling and predicting biodiversity is possible as long as large sets ofspatial zed data on species are available. By superimposing the geographical coordinates of theoccurrence of species on maps of climate, geology, ecology, etc., it is possible to calculate thepotential distribution of species on the basis of their observed distribution. For instance, by varyingthe climatic parameters according to the various existing models, it is possible to predict the possibleevolution of local biodiversity under the influence of climate change. Experimental data of this kindhas accumulated in museum collections over the last two centuries —such as the specimens in the

herbariums at the Muséum national d’histoire naturelle (the French National Museum ofNatural History, www.mnhn.fr) and, much more recently, in data bases of environmentalobservations (inpn.mnhn.fr). In order to build the infrastructure which will make itpossible to utilize all this data which is scattered among countless institutions, thetechnological and scientific challenge is to make existing data bases interoperable. Inthis way, any user will be able to utilize the data as if it were stored in a single database.Computer software for this will be made available to potential users. To achieve thisgoal, several international groups are working within an international network known asGBIF (Global Biodiversity Information Facility, www.gbif.org), with a view to clarifying ideasand creating software that will enable all this disparate data to be used.

© G

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� THE MOLECULAR MARKERS OF THE HISTORY OF SPECIES

A species’ history leaves traces in its genes. In the last few years, researchers have

made a spectacular leap forward in interpreting this molecular information.

Population geneticists are now able to enumerate the genes which bear the "signa-

ture" of natural selection or of demographic events (see Figure 1). For cultivated

plants, for instance, it is possible to detect the genes which bear a ‘domestication syn-

drome’, a record of the artificial selection carried out by early farmers.

Over the course of generations, mutations appear in a gene. The same gene can

thus be found in the genome of individuals from the same species in different forms.

Over the past twenty years there has been enormous progress in interpreting this

polymorphism of DNA sequences. "Coalescence theory", together with the develop-

ment of new bioinformatic tools for data analysis has made it possible to interpret the

phylogeny of genes in a single species. Population geneticists have used these tech-

niques to model the colonization of Europe by modern humans. Their model incorpo-

rates the geography of Europe and the growth of populations.

Inra’s laboratories have studied the recent spread through Europe of an invasive

species of corn pest. They have discovered the origin of the invasion. It is the result of

three different introductions of individuals from North America. The next challenge for

population genomics (see Figure 2) is to develop a molecular signature for each

species. This taxonomic information will then be of benefit to the whole scientific

community.

� GENETIC DIVERSITY AND STRUCTURE OF POPULATIONS

In order to characterize genetic variability, certain biochemical or molecular

markers are used. Markers with a single genetic determinism, whose variation is dis-

continuous, are mainly used to "identify" gene flow between individuals (reproductive

systems on a local scale) and populations (reproductive systems on a regional scale).

They frequently consist of fragments of DNA of unknown function, whose variability is

apparently neutral with respect to natural selection. Phenotypic features —the visible

characteristics— can also be used to characterize genetic diversity. They are often

nonneutral with respect to natural selection.

We therefore use certain phenotypic characters which show continuous variation,

for whom the genetic determinism of the variation is frequently complex, and whose

expression is heavily influenced by the environment in which it is observed. The evo-

lutionary success of different phenotypes depends on the environment, so much so

that it is possible to observe phenomena of local adaptation. Migration and mutation

have opposing effects on this local adaptation. These two evolutionary forces intro-

duce variation, on which natural selection can then act. When populations are small

in size, natural selection becomes less effective. By chance, harmful mutations may

become more frequent and lead to populations becoming less viable. This is what is

called genetic load or inbreeding depression.

Consider the example of the island cabbage, Brassica insularis, a protected species

endemic to the islands of Sardinia and Corsica. This species has a self-incompatible

reproductive system. Two cabbage plants having the same allele at the self-incompat-

ibility locus cannot breed. Besides the monitoring of populations carried out since

1999, molecular diversity, the diversity of quantitative characters and diversity at the

self-incompatibility locus have also been studied. All the results show that the popu-

lations are small in size, and have low genetic diversity and that there is a quasi-

absence of gene flow among populations. What’s more, one of the populations shows

particularly reduced diversity at the self-incompatibility locus. Hence, little cross-

breeding is possible among individuals in this population. The question here is as fol-

lows: is it better to reinforce this population, at risk of making it lose its genetic

identity, or to let things be and hope for the appearance of mutations at the self-

incompatibility locus? The answer has yet to be found…

Population of constant size

Expandingpopulation

Tim

e

Ancestralspecies

Daughterspecies A

Daughterspecies B

Isolation

Speciation

� Figure 2. The molecular signature in

taxonomy, or bar-code, is a simple system

for characterizing species. When populations

of the same species divide, giving rise to

different species, some polymorphisms of

the ancestral species are fixed, by chance or

by selection, in one or other of the daughter

species (mutations are represented by

circles). The diagnostic mutation is shown in

blue. This mutation appeared in the common

ancestor of all the sequences of daughter

species B. They are the basis of the

molecular "bar-code". However, not every

mutation leads to a new species.

Collaboration between geneticists and

taxonomists is vital if we are to define a

universal bar-code system.

Tim

e

� Figure 1. Molecular signature of past

demographic events. In a population, the

sequences of the same gene (here, six

sequences represented by squares) have

common ancestors (represented by circles).

In a population of constant size, many of

these ancestors are recent, while a small

number are distant. In contrast, in an

expanding population, most of the common

ancestors date from the beginning of the

population’s history, and are comparatively

distant. The phylogeny of genes within

species thus gives us information about the

history of populations.

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� Population of the cabbage Brassica insulariscalled Conaca. Not only does the reducedgenetic diversity at the self-incompatibilitylocus result in a reduction of the proportion ofcompatible crosses, but moreover, selectivepressure for resistance to flower parasites isundoubtedly weakened, precisely because ofthe low rate of reproduction in this population.This is why attacks by parasites are morepronounced in this population (in this case byaphids) than in the other populations on theisland.

14-15

UNDERSTANDING

BIODIVERSITY

� DIVERSITY: BEYOND GENETICS

Although genetic diversity is the chief source of diversity among individuals of a

given species, some types of phenotypic diversity are not necessarily associated with

genetic differences. For instance, plasticity enables two individuals with the same

genotype to have a different phenotype depending on their habitat, and thus be better

adapted to their environment. The amount of such plasticity depends on the individual

and on the species.

Other mechanisms, such as developmental instability, can lead to greater pheno-

typic variance. This random variability may be adaptive in an unsettled, unpredictable

environment. This, for instance, is the case for the flowering period of gorse, Ulex

europaeus.

Lastly, a gene can undergo different kinds of regulation during transcription (trans-

formation of a DNA sequence into RNA). The same genotype can therefore give differ-

ent phenotypes. It can undergo epigenetic variation, in other words hereditary changes

which are not coded for by DNA. These may be the chief source of diversity, as was

shown by a team from the Ecobio Laboratory for the invasive clonal grass Spartina

anglica. Understanding biodiversity thus makes it necessary to take into account the

whole of diversity, whether it be deterministic or random, hereditary or not, that can be

generated by the same genotype.

The genetic variability and genetic evolution of a population are very complex. There

are a large number of phenomena at work, of which we know but a few. The genetic

biodiversity which they give rise to is indeed considerable. We now need to incorporate

these phenomena at the ecosystem level. Their relationships with the environment, the

interactions among species and the evolution of these relationships over time are all

dimensions that need to be taken into account if we are to understand ecological

dynamics.

� These two individuals of Ulex europaeus, ofidentical age and grown under the sameexperimental conditions, do not flower at the

same time. This experiment demonstratesintraspecific variation in flowering.

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� The aquatic mollusk Biomphalaria glabratais the obligatory intermediate host of theparasite Schistosoma mansoni.

� BIODIVERSITY SHAPED BY A NETWORK OF INTERACTIONS AMONG SPECIES

Interactions among species are both numerous and complex. They play one of the

most important roles on the biodiversity stage.

Parasites, for instance, and more generally symbionts, are an integral part of bio-

diversity. It has even been shown that groups which have adopted a parasitic way of

life have become more diverse than free groups. This is a demonstration of the

extremely dynamic nature of durable interactions. Parasites are often dominant on

the "selective stage". They alter population dynamics and the evolution of free

species. They can play a predominant role in the success or failure of a biological inva-

sion.

The success of an invasion of a new area by a free species can depend on the pres-

ence of its parasites. They may not follow the free species, or alternatively they may

become more virulent when on native hosts, acting as a sort of biological weapon.

This reasoning can be turned on its head in order to explain the failure of an inva-

sion. There is any number of scenarios, the plot can become just about as complex as

you wish, and the outcome will to a large extent be linked to the factors on which the

local adaptation of hosts and parasites depends. Among these factors, the most

important are the characteristics which make up the genetic systems of species,

migrations, mutations and the reproductive mode, interacting with the abiotic envi-

ronment. Parasites are involved in a large number of interactions. An increase in their

transmission may, directly or indirectly, increase their pathogenic effects and alter

characteristics connected to the reproduction, survival or even behavior of their hosts.

The hosts counter-attack. They initiate mechanisms help avoid parasites, stop infec-

tion before it starts, or limit its effects.

COLORATION, A SIGNAL AT THE HEART OF COMPLEX INTERACTIONS.

Using color is one of the ways in which animals communicate. It is acompromise between attracting conspecifics, avoiding predators andhiding from prey. The crab spider imitates the precise color of theflower which it is on so as to camouflage itself. It imitates the colorwithin the range to which its predators and prey are sensitive: birdshave four types of cone (UV, blue, green and red) while insects havethree (UV, blue and green). These visual systems differ considerably,

not only in their range of sensitivity but also in the number of photoreceptors. It is thus unlikelythat the spider imitates the color of the flower accurately.A team from the Ecotrop laboratory used spectroradiometry to measure the colors of a spiderplaced on peppermint flowers and then at the center of a tansy ragwort flower. Results frommodeling show that color mimicry can operate simultaneously in the visual systems of predatorsand prey. For birds, the spiders take on the pink color of mint flowers when seen with their fourcone system. Similarly, on the ragwort, each spider has the individual color of the center of theyellow flower on which it hunts its prey. However, against the background of the outer petals ofthe ragwort, where they don’t hunt, the spiders produce a strong color contrast which is easilydetected by birds. To hymenoptera the spiders appear to have the same blue-green color as themint flowers when seen with their three-cone system. To hymenoptera, they accurately mimicthe blue-green color of the center of the ragwort flowers, but stand out against the outer petals.These results show that the crab spider’s color mimicry works well for the visual systems ofboth predators and prey.

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� Tetrapod fossils from the Devonian. Skullsof Ichtyostega and Acanthostega, and a leg ofTulerpeton compsognathus.

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� A PROCESS WHICH UNFOLDS THROUGH TIME

The number of plant or animal species in any particular place not only depends on

the ecological conditions prevailing today but is also the result of history, back to the

distant geological past. Evolution has shaped the structure and functioning of living

communities. For example, the extraordinary evolutionary process which during the

Devonian, 370 million years ago, led to the appearance of the tetrapods and to verte-

brates leaving the water for the first time, had momentous consequences for the his-

tory of terrestrial biodiversity. At the other end of the geological time scale, the

adaptive radiation —i.e. rapid diversification and adaptation— of rodents during the

Pliocene and Quaternary (2 million to 50 000 years ago) enriched terrestrial ecosys-

tems with thousands of new species of small size, thus presenting a large number of

carnivores with renewed biomass.

� HUMANS AND BIODIVERSITY

The latest episodes in the history of biodiversity are closely connected to the his-

tory of humans. Remains from archaeological sites, of both plants (charcoal, charred

seeds, and fruit) and animals (shells and bones), contain a wealth of information

which throws light on interactions between human groups and biodiversity. They tell

us about both the ways in which humans exploited these raw materials that were nec-

essary for their survival and the impact of this exploitation on vegetation cover, the

structure of forests, the composition of animal communities, and the extinction of

large predators. Seen this way, the archaeological record gives us a unique opportu-

nity to observe the long-term effects of a wide range of human activities, whether it

be hunting, fishing or the gathering of shells by small prehistoric groups, the organ-

ized management of the countryside by ancient or medieval cities, and animal hus-

bandry and farming in the first village societies. Understanding this interaction on the

scale of centuries or millennia represents a major contribution to the understanding

of biodiversity dynamics, which is of key importance to the management of our cur-

rent resources with a view to sustainable development.

16-17

UNDERSTANDING

BIODIVERSITY

� These small pierced shells, Nassariuskraussianus, dating from 75 000 years ago,were discovered in the Blombos caves inSouth Africa. They were used as ornaments.They are the oldest jewellery ever discovered.

UNDERSTANDING BIODIVERSITY

Coordinator: Robert BarbaultInstitut fédératif d’écologie fondamentale etappliquée,(Federal Institut of Fundamental andApplied Ecology) CNRS/université Paris6,7,12/ENS Cachan/Muséum national d’histoirenaturelle (MNHN)/Institut de recherche pour ledéveloppement (IRD)With contributions from:� Philippe BouchetTaxonomy/Collections Unit, CNRS/MNHN� Guillaume LecointreTaxonomy, Adaptation and Evolution Unit,CNRS/Université Paris 6/MNHN/IRD/ENS Paris

� Simon TillierTaxonomy, Adaptation and Evolution Unit,CNRS/Université Paris 6/MNHN/IRD/ENS Paris� Isabelle OlivieriInstitut des sciences de l’évolution (Institute ofEvolutionary Sciences), CNRS/UniversitéMontpellier 2� Michel VeuillePopulation Genomics Unit, CNRS/Écolepratique des hautes études (EPHE)� Anne-Gile AtlanEcosystems, Biodiversity and Evolution (Ecobio)Unit, CNRS/Université Rennes 1

� Ioannis MichalakisGenetics and Evolution of Infectious DiseasesUnit, CNRS/IRD� Jean-Denis VigneArcheozoology and History of Societies Unit,CNRS/MNHN� Marc ThéryFunctioning, Evolution and RegulatoryMechanisms of Tropical Forest Ecosystems Unit(Ecotrop), CNRS/MNHN

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� ECOSYSTEMS AND THEIR DYNAMICS

Ecosystems are both physical and biological systems. They are capable of self-

regulation and are dependent just as much on the laws of thermodynamics as on the

laws of Darwinian evolution. An ecosystem may be analyzed in terms of its structure.

In this case, researchers study the type of species present, the spatial distribution

of its species and physical components, and the organization of food webs between

species. However, the description of these systems can also focus on their function-

ing. In this case, stress is placed on vari-

ation in structure over time, the

movement of matter and energy within

the ecosystem, and exchanges of matter

and energy with the atmosphere, hydros-

phere and geosphere.

Today, ecosystems are subject to

considerable pressure. They are being

subjected to rapid climate change, the

spread of built-up areas and farmland,

and reduction in biodiversity. And yet

they are essential sources of energy,

materials and food for humans. They

play a key role in regulating biogeo-

chemical cycles. Because of this, more

and more research work is being carried

out on them, especially at CNRS.

� BIODIVERSITY PRESERVES ECOSYSTEMS

The rapid fall in the number of species present on the planet leads many people to

wonder about the importance of the role that biodiversity plays in ecosystem dynamics.

What effect will reduced biodiversity have on the performance of ecosystems with

respect to resource utilization? Subject to disturbances of various kinds, e.g. storms,

fires and pollution, can ecosystems persist? Under what conditions do they maintain

their capacity for resilience? There is a positive connection between the performance of

an ecosystem and the number of species which inhabit it —its species diversity—

18ECOSYSTEM DYNAMICS

AN ECOSYSTEM IS ONE OF THE MOST COMPLEX ENTITIES

RESEARCHERS CAN STUDY. ECOSYSTEMS ARE MORE THAN JUST THE

TOTALITY OF SPECIES PRESENT IN A GIVEN PLACE. THEY ARE ALSO

MADE UP OF ALL THE INTERACTIONS WHICH EXIST BETWEEN THE

SPECIES AS WELL AS BETWEEN THEM AND THEIR PHYSICAL ENVI-

RONMENT. THIS PARTICULARLY DENSE NETWORK OF INTERCON-

NECTED RELATIONSHIPS MAKES IT VERY DIFFICULT TO FORECAST

ECOSYSTEM DYNAMICS.

� Development of satellite towns in Brazil.Nothing remains of the original savannahvegetation: only the gallery forests have beenpartly preserved.

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especially in plant communities. For instance, this is the case for European grassland,

where, for a given density, plant productivity increases in line with the number of species

present. A certain number of observations also hint at genetic diversity having a major

positive effect on the productivity and stability of ecosystems.

� BIOLOGICAL INSURANCE

Biodiversity provides the ecosystem with buffering capacity against fluctuations in

the physical and biological environment. The mechanisms of this effect, known as bio-

logical insurance, are still being debated, and are the subject of a great deal of exper-

imental and theoretical work within the CNRS. The aim of this research is to

determine to what extent the haphazard selection of particular species, the comple-

mentarity between species and the establishment of mutualistic relationships

between species can explain the positive effects of biodiversity on the performance

and resilience of ecosystems. A major research effort is also being carried out on the

functional significance of the biodiversity of micro-organisms, especially with respect

to the regulation of certain key phases in the nitrogen cycle (nitrification and denitri-

fication), and more generally on interactions between soil biodiversity and soil’s phys-

ical and chemical characteristics.

� PREDICTING THE FUTURE OF ECOSYSTEMS

Diminishing biodiversity leads not only to a reduction in the number of species, but

also to a modification in the structure and dynamics of animal, plant and microbial

communities. The mechanisms which regulate the size of populations as well as the

nature and intensity of interactions between species are thus altered. Predicting the

effects of these changes on the functioning of ecosystems is still not easy to do and

gives rise to a great deal of modeling and experimental work. For instance, we are try-

ing to understand the role evolutionary mechanisms play in the response of ecosys-

tems to climatic variation, predict to what extent the flow of matter and energy can vary

within the ecosystem and between the ecosystem and atmosphere or hydrosphere, and

determine the conditions that make an organism become an invasive species, and the

effects of invasions on ecosystems. Invasive species themselves are a cause of reduced

biodiversity. For example, there is the famous case of Cape ivy (South Africa), which has

invaded the whole of Europe and is causing a drastic reduction in the number of plant

species found in grassland. Climate change and fragmentation of environments also

disturb communities, and their effects are added to those of species loss. One of the

big challenges for research today is to define the future geographical ranges of species

by analyzing the characteristics of their life histories, and use them to infer the new

(emergent) communities and ecosystems that will form. For instance, depending on

18-19

ECOSYSTEM

DYNAMICS

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� Grasshopper trapped by ants. TheseAllomerus decemarticulatus ants, which liveexclusively in the plant Hirtella physophora,construct a trap to capture insects which arethen consumed. The association between thisant and the plant is a mutualism: the plantprovides the ants with a home in the form ofpockets located at the base of the leaves,while in return the ants protect their hostplant against herbivorous insects. Thanks tothis trap, the ants manage to catch insectsover 1,500 times their own weight.

Annual brush fires are a major factor in thedynamics of the West African savannah.

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which assumptions are made, by 2100, the beech tree may either completely disappear

from France or remain just in the western part of the country.

IDENTIFYING THE BIODIVERSITY OF SOILS

The characterization of biodiversity is a difficult stage in any study of the biologicalfunctioning of ecosystems. Indeed, it is practically impossible at species level forthe micro-organisms in soils, fresh water and oceans. New tools are beingdeveloped at CNRS for the rapid characterization of genetic diversity in suchenvironments and to enable comparative approaches to be made. High throughputgenomic techniques as well as DNA chips open up interesting new possibilities forunderstanding how soil biodiversity varies under the influence of environmentalchange, including pollution.DNA chips make it possible to identify micro-organisms present in complex

environments (soils, aquatic environments, etc.). DNA sequences from different micro-organisms areobtained from international data bases. Thanks to the development of new algorithms, researchers atthe Protist Biology Laboratory can then determine the oligonucleotides which are specific to eachspecies of micro-organism, and fix them on a glass slide. The RNA of the micro-organisms from soilsor aquatic environments are then marked with a fluorescent label and hybridized with the specificsequences fixed on the slide. Each dot of light thus reveals the presence in these complexenvironments of one species of micro-organism, and in this way makes it possible to get a betterunderstanding of the mechanisms which govern how these ecosystems work.

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� The changing distribution of a species ofNorth American tree, Fraxinus americana, overthe 21st century, according to simulationsusing the Phenofit model.Left: simulation of the current range of thespecies using data from the ClimaticResearch Unit (CRU), (University of EastAnglia, UK).Right: simulation of the range of the speciesin 2100 using data from the HadCM3 model

(Hadley Center, UK), according to the A2 model(defined by the IPCC).

The simulation shows that the species’dispersion ability will not enable it to occupy allthe areas which are climatically favorable in2100, and that populations located at thesouthern most fringe of the range are likely tobecome extinct by 2100.

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Favorable area not reached

Colonized area

Increased likelihood of occurrence

Decreased likelihood of occurrence

Extinction

Scenario A2 HadCM 32001-2100

CRU TS 2,01901-2000

Simulated probability of occurrence

0 1

Current distribution

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� THE ECOSYSTEM: A SET OF TROPHIC INTERACTIONS…

The concept of biodiversity has revitalized research on ecosystems by focusing

attention on interactions between organisms and geochemical cycles. In particular,

the aquatic environment has been the subject of a great deal of study in this area, due

to the ease of experimental work within it. CNRS is carrying out a great deal of

research in this field. Scientists are attempting to understand the role of the organi-

zation of food webs, which are groups of species linked together by predator-prey

relationships. For instance, they determine the trophic connections between species

and the role of their functional diversity on energy flows and on the movement of the

main elements (nitrogen, phosphorus, carbon, etc.) within ecosystems. In addition the

coupling together of classic (plant-animal) food webs and decomposers via the micro-

bial loop is more fully integrated. The movement of matter within food webs, or the

trophic level of organisms can be measured more accurately by using markers for

organic matter such as fatty acids or stable isotopes.

� ...AND NON-TROPHIC INTERACTIONS

Increasing attention is now being paid to allelopathic interactions, in other words

to the inhibiting or stimulating effects of one species on another via chemical com-

pounds. Similarly, the effects of anthropogenic chemical substances cannot be fully

understood without taking into consideration the structure of the food webs into which

they are released. Theoretical and experimental approaches are being developed in

order to better assess the relative proportion of direct or indirect effects of such

chemical substances on the working of ecosystems in connection with the structure

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20-21

ECOSYSTEM

DYNAMICS

Left: Nitrogen-fixing nodule (symbiosisbetween Medicago truncatula (alfalfa) andSinorhizobium meliloti).Right: The spider Arycope bruennichi. A largespecies found locally. The blue patches aremarks made by the experimenter in order tomonitor the movement of individual spiders.This makes it possible to test in the field theinfluence of factors such as the density ofprey or of conspecifics on the way in which anindividual changes the place where it makesits web.

RESEARCH ON A LARGE SCALE

In order to understand the consequences of global change —in climate or land use— on populationsand communities of vertebrates, it is necessary to do research on a large scale. The CNRS Center forBiological Studies at Chizé is carrying out interdisciplinary research on environmental constraints,adaptation of individuals and the implications for managing populations. The goal of this research is toidentify the mechanisms involved, through long-term research on populations of predators andherbivores, both in marine and terrestrial environments. An evolutionary ecophysiological approachmakes it possible to study the mechanistic connections between variation in the environment andphenotypes. Some research has shown the importance of variation in resources over space and timefor the structure of communities. Other studies endeavor to describe the relationships between globalchange and biodiversity conservation. This work mainly concerns threatened species, such as bustardsand albatross, or invasive species such as roe deer, whose dynamics depend very strongly on global

change. These three areas of research are improving our knowledge of populationdynamics and animal communities in a changing environment, and are making itpossible to draw up new principles for the sustainable management of biologicalresources.

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� The long-tailed nightjar, Caprimulgusclimacurus, is a tropical African migrant and aregular winter visitor. It lives in humanenvironments, such as trails, villages andslash-and-burn cultivation, in the Makokouregion of Gabon.

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of food webs. All these different aspects show how diverse the networks of interac-

tions within ecosystems are. A detailed understanding of the role biodiversity plays in

functional processes within ecosystems is no longer conceivable today without taking

into account coupling between networks of trophic and non-trophic interactions (par-

asitism, competition, allelopathy and mutualism).

� URBAN ECOSYSTEMS

Long considered to be of minor interest, biodiversity in urban environments is

today the subject of several research programs at CNRS. Contrary to popular belief,

urban areas are home to a substantial number of species, and some taxa are actual-

ly better represented in cities than in the surrounding countryside. Urban biodiversity

forms an ideal model for study of many current issues in ecology. This is because the

colonization of these new environments, which on the face of it are not very favorable

to living organisms, provides researchers with novel assemblages of species, i.e. with

new models for the analysis of the factors influencing the structure of communities.

The extreme fragmentation of urban environments leads to the formation of a network

of habitats that are isolated from each other, and that can also be used in order to

identify processes of colonization and extinction of small populations functioning as a

network (the metapopulation concept). In addition, cities provide a new type of habitat

for species, which are obliged to adapt to it. It thus forms an authentic evolutionary

laboratory, where we can expect to observe alterations in biological traits (dispersion,

reproduction, behavior, etc.) in response to natural selection. Finally, since cities are

artificial spaces, they make it possible to study the role of humans in the functioning

of ecological systems and to improve the scientific foundations of biodiversity conser-

vation in anthropentric environments.

AN OCEANOGRAPHIC LABORATORY FOR THE STUDY OF BIODIVERSITY IN THE MEDITERRANEAN

Oceanographic laboratories have long practiced the interdisciplinary research required for anintegrated approach to ecology and marine biodiversity. They provide facilities for experimental workboth in situ and in the laboratory using naturally circulating seawater, which makes it easier to allowfor interactions between the physical factors of the medium and biological complexity. Theselaboratories have now been established for over a century and a half, and possess series of high-quality long-term observations which not only make it possible to estimate environmental change butalso to validate models. Oceanographic laboratories also play an active role in disseminatingknowledge to decision-makers, schools, clubs and associations, and the general public, thus making acontribution to good governance of the environment. The Diversity, Evolution and Marine FunctionalEcology Unit (Dimar), based at the Endoume oceanographic laboratory, in Marseille, is part of theCentre d’océanologie de Marseille (Marseille Oceanology Center). It brings together the skills needed

for research into the connections between biological diversity (genetic,phenotypic, specific and functional) and the dynamics and functioning ofmarine ecosystems. Special importance is given to the study of theimpact of large rivers such as the Rhône on benthic communities andon fishing, as well as to biological invasions, since the MediterraneanSea is severely affected by this phenomenon. The results are helping usto understand and predict the impact of disturbances (whether naturalor anthropogenic) and of climate change on coastal environments. Manyresearchers at Dimar are involved as experts in a large number ofprotection and conservation programs, not only locally, but also atregional, national and European levels.

� Reef slope in the Cassis area, withParazoanthus (orange sea anemone) andCorallium rubrum (red coral).

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22-23

ECOSYSTEM

DYNAMICS

ECOTRONS: ECOSYSTEMS UNDER OBSERVATION

As a result of an article by Michel Loreau published at the end of 1998 in "Bio", the journal of theDepartment of Life Sciences, CNRS decided to equip itself with Ecotrons on a national scale. In theseexperimental stations, natural or artificial ecosystems, as well as animal, plant or microbialcommunities, can be subjected to predetermined environmental conditions. The aim is to understandand predict their responses to pressure such as global climate change.The first Ecotron saw the day in the UK, at the Centre for Population Biology (Imperial College) nearLondon. Its goal is to quantify the relationship between the organization of biodiversity and ecosystemfunctioning. Currently there are two projects under development in France, while a third one isplanned.The first French project is the Montpellier Ecotron, to be located on the CNRS and Baillarguetcampuses. It is planned to contain an experimental plot and an array of twelve macrocosms, which willbe enclosed chambers in daylight, within which the climate can be controlled. The chambers will beequipped with instruments which continuously measure temperature, humidity, the atmospheric CO2

concentration, etc. One of their original features is that the chambers will be able to accommodateintact soil monoliths measuring 5 m3 complete with their natural vegetation. An array of mesocosmsand microcosms will used for short-term studies, i.e. less than two years in length. This setup, whichis used to study terrestrial ecosystems, will be completed by the Medimeer station (Sète), where it isalready possible to confine pelagic communities.The Foljuif Ecotron, located near Fontainebleau, is run by the École normale supérieure. One plot isused to carry out long-term experiments under natural conditions. The core of the project is an arrayof 24 climate chambers designed to subject artificial, terrestrial or aquatic communities andecosystems to a range of environments. Ponds will be used for long-term monitoring of interactions

between the structure of food webs, thedynamics of plankton communities and thephysical chemistry of water. Population cagesare used to test the effect of climate changeand fragmentation of the environment on thedispersion of animals.Finally, sophisticated greenhouses are used toanalyze the functioning of plant communitiesunder semi-controlled conditions.A third Ecotron, given over to Alpinebiodiversity, is under study. It will be set up onthe site of the Lautaret Alpine garden, located

at 2,100 meters altitude. It willin particular include coldgreenhouses which allowaccurate control of soilparameters.

ECOSYSTEM DYNAMICS

Coordinator: Luc AbbadieUnit for Biogeochemistry and Ecology ofContinental Environments,CNRS/Inra/université Paris 6/Institut nationalagronomique Paris-Grignon (INA-PG)/ ENSParis/École nationale supérieure de chimie deParis (ENSCP)With contributions from:� Gilles BoeufEvolutionary and Cell Biology Models Unit,CNRS/université Paris 6� Patrick DuncanCentre d’études biologiques de Chizé (ChizéCenter for Biological Studies), CNRS

� Pierre-Olivier CheptouCentre d’écologie fonctionnelle et évolutive(Center for Evolutionary and FunctionalEcology), CNRS/universités Montpellier 1, 2,3/École nationale supérieure agronomique deMontpellier/Centre de coopérationinternationale en recherche agronomique pourle développement (Cirad)� Jean-Pierre FéralDiversity, Evolution and Marine FunctionalEcology Unit, CNRS/Université Aix-Marseille 2� Gérard LacroixBiogeochemistry and Ecology of TerrestrialEnvironments Unit, CNRS/Inra/Université Paris6/INA-PG/ENS Paris/ENSCP

� Architect’s drawing of the Ecotron in Montpellier.

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These experimental plots run by CNRSat Foljuif enable researchers to carry outa long-term study of the impact ofclimate warming on the functioning ofpopulations.

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24THE IMPACT ON HEALTH

2.5 BILLION IN 1955, OVER 6.5 BILLION TODAY, AND NEARLY 10 BILLION

IN 50 YEARS TIME. THAT’S THE RATE HOMO SAPIENS SAPIENS IS

EXPANDING WITHIN THE BIOSPHERE. HUMANS ARE CHANGING THE

EARTH AND ALL ITS ECOSYSTEMS BY UPSETTING THE BALANCE OF

INTERACTIONS, COMPETITION AND COOPERATION AMONG SPECIES.

WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF REDUCED BIODIVERSITY FOR

THE EVOLUTION OF MICROBES, WHICH, LIKE US, ARE PART OF THE

LIVING WORLD? OUR HEALTH DEPENDS ON THE ANSWER TO THIS

QUESTION.

� MICRO-ORGANISMS: A CENTRAL ROLE

IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF HUMAN POPULATIONS

Micro-organisms are one of the essential biological components of our planet, and

one that cannot be ignored. The emergence of higher organisms, including the first

humans, and their impact on the environment encouraged selection for new types of

activity by micro-organisms. These new possibilities gave rise to a large number of

associations which have proved beneficial to humans. Such microbial diversity has a

great impact on human health and on the development of human populations.

� EVER SINCE THE BEGINNING OF HUMAN EXISTENCE…

Certain micro-organisms colonize humans and live in close interaction with them.

They are found on the skin, and in all the human body’s entry and elimination routes:

the nasal cavity, the oral cavity, the alimentary tract, etc. These micro-organisms use

the products of the human body or ingested and digested food in order to grow. The

colonization of these routes by the micro-organisms has been going on, generation

after generation, for at least several thousand years, and possibly for the last 195 000

years on the basis of the most recent dating of the oldest skulls of Homo sapiens.

However, it has only been in the last fifty years or so that the benefits for human health

of colonization by some of these micro-organisms have been recorded and recog-

nized. Some micro-organisms break down food which has not been digested by

humans. They improve digestion, stimulate the immune system, and prevent coloniza-

tion by pathogens. These observations have given rise to the term "probiotic", which

denotes a micro-organism which benefits the health of its host. However, despite the

benefits they bring, it shouldn’t be forgotten that some micro-organisms in the human

body can turn into opportunistic infectious agents if the body is weakened or immun-

odeficient.

� Bacteria and red blood cells in a mouseintestine.

� Staphylococcus aureus growing on avascular prosthesis.

5 μm

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24-25

THE IMPACT ON HEALTH

� RECYCLING ORGANIC MATTER AND WASTE TREATMENT

Micro-organisms lie at the heart of food chains and the major biogeochemical

cycles. Without their help and their great diversity, there would be a breakdown in the

recycling of organic matter, the bioavailability of many elements essential to life and,

more generally, ecosystem functioning. We would be submerged by vast quantities of

waste that can only be broken down and made accessible by micro-organisms, by a

process known as "regeneration". A significant example of how regeneration can be

put to work is given by the very concrete case of waste water treatment. Sewage has

often caused major epidemics (plague, cholera, typhoid, etc.) and produces foul-

smelling odors. In 1914, British scientists used microbial diversity and Pasteur’s

research on fermentation to develop a system whereby sewage was aerated and bro-

ken down by micro-organisms in a tank. This method has since been modernized but

still uses the same principles. In the past few years, molecular analyses of microbial

diversity have demonstrated the great diversity and complexity of interactions in waste

water treatment plants. Intensive research is now being carried out, in particular at

CNRS, in order to characterize the micro-organisms involved, understand how they

work and study how they complement each other. This new knowledge should make

it possible to further reduce the biological and chemical risks associated with waste

water.

� BIODIVERSITY CAN PROTECT US FROM DISEASE

It is biodiversity in general, and not only the biodiversity of micro-organisms, which

plays a key role in regulating the environment. The arrival of bird flu in Europe and the

outbreak of Chikungunya on the island of Reunion are there to remind us of the major

role played by reservoirs and host vectors in the development and spread of infectious

diseases. The problems related to the emergence or resurgence of diseases cannot

be understood from an anthropocentric, reductionist viewpoint. Their complexity

appears inextricable to us, since thousands of vector and reservoir species are con-

nected by ecological interactions which are subjected to, and react to, environmental

conditions. The question of how to control diseases which have a major environmen-

tal component is not an easy one to answer. New epidemics are highly likely to occur.

What can be done to prevent them from spreading?

For a large number of diseases of environmental origin, an ecological approach

appears to be the most appropriate one, because the focus is on the interaction of liv-

ing organisms with a microbial agent, and on the way in which this interaction reacts

to environmental conditions. The most productive studies using this approach are

unquestionably those which have revealed fundamental phenomena that explain the

movement of pathogens within ecosystems. Reservoir and vector animal species

show very varying abilities to pass on micro parasites. This natural diversity plays a

key role in the transmission of infectious agents in their environment.

In the US, Lyme’s disease illustrates this remarkably well. The bacterium which

causes this disease is transmitted by ticks to a number of animal species. In the

United States, the small rodent Peromyscus leucopus is far and away the most com-

petent species when it comes to transmitting the microbe to ticks which bite them.

Environmental conditions, especially the fragmentation of forest ecosystems, have

encouraged the proliferation of this species to the detriment of others, thus leading to

increased transmission of the microbe to the vectors and therefore to human popula-

tions frequenting high-risk areas. This situation doesn’t occur in other more forested

areas of the US since the preservation of greater biodiversity in these ecosystems

leads to regulation of the population of Peromyscus leucopus. Thus, according to this

study, high local biological diversity tends to dilute the infectious agent in reservoir

hosts which are not or only slightly competent, and therefore to decrease the risk of it

being passed on to humans. This phenomenon has been named "dilution effect".

Since then, mathematical modeling has made it possible to show that these

results can be generalized to so-called "frequency-dependent" diseases, for which

contact with an infected individual does not depend on the density of individuals pres-

ent. Nonetheless, the ecological mechanism in question seems more difficult to

� Thiobacillus ferroxidans sp. in a bacterialmat in a pond for the treatment of acid waterpolluted by arsenic, seen through a scanningelectron microscope.

� Bird populations are reservoirs for virusessuch as West Nile fever or bird flu. Dependingon the diversity of bird species in acommunity, the same infectious agent may betransmitted in very different ways.

© C

NR

S P

hoto

thèq

ue /

C.D

elha

ye, G

.Nab

ias

© E

ye o

f Sci

ence

/ C

osm

os©

Gill

es B

alan

ça (C

irad

)

� If not treated, Lyme’s disease causes skin,arthritic, heart, neurological and sometimeseye disorders. The agent which causes thedisease, Borrelia burgdorferi, is a highlymobile bacterium, spiral in shape andbetween 5 and 25 micrometers long. It istransmitted by ticks.

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© D

avid

Aub

rey

/ Sc

ienc

e P

hoto

Lib

rary

� In the United States, Peromyscus leucopusis a reservoir for Borrelia burgdorferi. Theserodents transmit the bacterium to ticks, whichtransmit it to humans. It is thereforenecessary to study the dynamics of the rodentpopulation in order to understand thefrequency of Lyme’s disease.

explain for "density-dependent" diseases. To what extent can these results be extrap-

olated to other zoonotic diseases and to other environmental conditions? Today,

research is being carried out at CNRS with the aim of formalizing the effects of biodi-

versity and its evolution for other diseases such as West Nile fever and bird flu, dis-

eases for which it is suspected that a great diversity of reservoir birds are involved.

The outbreak of bird flu is a phenomenon which is likely to recur. Natural bird sanc-

tuaries and wetlands are stopping off places where migrating birds, carrying numer-

ous pathogens, come into contact with resident species. These areas are highly

favorable to the movement of pathogens, even at a low level. To what extent did the

proximity of intensive poultry production and wetlands in the Ain Department, where

the H5N1 virus was detected, facilitate the triggering of a chain reaction, in which

humans may also have played a role, and which led to over a thousand turkeys being

slaughtered?

� THE EXAMPLE OF AGRICULTURE

Agriculture is another example of the role biodiversity plays in controlling epi-

demics. In the past few years, the risk inherent in cultivating a limited number of vari-

eties of a given crop plant and the benefits of genetic diversity have been recognized.

In plant pathology there have been many cases of disease developing following the

cultivation of a particular variety or a group of related varieties. This observation has

led to the concept of "genetic vulnerability". The cultivation of vulnerable varieties is a

key factor in epidemics. It disturbs the balance between pathogens and their hosts

and encourages their propagation.

In contrast, intraspecific diversity may have beneficial effects. The progression and

BIODIVERSITY VERSUS EPIDEMICS

Depending on the diversity of bird species in a community, the same infectious agent may be transmittedin very different ways.1. In the presence of a diversity of reservoir species (each species can transmit the virus) the pathogencan find many different ways of being transmitted, the overall result being a dilution of its effects. The greater the proportion of reservoir species that have only a low capacity to transmit the virus, the greater this dilution effect becomes.2. In communities where reservoir species are less abundant, where one or several species which havea high capacity to transmit the virus have taken advantage of the environmental conditions to breed, the transmission of the infectious agent becomes easier and its effects are more easily seen. This is a situation that can be encountered when migrating birds with a high capacity for virustransmission settle in a local community where that virus is absent.3. An extreme situation occurs where individuals of a single species of bird, with a high capacity forvirus transmission or which suffer its consequences, are concentrated in large numbers, as in poultryfarms.

1 2 3

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26-27

THE IMPACT ON HEALTH

subsequent control of outbreaks of cassava mosaic in Uganda in the 1990s provides a

spectacular example of the beneficial role of genetic diversity.

The first time cassava mosaic was observed was in 1894 in Tanzania. This disease

of viral origin is transmitted by cuttings and

insects. Some varieties are more affected by

the disease than others. By selecting varieties

which were relatively unaffected farmers

avoided major crop losses. These early find-

ings have since been corroborated by obser-

vations in a large number of African countries,

particularly during the outbreaks in Uganda in

the 1990s, which have been studied by

researchers at IRD. The most affected regions

in the country were those where the local

Ebwanateraka variety was almost exclusively

cultivated. The only crops to be spared were

those which contained a large number of

other varieties. Ebwanateraka had been

selected for its early maturity and high yield,

and grown by farmers several years earlier, at

a time when cassava mosaic was insignificant.

Ebwanateraka was grown in many regions of

Uganda, but the variety turned out to be very sensitive to outbreaks of cassava mosa-

ic. There were thus considerable crop losses. The growth of the plants was so reduced

that they produced neither tubers for consumption nor cuttings for future planting. An

extensive survey carried out between 1990 and 2003 showed that there have been

major changes in the range of cultivars grown. Nearly twenty five varieties are now

grown in the areas where Ebwanateraka was predominant. Some were selected for

their resistance as a result of programs to improve cassava. Others are local varieties

chosen by farmers because of their resistance and tolerance. In this way production

recovered and the crisis was overcome.

In a number of areas in west and southwest Uganda, the situation was completely

different. A large number of varieties of cassava are grown there, and farmers are far

less dependent on it. When the first outbreaks of cassava mosaic occurred, the farm-

ers eliminated the most seriously affected varieties and planted far more of those

which were least affected. They thus adapted rapidly to the disease, without any knowl-

edge of mosaic, and without any technical assistance. This epidemic is one of the most

striking examples of the contribution genetic diversity makes to the control of plant

diseases.

EPIDEMIC IN UGANDA

As a result of the epidemic of cassava mosaic in Uganda in the 1990s, a large number of villagepopulations suffered a total loss of their income. Food shortages made their appearance, andgovernment boards of enquiry were informed of deaths due to famine. Since cassava was nolonger able to play its role as a stop-gap crop in the event of shortages, the situation becameespecially difficult after the drought of 1993-1994. Given the almost total absence of cassava, thefarmers had no choice but to turn to other crops such as sweet potato. This led to pricesrocketing. Given the seriousness of the situation, emergency food aid was established, andvarious governmental and nongovernmental organizations supplied cuttings of mosaic-resistantcassava.

© J

.M. T

hres

hD

R

© C

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D.M

c K

ey

� A field of healthy cassava, anda leaf affected by cassavamosaic.

� A field in Uganda destroyedby cassava mosaic.

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� PARASITES: ORGANISMS NOT TO BE OVERLOOKED

Unlike free organisms, parasites and pathogens have rarely been considered to

play a role in the working of ecosystems. Nonetheless, research carried out over the

past few years at CNRS have brought to light an unsuspected number of conse-

quences of the influence they have on ecology and the evolution of the host popula-

tions. As often happens in ecology, these effects can be spectacularly amplified by

cascade processes. Parasites and pathogens can in this way totally disrupt food

chains, competitive relationships between species, or even the invasive potential of

some species. Upsetting these "balances" may or may not favor the preservation of

biodiversity.

Current scientific research into the consequences of parasitism in ecosystems,

range all the way from purely fundamental questions about the roles of parasitism in

ecosystems to more applied topics, such as clarifying the influence of land manage-

ment methods (farming, hunting, deforestation, nature reserves, etc.) on the dynam-

ics of parasite communities. Knowing that practically all the ecosystems on the planet

suffer the consequences of human activities to varying degrees, it would appear to be

of crucial importance to improve our understanding of the interactions between

human activities, parasitism and biodiversity. This research thus contributes not only

new information enabling more account to be taken of parasites in conservation pro-

grams, but is also laying the foundations of the rapidly growing discipline of health

ecology.

With regard to fundamental research, one of the top priorities for CNRS is the

identification of the mechanisms whereby parasites can locally favor biodiversity. The

processes involved are as astonishing as they are diverse. For instance, by altering the

appetite of their herbivore hosts, nematodes in the alimentary tract can indirectly

affect the structure of plant communities. Some parasites in lagoon ecosystems pre-

vent shellfish from burrowing under the sediment and thus help to diversify the nature

of the possible substrates to which limpets, sea anemones, chitons and tube worms

fix themselves. This diversification of the habitat leads to a lessening of competition

between benthic invertebrates, which in return favors their coexistence.

This cockle, Austrovenus stutchburyi, isparasitized by the trematode Curtuteriaaustralis which prevents it from burrowinginto the sediment. This alteration in behaviorenables two species of invertebrate, thelimpet Notoacmea helmsi and the seaanemone Anthopleura aureoradiata to coexistin this environment.

© C

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ue

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� For over twenty years, Guadeloupe’sfreshwater mangrove swamp has been usedas a natural laboratory by teams from CNRSwho are studying the evolutionary ecology ofhost-parasite systems. In this swampy forestin an island environment, a combination ofecological, behavioral and demographicfactors has led to a human parasite (theschistosome) crossing over to theoverabundant populations of roof rats.Although this is a recent phenomenon, it hasalready led to remarkable adaptations of theparasite to its new hosts. Analysis of thegenetic co-structures of the populationsconcerned (parasites, rodents and mollusks)also makes it possible to understand thedynamic processes at work in these complexsystems of interactions, and to envisage themost appropriate ways of combating theparasite.

© C

NR

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S.M

orin

, J.-

P.P

oint

ier

The leek moth, Acrolepiopsis assectella, aplant-eating lepidopteran of the superfamilyYponomeutoidea, attacks plants of the genusAllium, and especially the leek, Allium porrum.Found all over Europe, this species causeshuge damage to crops. In the center of thepicture, the hole made by a newly born larvaand the beginning of a mine can be seen.

28-29

THE IMPACT ON HEALTH

� BIODIVERSITY, PARASITISM AND HUMAN HEALTH: A FRAGILE BALANCE

Taking parasites into account is becoming increasingly important in conservation

biology, especially within areas which enjoy protected status. This is because parks

and reserves are hot spots when it comes to population density and species diversity.

These differences in the density of the animal population (and there-

fore of hosts) compared to adjoining areas have direct repercussions

not only on the dynamics of pathogen communities and on their viru-

lence, but also indirectly on the populations of invertebrate prey.

Quantifying these phenomena is important for several reasons. For

instance, nature reserves may in some cases be areas where there is

a high parasite risk for the very species that they are supposed to pro-

tect, or where the prey available there is not as valuable to predators

because of parasitism. It is also conceivable that the concentrated

population of animals in these areas encourages the transmission

and proliferation of pathogens which are a potential risk to human health. This clear-

ly illustrates the connection between conservation biology and health ecology.

For CNRS, it is essential over the next few years to provide the knowledge which

will enable ecosystems to be managed in a way that allows for the transmission of

pathogens to human and animal populations. However, so that they can be managed

in a way that also favors the preservation of biodiversity, it is essential that this

research be carried out in close collaboration between biologists, veterinarians and

managers of protected sites. Despite a great deal of progress regarding theory in this

field, the setting up of long-term studies and monitoring of the interactions between

human activity, biodiversity management and parasitism are more than ever of

utmost importance for the understanding and prevention of public and veterinary

health problems.

THE IMPACT ON HEALTH

Coordinator: François RenaudGenetics and Evolution of Infectious DiseasesUnit, CNRS/Institut de recherche pour ledéveloppement (IRD)With contributions from:� Benoît CournoyerMicrobial Ecology Unit, CNRS

� Jean-François Guégan and Benjamin RocheGenetics and Evolution of Infectious DiseasesUnit, CNRS/IRD� Denis FargetteCrop Diversity and Genomes Unit, IRD� Frédéric Thomas and Camille LebarbenchonGenetics and Evolution of Infectious DiseasesUnit and la Tour du Valat Biological Station,CNRS/IRD

� A larva at the 5th larval stage on its hostplant. This is a male, which can be identifiedby its orange testes. This larva mines the leekleaf on hatching, where it will then takerefuge.

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Lau

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� THE HUMAN IMPACT ON BIODIVERSITY

Biodiversity is an essential part of human activity, nutrition and health. Applied

research in the field of biodiversity may have a major impact on our development and

its sustainability. In the short term, the interest of such research is not always imme-

diately clear, and it may be tempting to prefer research that leads to a rapid improve-

ment in production or health. However, because of the major effect human activity has

on living species, as well as the importance of sustainability for medicine and farm-

ing, in the medium term, research on biodiversity is potentially of huge importance for

the future of our species.

� THE IMPACT OF AGRICULTURE

Agronomists have always been aware of the need to make use of existing biodiver-

sity. However, over the course of the last century, we have witnessed the emergence

of an agronomy which is less and less sustainable. Research into the origin of crop

plants, the basis of all human food, has shown that they are the result of a process of

domestication carried out in constant interaction between wild and cultivated forms.

The wild relatives of cultivated varieties provide the diversity which is essential for the

adaptation of cultivated forms to environmental changes (especially to pests and

pathogens). It is clear that the increasingly intensive nature of agriculture has been

detrimental to these processes.

Plant geneticists continue to

draw on wild forms for the

genetic resources which make it

possible to adapt cultivated

forms, but the preservation of

this diversity is becoming

increasingly problematic. The

only solution currently imple-

mented on a large scale consists

in freezing existing diversity in

gene banks. Research aimed at

a more practical and active

management of genetic diversi-

ty, based on the agricultural

30BIODIVERSITY IN DANGER

HUMANS ARE THE MAIN THREAT TO DIVERSITY. IN THE LAST FIFTY

YEARS THEIR POPULATION HAS MORE THAN DOUBLED AND THEIR

CONSUMPTION OF NATURAL RESOURCES HAS INCREASED SIXFOLD.

THE DEVELOPMENT OF HUMAN SOCIETIES HAS LED TO THE OVER

EXPLOITATION OF ANIMAL AND PLANT SPECIES TO THE POLLUTION OF

NATURAL ENVIRONMENTS AND IS NOW CONTRIBUTING TO CLIMATE

CHANGE. OVER AND ABOVE THE CHANGES THAT HUMANS HAVE

BROUGHT ABOUT BY THEIR NUMBERS AND THEIR ACTIVITY, THEY HAVE

ALSO DIRECTLY ACTED UPON SOME ECOSYSTEMS IN ORDER TO SATIS-

FY THEIR NEEDS. ALL THESE FACTORS IMPACT ON BIODIVERSITY AND

ARE LIKELY TO CAUSE A MASS EXTINCTION OF SPECIES.

Algal bloom in Lannion Bay. Every summer,a large number of estuaries and bays inBrittany are invaded by the alga Ulva lactuca.The proliferation of these algae is due to highconcentrations of nitrates and phosphates incoastal waters, and is directly caused byhuman activity (farm waste, leaching fromfarmland, and sewage).

� The sea floor off Frioul (Bay of Marseille) in1970. Oceans and seas are used as garbagedumps for the waste left over from humanactivity.

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© CNRS Photothèque / Jean-Yves Pontailler

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30-31

BIODIVERSITY

IN DANGER

environment itself and treating the agro ecosystem as a whole, is currently under way.

It aims to transform an attitude based on productivity into one which encourages sus-

tainable management practices. With this research, carried out in partnership by

CNRS, Inra, IRD and Cirad we treat questions of agronomy, as one leading member of

Inra put it, "as an applied branch of ecology".

� GMOS: A PRECAUTIONARY APPROACH

The need for diversity in cultivated forms has led to an innovative technical solu-

tion, which is to look for the genes which can be used to improve a domestic species

not just in closely-related species, but rather in any living organism. Research in the

field of biotechnology has been extremely active, and rapidly led to the production of

GMOs able to bring about a number of improvements to farming. Unfortunately, this

approach did not include a wider analysis of the diversity of crop plants and their wild

relations. Adding a gene taken from a bacterium to a plant in order to kill the insects

that attack it can certainly be useful to agriculture, by making it possible to fight

against pests without harming other species. Similarly, making a species resistant to

a herbicide makes it possible to be sparing with toxic chemicals when eliminating

weeds from crops. However, research into the impact of such practices jointly carried

out by CNRS and Inra, have shown that a certain number of precautions need to be

taken. Firstly, it would be irresponsible to make all plant species resistant to all her-

bicides. That would lead to an inextricable situation when it comes to dealing with

self-sowing plants of one crop within another. Secondly, it is necessary to make sure

PATENTING LIFE

Research has shown that plant pollen spreads much further than once thought. Naturally, in theimmediate vicinity of a crop, the quantity of pollen originating from this crop falls off rapidly the furtheraway you are. However, this is only true for pollen which has fallen straight onto the ground.Other pollen, caught up by atmospheric turbulence, are spread almost uniformly throughout the turbulentlayer (from 0 to around 1,000 meters altitude), and the distance they disperse then only depends on howlong they survive. Apart from the many agricultural and economic consequences this phenomenon canhave, it takes on particular importance if you take into account the practice of patenting plant genes,which is recognized all over the world except in Europe.A Canadian farmer was recently convicted for sowing rape seed, collected from his own fields, whichcontained genes patented by an agrochemical company. The genes, in the form of seeds or pollen, had

been blown into the farmer’s field. He hadn’t stolen them, but they werepatented. The farmer was therefore banned from continuing to use hisown seed. After a lengthy court battle, the Supreme Court of Canadafinally came down in favor of the firm. It’s easy to see that wind-blownpollen and seed, together with American patent legislation, can enablebiotechnology companies to take over the genetic resources of the entireplanet. All they have to do is to patent the genes, grow the plants thatcontain them, and then let the wind do the rest. This prospect opens upthe possibility of a massive loss of genetic diversity among the organisms which are most valuable to humans: the plants on which all their food is based.

� A genetically modified tomato plant.

© C

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© E

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ence

/ C

osm

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This grain of pine pollen has ashape which favors its dispersion bywind.

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that crossbreeding between crop plants and wild plants doesn’t end up producing

resistant super-weeds. And finally, it would be foolish to insert the same resistance to

insects into all plants. Just as bacteria have become resistant to antibiotics, such an

approach would inevitably lead to widespread resistance by insects.

� CHEMICAL DIVERSITY: A COMPLEX PUZZLE

Chemical pollution contaminates all food chains. Over 100,000 differ-

ent chemicals are produced in Europe. Not much is known about their

individual effects, and even less about their synergistic or antagonistic

effects. Most of these substances or their breakdown products are

found in the environment. That makes thousands of different chemi-

cals which have to be tracked and monitored. The development of new

analytical methods means that it is now possible to detect chemical

elements at very low concentrations, and identify new molecules liable

to have biological effects and which are as yet unregulated. It was in

the 1970s that people first became aware of the dangers of industrial

pollution, while the 1980s saw increased awareness of the problems

caused by agricultural pollution due to the use of fertilizers and pesticides. Now, in the

first decade of the new century, there is increased interest in the problems caused by

new substances which are present in the environment mainly because of use by individ-

uals. These new classes of chemicals include plasticizers, detergents, pharmaceutical

and body care products, natural or synthetic estrogen compounds (contraceptive pills),

and pesticides with recent formulations. A number of carcinogenic, mutagenic, immuno-

suppressive and neurotoxic effects are associated with such chemical compounds.

The Reach directive is a major step forward with regard to the security and safety

of chemistry for health and for the environment. In future, chemicals will be author-

ized only if they have no toxic effects, or under special conditions if they are danger-

ous but essential. The industry will have to produce toxicological evidence that their

products are harmless. Over 30,000 chemicals produced or imported into the

European Union will be analyzed and recorded over a period of eleven years.

The eventual goal of Reach is to promote the withdrawal of those chemicals that give

most cause for concern and their replacement by alternative substances that are

more suitable and safer. These regulations will make the European

chemical industry more competitive by encouraging innovation (e.g.

green chemistry and toxicity tests) rather than restricting it as hap-

pened with previous legislation. What is more, this legislation estab-

lishes rules which will set an example to the World with regards

sustainable chemical production.

� BIODIVERSITY AND CLIMATE CHANGE

Besides direct human impact on certain ecosystems, the burning of

hydrocarbons and coal due to human activity has led, since 1950, to

a massive increase in greenhouse gas concentrations. Since then,

the global mean surface temperature has risen by 0.6°C. Models

predict that by the end of the 21st century this average global temperature will have

increased by between 1.5°C and 5.8°C.

Global warming has already to begun to manifest its impact on biodiversity. For

instance, of the 95 most common species of passerine birds, those in northern regions

are declining the fastest. This trend was confirmed during and after the heatwave of

2003. The most pessimistic projections predict that by 2050, 35% of living species will

probably have disappeared, with global warming coming on top of the other three major

causes of extinction: environmental deterioration, biological invasions and overexploita-

tion by humans.

� Catalytic ozonization device for breakingdown pollutants in aqueous solution in alaboratory reactor. The goal of this research isto study the reaction mechanisms of catalyticozonization on model molecules and todevelop processes for depolluting water.

© W

.Thu

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Chr

isto

phe

Lebe

ndin

sky

� Pessimistic (left) and optimistic (right)forecasts for the shift in the geographicalrange of the chestnut by 2080 (in red, areaswhere it will have disappeared; in blue, areaswhich it will have colonized).

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BIODIVERSITY

IN DANGER

� View of a landslide caused by runoff insouthern India. Unprotected ground left bareby the destruction of forest cover is especiallyaffected by this phenomenon.

In return, biodiversity

makes a big contribu-

tion to the absorption of

anthropogenic emis-

sions of carbon, and is

thus slowing down

ongoing climate

change. The greater

the biodiversity, the greater the biomass. Biodiversity and climate change are there-

fore connected. The way in which biodiversity evolves will lead to either an accelera-

tion or a slowing down of climate change in the future.

� IT’S NOT ALWAYS EASY TO MOVE

Besides the reorganization of communities, the impact of global warming on the

diversity of species could be made worse by the reduction in size of their ranges. The

number of species liable to disappear could double if individuals are not able to

migrate to their new ranges. Biodiversity monitoring stations are pointing to the exis-

tence of real difficulties for migrating species. Specialist species (dependent on one

particular type of habitat) are the most likely to decline in abundance and go extinct…

These movements of species are seriously disrupted by human land-use manage-

ment. Human pressure is fragmenting natural habitats. A species whose demograph-

ic potential diminishes due to the deterioration of its environment caused by human

activities (urban growth, building of roads and freeways, barriers which prevent move-

ment of migratory animals, etc.) is even more likely to become extinct if climatic con-

ditions are no longer conducive to its survival.

� Aerial view of the Trans Amazon Highway.The road is absolutely straight, except where itcrosses a stream (middle of photo). Its routewas drawn in the offices of the militaryauthorities with the aim of occupying the

Amazon basin in a rational way. Only a few shortsections are paved. Running parallel to thehighway, a high voltage power line (visible dueto the clearing of trees beneath the line) servesthe main towns and exports the hydroelectricityproduced in the region.

© C

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Ala

in P

avé

© C

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Xav

ier

Arn

aud

de S

artr

CN

RS

Pho

toth

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/ J

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urni

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Plants which make up the restinga, a plantassociation which is typical of coastal dunes in Brazil (Ilha do Mel, Brazil). The bay ofParanaguá is located at a very pronouncedbiogeographic boundary on South America’sAtlantic coast, since it separates the tropicaland subtropical areas, and is home to plantspecies and associations from both areas.Climate change on a major scale would leadto the expansion or decline of vegetationbelonging to one of the two areas

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Adaptation to new climatic conditions will be an alternative response of species to

the reduction in their range or to problems in migrating. In this case, intraspecific

diversity represents is of major importance since it determines the persistence of

adaptive processes within a context of rapid climate change.

� THE BIOLOGY OF EXTINCTION, A VICIOUS CIRCLE

Humans are the main threat to biodiversity. The deterioration of habitats is reduc-

ing the possible range of those species which, confined to the limits of their range,

experience a fall in numbers and become caught up in a spiral, leading to their extinc-

tion.

Besides outside pressure, once a popula-

tion’s numbers have started to decline, random

processes may come into play and push the

species over the brink into extinction. The

smallest populations of the species are affected

by demographic, genetic and environmental

factors. The survival rate of a population is

directly connected to its size in terms of the

number of individuals present. Small popula-

tions are the most likely to disappear. Intuitively,

it is not difficult to imagine that a population

composed of only two individuals has far more

chances of disappearing than a population with

fifty individuals. The likelihood of the two indi-

viduals in the small population dying are greater

than the likelihood of the fifty individuals in the

larger population disappearing.

Over and above this demographic effect, a

small-sized population is faced with harmful

genetic effects which threaten its survival. At

the level of a population, the number of different

copies of a gene, i.e. the number of alleles, con-

stantly diminishes, apart from the odd mutation.

Some alleles (alternate forms of gene) are not

transmitted to offspring. This phenomenon is

called genetic drift. Genetic drift impoverishes the evolutionary potential of the popu-

lation. In the event of an allele which is less favorable to an individual’s survival or

fecundity being transmitted, it can also diminish the average fitness of the population.

If this allele becomes permanently established in the population, and its effects are

too weak for it to be rapidly eliminated by natural selection, inbreeding depression can

be observed.

� EVOLVING TOWARDS EXTINCTION

Habitat degradation is the cause of the extinction of a large number of populations,

but a species can adapt to its new environment, even if it is degraded or partially

destroyed if it has sufficient evolutionary potential. It can colonize new sites, acquire

tolerance to pollution or new behavior, and so on. However, there are cases where a

species can not adapt to a new environment. For instance, it may be highly specialized

to its environment and thus not contain the genetic variability necessary for adapta-

tion to new conditions. The range of a species can be restricted not only by the

absence of favorable environments but also by its limited ability to disperse. Moreover,

the absence of a favorable environment is in itself connected to the environmental

requirements of the species, and therefore to its degree of specialization. When there

are few favorable environments, genes that confer a decreased aptitude for dispersion

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� Namibian desert. This succulent,euphorbia, grows in cracks in therocks of Swartzbank. Sea mists fromthe ocean, located 20 kilometers away,condense on this granite inselberg andprovide water for the plants, which areadapted to extreme drought stress.

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BIODIVERSITY

IN DANGER

BIODIVERSITY IN DANGER

Coordinator: Pierre-Henri GouyonWith contributions from:� Denis CouvetSpecies Conservation, Restoration andMonitoring of Populations Unit, CNRS/Muséumnational d’histoire naturelle/Université Paris 6� Isabelle Olivieri

Institut des sciences de l’évolution (Institute forEvolutionary Sciences),CNRS/Université Montpellier 2� Alain PavéCNRS French Guiana Unit, CNRS.� Philippe GarriguesLaboratoire de physico-toxicochimie dessystèmes naturels (Laboratory of Physico-Toxico-Chemistry of Natural Systems) (LPTC),CNRS/Université Bordeaux 1

are selected. This phenomenon can be

illustrated by the distribution of

Centaurea corymbosa, an endemic plant

in the La Clape massif in the Hérault

department. The species is made up of

six populations, and its range is restrict-

ed to ten square kilometers.

� THE AMAZON BASIN

Biological diversity in the Amazon basin is principal-

ly threatened by human activity for all the reasons we

have already mentioned, and especially by deforestation

to provide new land for agriculture and livestock farm-

ing. This is a worldwide, long-term process. Due to the

growth of human populations and therefore the increase

in food needs, as well as the need to promote new agri-

cultural methods which are less harmful to the environ-

ment and human health, and will lead to more land

being farmed. Within fifty years, 30 to 50% of the Amazon

forest will have disappeared or been considerably

altered by humans. There is no doubt that this transfor-

mation will cause a decline in biodiversity.

Centaurea corymbosa is a protectedmonocarpic plant and is only found on a singlemassif in the south of France near Narbonne.

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� The Central coast stubfoot toad of FrenchGuiana, Atelopus franciscus; fungi; the fruit-eating bat Artibeus gnomus; the rainbow boa.The Amazon basin, together with the othertropical rain forests, covers 7% of the Earth’ssurface, and may contain over half of all livingspecies.

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Controlled burning in order to clear grazingland near Redenção, Brazil.

��

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36SUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENT

THE STATES WHICH SIGNED THE RIO CONVENTION ON BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY

AGREED ON THE NEED TO HALT THE REDUCTION IN BIODIVERSITY BY 2010. WE

NOW KNOW THAT THIS WILL BE FAR FROM BEING THE CASE, AND THAT MUCH

PROGRESS NEEDS TO BE MADE WITH REGARD TO MANAGING BIODIVERSITY.

MANAGING NATURE MEANS UNDERSTANDING AND ADAPTING HUMAN RELA-

TIONS WITH RESPECT TO NON-HUMANS, WHETHER DOMESTICATED OR WILD. IT

IS THEREFORE NECESSARY TO OBSERVE, MODEL, DEVELOP ECOLOGICAL TECH-

NOLOGIES AND ENGINEERING, AND IMPLEMENT NUMEROUS TOOLS, FROM

LOCAL TO GLOBAL LEVELS.

� HUMAN RELATIONS WITH RESPECT TO NON-HUMANS.

Although the word ‘biodiversity’ had been coined some time before, this new word

only really came of age at the Rio de Janeiro conference in 1992. Even in the remotest

villages in the world, farmers were asked to change the way they viewed the world.

They were invited to do so by civil ser-

vants or by NGOs who very often didn’t

themselves really understand what the

word meant, but nevertheless talked

about the need to safeguard "nature".

Every society has its own view of nature,

and a Pygmy certainly doesn’t see it in

the same way as a French farmer, let

alone a Parisian! Nonetheless, the need

to preserve the diversity of the living

world is becoming a worldwide concern,

and reflects the idea that a watered down

version of life wouldn’t really be life at

all. People’s perception of nature underpins any management of biodiversity.

Managing biodiversity means managing human relations with respect to nature. How

can these different interests and activities be reconciled? It is up to scientists to clar-

ify the choices and help the decision-making process.

Simply listing all the different life-forms implies a considerable long-term effort by all

of the world’s groups of taxonomists. This is nonetheless essential if we are to under-

stand the interactions between these life-forms over space and time. It’s a huge task,

and it is already raising a number of problems with regard to managing, analyzing and

making the data available. Several international scientific programs are involved in

this, especially the GBIF (Global Biodiversity Information Facility) and the GTI (Global

Taxonomy Initiative), as well as others at European level.

The interactions between organisms and environments give rise to the services that

ecosystems provide, on which humans depend and from which they draw benefit, such

as recycling the atmosphere, filtering water, soil fertility, pollination, etc. Biodiversity

management is essential for the preservation of these ecosystem services.

The importance of these services in the economic and social spheres is poorly under-

stood and considerably underestimated. Biodiversity is a source of raw materials,

technology and products: its profits represent somewhere between 20 and 90% of the

turnover of companies, depending on the industry. We need to invent a kind of "life

� and Depending on the culture they comefrom, humans see nature in very differentways. Left: View from the administrationbuilding of the Jussieu campus in Paris: asmall patch of nature can be seen, consistingof a few embankments covered with wildcomposite plants. Right: Aka Pygmy childrenwashing their clothes in a creek. CentralAfrican Republic.

� Bombus terrestris on Mimulus guttatus. Thepollination of crops, which is essential to theirsurvival, is one of the services thatecosystems provide and on which humansdepend.

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SUSTAINABLE

MANAGEMENT

accounting", which would place business activity within the context of living process-

es. Some scientists hold a completely different view, and believe that we could

improve management by giving nature a price. Simply evaluating the cost of replacing

these natural services by technical solutions is usually enough to demonstrate the

importance of preserving them. One oft-quoted example is New York’s drinking water

supply, where it was shown that the natural water treatment afforded by the hills was

more efficient and far less expensive than using a water treatment plant. It is cheap-

er to preserve the quality of water in the ecosystem than to treat used water.

Biodiversity management will have to be based on long-term observation systems

which enable indicators to be established. Indicators are tools which enable dialogue

between decision makers, the general public and scientists, in order to decide on the

goals and means for biodiversity management. For instance, monitoring bird popula-

tions provides information about changes in land use and in human habitats.

Modeling, which is developing very rapidly, has turned out to be crucial to understand-

ing the living world on the basis of partial information, and also to uncovering the

dynamic systems of interactions between organisms and environments, as well as

between environments and societies.

� WHAT GOVERNANCE AND WHAT TOOLS FOR MANAGEMENT?

Laws and regulations are the first tools that spring to mind. They are of great

importance, provided it is remembered that they are expensive and complex to imple-

ment and administer. For society, they are indispensable when their role is to define

the global rules of the game, but much less so when they attempt to go into the finer

details of management at the local level.

Protected areas play a major role in biodiversity management, by making them

safe from being plundered. They cover around 10% of land and less than 0.5% of the

MONITORING STATIONS AND INDICATORS

Biodiversity monitoring stations: rationale and first results

There is a lack of biodiversity monitoring stations whose job is collect quantitative information, as isdone in Earth and Astronomical Sciences, about the general state of biodiversity.The most successful experiment concerns observatories for common birds, which have been operatingin the US for the last fifty years and in France over the last fifteen years. They show that there has beena fall of around 1% per year in the bird population, i.e. a fall of over a million birds per year in France.This major decline, which covers the whole range of ecosystems in the northern hemisphere, can onlybe proved irrefutably by increasing the number of observation points (10,000 points per year in France),given its low annual intensity.Butterfly monitoring stations, which have been operating in Northern Europe for twenty five years haveobserved not only a steep drop in numbers, but also a reorganization of communities, favoringgeneralist and southern species (the same thing has been observed in birds).As for plants, monitoring over the past sixty years in the State of Wisconsin, USA, has shown a steepdrop in plant diversity among protected species (-50% in species diversity as opposed to -10% forordinary species), which may be due to the proliferation of herbivores.

From monitoring stations to indicators

The findings from biodiversity monitoring stations provide information for the development ofindicators. Indispensable tools for biodiversity management, indicators can promote dialogue betweenscientists, politicians, the general public and where relevant, farmers, hunters, industrialists, etc. Thisis because indicators, besides providing a succinct description of the state of biodiversity, make itpossible to rank the different types of pressure affecting biodiversity and the effectiveness of measurestaken for its conservation. Indicators are only effective if they facilitate dialogue among the differentgroups mentioned above.

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Generalists + 7 %

Urban + 9 %

Forest - 17 %

Farmland - 29 %

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� Variation in the abundance of birds inFrance, according to their specific habitat(statistics established on the basis ofobservations of over 300 000 birds). The‘common birds’ indicator appears to show anespecially steep decline in biodiversity infarmland.

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ocean. They make up one of the tools for the

management of biodiversity, and are themselves

diverse, ranging from strict nature reserves to

biosphere reserves, a Unesco concept aimed at

reconciling conservation and development. The

recent French National Parks Act (14 April 2006)

attempts to bring the management of the parks

into line with our current state of knowledge

about biodiversity dynamics. In particular, it

attempts to ensure that the surface areas are

appropriate given conservation constraints and

that there are ecological corridors. Regional

parks (Parcs naturels régionaux, PNR) are run

by the elected authorities, and are similar in con-

cept to Unesco’s biosphere reserves.

Contracts play an important role in regulating relations between private and pub-

lic stakeholders, especially with regard to bioprospecting. They are supposed to reg-

ulate access to resources and the sharing of benefits. Such contracts rapidly come up

against the difficulty that human communities whose territory contains these living

resources do not have property rights over them. Economists are therefore now advo-

cating the establishment of clearly defined property rights, whether private, public or

state-controlled. They also suggest that rights of access and rights of use be clearly

separated since any regulation of use is pointless in the absence of control over

access. Overexploitation of fishery resources is a good illustration of this because,

despite a huge number of regulations, the absence of any control over access to these

resources has allowed their overexploitation.

There is a wide range of tools available, but their effectiveness depends on having

clear goals and the means to verify their implementation. However, and sadly, up till

now users have always managed get round measures taken to manage ecosystems.

The range of measures available can restrict the quantities extracted (quotas), restrict

the number of users (licenses) or put rights of access and of use on to the market

(marketable permits or rights markets).

Biodiversity management is the management of conflicts of interest or of culture.

This is well illustrated by the misadventures involved in the reintroduction of bears to

the Pyrenees. The social sciences have developed methods of arbitration which can

facilitate dialogue between conflicting sides and the emergence of common long-term

goals. Some of these approaches have recourse to role games and modeling.

In all cases, the aim is to enable stakeholders to share a common representation

of the ecosystems which are to be managed, and to build a body of expertise which

will facilitate the decision-making process.

BIODIVERSITY AND CONTRACTS

The analysis of contracts for bioprospecting, extraction of non-renewable natural resources, and access to biotechnological innovations in developed countries is at the center of social scientificresearch into biodiversity. These contracts need to take into account the interactions and conflictsbetween different stakeholders. To limit conflicts, scientists recommend defining and implementingproperty rights. This step is crucial, since whereas the English-speaking countries advocate privateproperty as the only management model, French scientists are seeking alternative models forproperty: common property, distinction between rights of access and rights of use, collectiveadministration of intellectual property, etc. The goal of these alternatives is to improve the economic,social and environmental effectiveness of contracts associated with development projects, and to facilitate access both of companies to natural resources and of the poorest populations to pharmaceutical and agricultural innovations.

� Griffon vultures, Gyps fulvus. These vultureswere reintroduced into the Gorges du Tarnand the Gorges de la Jonte, which runalongside the Causse Méjean limestoneplateau in southern France in the early 1980s.This conservation program is run andmonitored locally by the Ligue pour laprotection des oiseaux (French Society forBird Protection) and by the Cévennes NationalPark.

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� Planting out greenhouse germinatedseedlings of Senecio inaequidens, Cape ivy, inan experimental set up at Montpellier. Thisplant is native to South Africa and arrived inEurope at the end of the 19th century in theholds of boats carrying wool. The aim of thisexperiment is to determine the evolutionaryconsequences of the invasion of Europe bythis invasive species.

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SUSTAINABLE

MANAGEMENT

� INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE

Biodiversity management is also an international issue and has given rise to the

establishment of conventions and international auditing mechanisms. The 1992

International Convention on Biological Diversity has been ratified by 188 countries.

Over the past fourteen years it has succeeded in getting these countries to agree on a

common method for defining problems, which is a remarkable result. It serves as a

reference for thinking about biodiversity management. In parallel, there exist other

specialized conventions about wetlands (Ramsar), desertification and biosafety.

The role of science in establishing this world governance is considerable. The

worldwide Diversitas program is exerting a great deal of influence on the ‘scientific

bodies’ involved in the support and implementation of the convention. Scientists pro-

vide counterintuitive results which influence international discussion, and will contin-

ue to do so in the future. For instance, this is the case regarding the management of

one of the biggest problems in biodiversity, i.e. biological invasions. The solutions are

both national (improved planning of land use, less fragmentation) and international.

This is because invasive species generally travel via international trade, like Crepidula

fornicata, an oyster parasite which is carried in the ballast tanks of merchant shipping,

or the corn rootworm, which invades via airports. It is estimated that 10% of introduc-

tions lead to naturalization and spread from the site of introduction, and that 10% of

these introductions subsequently cause problems. Research is being carried out in

order to attempt to develop diagnostic tests for quantifying the susceptibility of

ecosystems to such invasions and ways of controlling them.

� THE URGENT NEED FOR RECOGNIZED EXPERTISE

Decision-makers, politicians, administrators and

industrialists have become aware of the importance of

biodiversity, in other words, of preserving life on Earth.

They wish to act but don’t know how, and are seeking

established, recognized expertise.

Firstly, it is necessary to encourage the emergence of

professional ecological engineering. Based on the

progress made in fundamental and theoretical ecol-

ogy, we now need to develop the tools necessary to

solve environmental problems and to invent adap-

tive and self-sustaining systems. This means learn-

ing how to direct or restore ecosystem functions and

restore degraded ecosystems, constructing ecosys-

tems that are adapted to the survival of threatened

species, and so on. Ecological engineering will need

experimental evaluation under controlled condi-

tions, the developments of predictive models and

experiments on real ecosystems.

It should not be forgotten that although management has a technical basis, it also

means reconciling what are frequently conflicting human interests. Ecological engi-

neering will therefore also need to make use of social science skills. Thus to be cred-

ible, it will need to be interdisciplinary in nature.

On the international level, several mechanisms of expertise are under way, the

best-known being the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, which is available on the

internet. The results of this work, which was carried out by 1,320 experts from all over

the world, including ten from France, are being carefully studied by both public and

private decision-making bodies. An international consultation is also in progress

whose goal is to draw up the outlines of an international mechanism of expertise at

the disposal of public and private decision makers. The consultation is the result of

the "Biodiversity, Science and Governance" conference held in Paris in January 2005,

which was attended by 1,500 people. The conference reviewed the current state of

knowledge and ignorance, and called for an immediate speeding up of the decision-

making process.

� Left: flow cytometry. This device is usedto determine the abundance andcharacteristics of phytoplankton cells thanksto their fluorescent properties. Demonstrationof fluorescence using colored solutions.Right: Chroodactylon ramnosum.

50 μm

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� A CHALLENGE FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

Biodiversity management has major implications for the future of societies. The

disappearance of a large number of species alters the environment and makes it

more vulnerable. For instance, the loss of microbial diversity leads to the selection of

highly resistant strains of pathogen; lower diversity makes ecosystems less resistant

to biological invasions; in tropical countries, deforestation and concentration of prop-

erty force the poor onto unproductive land and leave them with precarious rights of

use. Poverty, biodiversity and sustainable development are closely linked. Managing

biodiversity and preserving evolutionary potential means keeping the options open for

the future of humankind.

� AMAZONIA: AN EXAMPLE OF BIODIVERSITY MANAGEMENT

The word ‘Amazonia’ tends to conjure up images of the rainforest, the "green hell"

or the "emerald-green forest", depending on your point of view. We also think of the

river, the biggest river system in the world, often as if it were somehow separate from

the forest. Of course, it’s true that much of Amazonia is covered by forest, the largest

in the world together with the Siberian forest. However, Amazonia is much more than

that. There are towns and villages forming a widely scattered habitat covering a huge

area; a large number of highly diverse human societies (in French Guiana alone, there

are around ten different languages spoken); a high biodiversity (not only terrestrial but

also aquatic) that is a potential and sometimes overestimated source of wealth; close

interdependence between rivers and forest; areas of savannah; a coastline with large

areas of wetland; a fluvial island system; one of the most ancient basements in the

world (the Proterozoic, or possibly even Archean, basement of the Guyana Plateau);

mineral resources; and a humid intertropical climate, with a strong Atlantic maritime

influence which can be felt right up to the Andes. How important is the role this sys-

tem plays in the main dynamic processes on our planet?

What role does biodiversity play? How did it evolve? How does it maintain itself

spontaneously? What resources are connected to it? What is the best way of manag-

ing and developing this vast territory with a view to the sustainable development of the

societies who live in and off it? What technologies should be adapted or developed in

order to bring about this development? How can this development be planned, how

can the health of the populations be improved, while at the same time preserving and

making the best use of the wealth of this environment, and minimizing the impact on

biodiversity?

The best, and most economical, way of preserving the diversity of a living system,

as well as its capacity to generate diversity, is probably to let it evolve spontaneously.

This doesn’t mean that monitoring should be neglected, or that exploration or a cer-

tain amount of forestry and farming should be banned, but it does mean that it’s

important to be careful not to disturb the spontaneous mechanisms that increase,

maintain or reduce biodiversity.

� Flocks of sheep and goats being taken up tosummer pasture by nomads from Rupshu.Eastern Ladakh, Northern India.

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Distribution model of trees in a tropicalforest and sensitivity to environmentaldisturbance. The trees are shown as coloreddots. Each color corresponds to a particularspecies. In practice, in the vast majority ofcases, a type B distribution will often occur(individuals are distributed randomly, or elsethey form small groups, which at a largerscale are also distributed randomly). Althoughthey are distributed at random, this is not justdue to chance. This distribution ensures thepreservation of the maximum number ofspecies, and hence of biodiversity, in the eventof a major disturbance (D).

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SUSTAINABLE

MANAGEMENT

Once this is established, it is necessary to deter-

mine the size and location of the areas con-

cerned, and have good assessments of their

biological diversity and its dynamics. These data

are frequently not available, not only because the

necessary means to obtain them were not imple-

mented, but also because for a long time

researchers were more interested in finding and

describing new species than in quantifying them.

The development and management of a region

and its biodiversity require: reliable data; regular

monitoring of changing conditions; defining

which areas are to be protected, and where, and which are to be used for human use

such as farming and forestry; and the establishment of connections between them. It

is also necessary to set up flexible management methods which enable land-use

plans to be revised in a well-ordered and regular way. In this way, Amazonia will be

developed rather than devastated.

� MANAGING NOT ONLY TERRITORIES, BUT ALSO RESOURCES AND TRADITIONS

Managing biodiversity is not just a question of managing a geographical area or

monitoring biological and ecological processes. We can mention two sensitive issues,

especially in Amazonia: on the one hand, traditional knowledge, and on the other, the

widespread hope of being able to make money from a living resource.

The AOC label ("appellation d’origine contrôlée" or Controlled Designation of

Origin), which designates the geographical area, the variety, and how, how much and

where a product is made, and the Protected Geographical Indication (PGI) label, which

only designates the geographical origin of the product, are based on the principle of

combining geographical origin with local knowledge. With respect to traditional

knowledge, this medium is effective in the case of food resources, materials or repel-

lents. However, therapeutic knowledge is a much trickier thing to use and develop. A

therapeutic substance may only be effective because of the placebo effect, and an

antipyretic substance can be confused with an antibiotic substance. Moreover, knowl-

edge, which is a source of power, is not shared in these societies.

THE AMAZONIA PROGRAM

In 2004, CNRS set up the Amazonia program. The goal of this interdisciplinary program is to give CNRS apermanent footing in French Guiana, and to promote scientific policies and provide incentives to this end.The vast Amazonian system, where there are still to be found extensive, almost totally undisturbedareas of high biological diversity, is of enormous scientific interest, especially with respect to questionsrelating to biodiversity. In the CNRS tradition, activities are carried out in cooperation with its partners,universities and other research establishments.The Amazonia program has three main roles. It looks after the setting up of research facilities in FrenchGuiana (field stations, laboratories, and accommodation of researchers participating in scientificprograms). It encourages research in line with the policies outlined in its scientific program. The subjectof biodiversity obviously plays a central role in several areas: the search for biologically active substancesand for bioinspired technologies; the dynamics and management of the Amazonian region; health ecology(emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases); conservation biology; and the history and functioning of Amazonian ecosystems. Finally, the Amazonia program aims to model and simulate the dynamics

of biodiversity and ecosystems on the basis of theoretical analysis of data gathered.The money that can be made from biodiversity has raised a lot of hope, to such an extentthat this has boomeranged, with researchers in some areas being suspected of "biopiracy".It is high time that this issue be discussed in a rational and reasonable manner,emphasizing that this is not the same kind of resource as a mine, which is located in oneparticular spot, and that developing it usually requires major investment.

Identifying a sample of termites at theNouragues laboratory, a tropical ecologyresearch station (Nouragues Station, FrenchGuiana). Aerial view of the camp (Inselbergsite).

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� TOWARD A GLOBAL UNDERSTANDING OF BIODIVERSITY?

It has to be admitted that we’re having some trouble building up a global under-

standing of biodiversity, in a scientific world which is still highly compartmentalized.

Only scientists can bring about the interdisciplinary approach required to achieve this

understanding, without which no major progress will be possible in a subject of such

complexity. Besides, the thing that distinguishes the current "big questions" about the

environment from the small ones is precisely what might be called the doubly global

nature of the former: they concern the whole planet, and they involve a host of scien-

tific and technological disciplines, as well as various political, economic, health and

social aspects of the way our societies are run.

However, above all, biodiversity concerns the living world, and it is also only by

improving our understanding of the biological and ecological processes involved in the

three mechanisms that increase, maintain or reduce biodiversity (whether they be

spontaneous or induced) that we will have a better basis on which to manage our

common heritage. Finally, a major effort must be made with respect to the gathering

and classification of reliable data, as well as to a frequently neglected area, namely

the creation of sound theoretical foundations on which to build evolutionary models of

biodiversity.

� View of the forest from the summit of theNouragues Inselberg.

The peptides secreted by the skin of thistree-dwelling frog from French Guiana,Phyllomedusa bicolor, made it possible tocharacterize molecules with analgesic andantibacterial properties which can be used inpharmacology.

� An adult homopteran (Membracidae) withlarvae.

SUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENT

Coordinator: Jacques WeberCentre de coopération internationale enrecherche agronomique pour ledéveloppement (Cirad) and Institut français dela biodiversité (IFB)Avec les contributions de :� Denis CouvetSpecies Conservation, Restoration andMonitoring of Populations Unit, CNRS/Muséumnational d’histoire naturelle/Université Paris 6 � Alain Pavé CNRS French Guiana Unit, CNRS.

� Franck CourchampEcology, Taxonomy and Evolution Unit,CNRS/Université Paris 11/École nationale dugénie rural des eaux et forêts� André MicoudCentre de recherches en sciences sociales(Center for Social Science Research) (Cresal),CNRS/Université Saint-Étienne/Université Lyon 2� Luc AbbadieBiogeochemistry and Ecology of TerrestrialEnvironments Unit, CNRS/Inra/Université Paris6/INA-PG/ENS Paris/ENSCP� Michel Trometter, Inra Grenoble

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BIODIVERSITY: A FEW STATISTICS

� 2,300 people do work on biodiversity in CNRS laboratories, of whom 1,000 are CNRS staff members� 1.8 million species have been described.� It is estimated that there are between 10 and 15 million animal and plant species living on the Earth.� About 16,000 new species are described every year, of which 600 are found in Europe.� Species are going extinct 100 to 1,000 times faster than in the past as revealed by the geological record.

FURTHER READING

Un éléphant dans un jeu de quilles : L’homme dans la biodiversité, Robert Barbault, ed. Seuil, 2006

Biodiversité et savoirs naturalistes locaux en France, Collective edition, Inra-Cirad-Iddri-IFB, 2005

La nature a-t-elle encore une place dans les milieux géographiques ?, Paul Arnould and Éric Glon (eds),Publications de la Sorbonne, 2005

Actes de la Conférence internationale Biodiversité, science et gouvernance – Paris, 24-28 janvier 2005, Robert Barbault, coordinated by Jean-Patrick Le Duc.MNHN

Biodiversité et changements globaux – Enjeux de société et défis pour la recherche,Robert Barbault and Bernard Chevassus-au-Louis (eds) Coordinated by Anne Teyssèdre.Adpf / Ministère des Affaires étrangères, 2004

Les biodiversités. Objets, théories, pratiques, coordinated by Pascal Marty, Franck-Dominique Vivien, Jacques Lepart and Raphaël Larrère, CNRS éditions, 2005

TO FIND OUT MORE:

� www.biodiv.org – Official site of the Convention on Biodiversity.� www.comite21.org – French site on the implementation of Agenda 21.� www.csf-desertification.org – Site of the French scientific committee for the Convention to Combat Desertification.� www.unfccc.int/ - Official site of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change

(the complete text of the Kyoto convention can be downloaded in pdf format).� www.agora21.org – Site in French on sustainable development, where Agenda 21 can be consulted� www.brg.prd.fr – Site of the (Genetic Resources Bureau). Bureau des ressources génétiques� www.millenniumassessment.org/en/index.aspx - Site of the Millenium Ecosystem Assessment.� www.fao.org – Site of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.� www.undp.org - Site of the United Nations Development Program. An excellent site

to get a clear picture of world economic and social development.� www.unesco.org/mab – Site of UNESCO’s Program on Man and the Biosphere. Information

about the Seville Strategy and the Global Network of Biosphere Reserves.� www.unep.org - Site of the United Nations Environment Program.� www.gbif.org – Site of the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) whose goal is to make available

all the disparate data on biodiversity already collected.

This brochure is published by the CNRS Communications Office.

Institutional publications manager: Stéphanie Lecocq (01 44 96 45 67)Design and coordination: Aude PhilippeScientific coordination: Luc Abbadie, René Bally, Robert Barbault,Pierre-Henri Gouyon, François Renaud and Jacques WeberPicture research: Aude PhilippeGraphic design: Sarah LandelGraphics: LaserGraphie

Printed by: C.printDecember 2006

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DECEMBER2006

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