Publications

Publications

Publications

Publications

Publications

Publications

Publications

Publications

Distribution of the organic matter in the channel-levees systems of the Congo mud-rich deep-sea fan (West Africa). Implication for deep offshore petroleum source rocks and global carbon cycle

François Baudin, Jean-Robert Disnar, Philippe Martinez, Bernard Dennielou

The Corinth Rift is superimposed on the Hellenic nappe stack that formed at the expense of the Apulian continental crust above the subducting African slab. Extension started in the Pliocene and the major steep normal faults that control the geometry of the present-day rift were born very recently, some 600 kyr ago only. They root into a shallow-dipping zone of microseismicity recorded near the base of the upper crust. The significance of this seismogenic zone is debated. Considering the northward dip of the zone of microseismicity, the depth of microearthquakes and their focal mechanisms, we observe a strong similarity with the northern Cycladic detachments in terms of expected pressure, temperature conditions and kinematics. We herein show (1) that the formation of the Corinth Rift can be considered a part of a continuum of extension that started some 30–35 Ma in the Aegean and that was recently localised in a more restricted area, (2) that the present-day structure and kinematics of the Corinth Rift can be explained with a series of decollements relayed by steeper ramps that altogether formed a mechanically weak, crustal-scale detachment, and (3) that the deformation, fluid behaviour and metamorphic features seen in the northern Cycladic metamorphic core complexes can be good analogues of the processes at work below the Corinth Rift.

(Marine and Petroleum Geology. vol. 27, n° 0264-8172, pp. 995–1010, 24/02/2026)

iSTeP, UPMC, CNRS, ISTO, INSU - CNRS, UO, UT, CNRS, EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, GM, IFREMER

Modélisation physique de la morphodynamique d'une plage barrée tridimensionnelle

Hervé Michallet, Bruno Castelle, Frédéric Bouchette, Adrien Lambert, Céline Berni, Eric Barthélemy, Philippe Bonneton, Damien Sous

Des expériences dans un bassin de 30 m x 30 m ont été réalisées dans l'objectif de caractériser la dynamique d'un courant d'arrachement et les évolutions morphologiques associées. La plage de sable fin (diamètre médian 166 microns) couvrait la largeur du bassin (30 m en longshore ) pour un profil total de 20 m cross-shore . La formation de courants sagittaux a été forcée par une houle frontale (spectre de Jonswap) avec un déficit d'énergie au centre du bassin. Une séquence accrétive complète de plage intermédiaire à simple barre (selon classification de WRIGHT & SHORT, 1984) a été reproduite. La barre s'est progressivement tridimensionnalisée en forme de croissant puis s'est connectée au haut de plage avec la présence de deux chenaux profonds qui se sont ensuite comblés pour obtenir une plage à terrasse au bout de plusieurs dizaines d'heures. L'association des mesures hydrodynamiques et morphodynamiques montre que le comblement des chenaux est alimenté par le haut de plage.

(pp. 45, 24/02/2026)

LEGI, UJF, Grenoble INP, CNRS, EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, UAG, INSU - CNRS, UM, CNRS, UQAR, LSEET, INSU - CNRS, UTLN, CNRS

Effect of dietary cadmium on lipid metabolism and storage of aquatic bird Carina moschata

Magali Lucia, Jean-Marc André, P. Gonzalez, Magalie Baudrimont, Marie-Dominique Bernadet, Karine Gontier, Régine Maury-Brachet, G. Guy, Stéphane Davail

In environment, birds often fast in connection with breeding, migration or drastic climatic conditions and need to mobilize lipid reserves during these periods. The impairment of lipid metabolism by cadmium (Cd; 1 mg kg(-1) added in diet) was investigated on palmiped Cairina moschata. Expression levels of genes involved in lipid metabolism, mitochondrial metabolism and detoxification were investigated in liver and muscle of ducks. Lipid content in muscle and liver were analysed and plasma triglycerides were quantified. After 20 days, ducks exposed to Cd displayed a lower body weight and lower lipid content in liver than controls. In muscle, the increase of lipid content was only significant for control ducks but not for exposed ducks. Exposed ducks appeared unable to sufficiently transport and store lipids into peripheral tissues. Cd impairs lipid metabolism by several ways. First, Cd triggered the down-regulation of fatty acids synthesis in liver even if the NADPH production and the mitochondrial metabolism are enhanced, suggesting a stronger energy needs. Secondly, the associated decrease of plasma triglycerides and lipoprotein lipase activity with Cd are consistent with impairment of lipids storage in peripheral tissues.

(Ecotoxicology, n° 0963-9292, pp. 163-170, 24/02/2026)

EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, UEPFG, INRA, IPREM, UPPA, INC-CNRS, CNRS

Laboratory experiment on rip current circulations over a moveable bed: Drifter measurements

Bruno Castelle, Hervé Michallet, Vincent Marieu, Fabien Leckler, Benjamin Dubarbier, Adrien Lambert, Céline Berni, Philippe Bonneton, Eric Barthélemy, Frédéric Bouchette

This study describes a laboratory experiment on rip current circulations over a moveable bed. Rip current characteristics over eight contrasting nature-like beach morphologies are investigated. The seabed varied from reasonably alongshore uniform to strongly alongshore nonuniform with crescentic patterns and bar-rip morphologies, representative of a full morphological down-state sequence. The same offshore shore-normal waves were generated by the wavemaker for the eight situations with the same mean water level to study the sensitivity of rip current characteristics as a function of the beach morphology only. In each case, a 30 to 60 min video run was used to track a large number of drifters released within the surf zone. Results show the presence of classic rip current patterns with counterrotating cells and a relatively narrow offshore-directed jet varying from shore-normal to strongly skewed. Wave-driven circulations were strongly unstable. Computed standard deviations of flow intensity and direction provide high-resolution information on the spatial variability of rip current instabilities. Highly pulsating and weakly directionally variable offshore-directed flow is observed in the rip neck for well-developed bar-rip morphologies that turns into a weakly pulsating and highly directional variable rip current flow with decreasing beach alongshore nonuniformity. Proposing a definition of rip current intensity based on the rip current circulation geometry, rip current intensity was found to linearly increase with increasing measure of beach alongshore nonuniformity within both the low-energy and moderate-energy rip current regimes. To date, our laboratory experiment provides the first extensive quantitative rip current information during a full down-state sequence for a given wave condition.

(Journal of Geophysical Research. vol. 115, n° 0148-0227, pp. C12008, 24/02/2026)

EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, LEGI, UJF, Grenoble INP, CNRS, Géosciences Montpellier, UAG, INSU - CNRS, UM, CNRS

A robust statistical framework for QTL analysis

Mohamedou Sow, Gilles Durrieu, Laurent Briollais

(24/02/2026)

EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, LMBA, UBS, UBO EPE, CNRS, MSH

Evènements extrêmes en Afrique de l'ouest durant le dernier glaciaire et l'Holocène

F. Grousset, E. Julien, Bruno Malaizé, Philippe Paillou, Anne Bory

(24/02/2026)

OASU, UB, INSU - CNRS, ULR, CNRS, INRAE, EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, L3AB, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, OASU, UB, INSU - CNRS, ULR, CNRS, INRAE, LAB, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, UB, LGF, UP1, CNRS

Exploitation of trophic resources by fish under stressful estuarine conditions

Stéphanie Pasquaud, V. David, Jérémy Lobry, Michel Girardin, B. Sautour, Pierre Elie

Despite the high complexity and variability of estuaries, these ecosystems are very productive and play an important role in fish feeding. This paper constitutes a preliminary investigation to test how fish optimize the use of the available trophic resources, by studying trophic preference variability and feeding strategies of some pelagic and demersal fish in the Gironde estuary (southwest France). Fish and their prey were collected approximately every two months from July 2003 to June 2004 in the upstream area of the saline estuary. Stomach content analyses were realized to describe the variability of fish feeding according to their size and the time of year. Intra- and interspecific food niche overlap was evaluated using Schoener's index and a cross-calculation method was used to highlight the general fish trends in predation strategy. Stomach content results showed interspecific and intraspecific variability in fish feeding, which can be explained by their different or evolutionary ecomorphology. Their diets are composed mainly of zooplankton and hyperbenthic crustaceans with temporal variations in the consumed taxa. Optimization of the available trophic resource use, a key element in estuarine resilience, is thus possible due to the temporal adaptation of this structural trophic web. However, in spite of their temporal adaptation capacity, most fish species exhibited a specialist feeding strategy. This result was not expected, especially in the high turbidity of the Gironde estuary; the loss of one of these species could affect the fish trophic web structure and hence the resilience of the system.

(Marine Ecology Progress Series. vol. 400, n° 0171-8630, pp. p. 207 - p. 219, 24/02/2026)

UR EPBX, CEMAGREF, LIENSs, INSU - CNRS, ULR, CNRS, EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS

Highstand vs. lowstand turbidite system growth in the Makran active margin: Imprints of high-frequency external controls on sediment delivery mechanisms to deep water systems

Julien Bourget, Sébastien Zaragosi, S Ellouz-Zimmermann, Emmanuelle Ducassou, M A Prins, T Garlan, V Lanfumey, J-L Schneider, P Rouillard, J Giraudeau

Late Quaternary turbidite system growth along the Makran convergent margin is investigated through a set of deep-sea cores from upper slope and piggy-back basins to deep basin plain settings. High-resolution stratigraphy in these various depositional environments permits reconstruction of the evolution of sand-to-mud ratio, sedimentation rates, frequencies, and thickness of turbidite deposits during the last 25 ka BP. This study demonstrates how tectonics, climate and eustasy can interplay at high resolution (< 20 ka) and control the input of terrigeneous sediment along the tectonically active Makran convergent margin, in a source-to-sink perspective. The Makran turbidite system growth has been continuous throughout sea-level lowstand, transgressive, and highstand conditions. However, the frequency, rates, and nature of sediment supply varied in response to climate, sea-level, and tectonically induced changes in source-to-sink sediment dispersal modes. These changes include conditions of sediment production and availability in the drainage basin, capacity of transport from fluvial systems, and rates of sediment storage on the shelf and upperslope areas. Climate in the hinterland appears as a first-order control on the properties of turbidity currents that feed the turbidite system, controlling the average sand-to-mud ratio in the deep water deposits. The onset of sea-level highstand after ∼ 8 ka BP resulted in a notable change in turbidite system growth, characterized by the occurrence of large volume, thick turbidity currents (> 300 m thick along the continental slope) originated from successive, multiple slide or slump-induced surges. Their related deposits have low recurrence intervals, close to those calculated from the large magnitude earthquake and tsunami record in the Makran area. Comparison with the Nile and Indus turbidite systems growth during the Late Quaternary provides an evaluation of the relative importance of shared forcing parameters (i.e. monsoon-induced phases of arid/humid conditions and post-glacial sea-level rise), in significantly different basin settings. The Indus fan appears mainly controlled by eustasy during the last 25 ka. Inversely, similarities are found between the Nile and Makran turbidite systems, where sea-level changes are modulated by the climate impact on fluvial dynamics in the hinterland. However, the Makran turbidite system growth is continuous through times, because both the uplift in the coastal area and the fluvial dynamics of short, mountainous river systems allow high sediment transfer rates to the marine basin, even though arid conditions and associated low water fluxes. Earthquake-induced highstand turbidite deposits form a thick sedimentary succession in the Oman abyssal plain, and are significant in the geologic record. This study finally illustrates how the complex interplay between external (allogenic) forcings can complicate the interpretation of high-resolution sedimentary successions in turbidite-filled basins.

(Marine Geology. vol. 274, n° 0025-3227, pp. 187 - 208, 24/02/2026)

EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, IFP, VU, SHOM, IFREMER

Spatio-temporal patterns of perkinsosis in the Manila clam Ruditapes philippinarum from Arcachon Bay (SW France)

Cécile Dang, Xavier de Montaudouin, Nathalie Caill-Milly, Zeljka Trumbic

Pathogens belonging to the genus Perkinsus infect many bivalve molluscan species around the world, including the Manila clam Ruditapes phihppinarum. We investigated the spatial distribution of this parasite at 34 stations throughout Arcachon Bay (SW France). Prevalence of perkinsosis was 93% and mean infection abundance was 96 x 10(3) cells g(-1) wet gill. Lowest mean abundances were found close to the Leyre River mouth and a significant negative correlation was observed between mean abundance and salinity. Perkinsosis was rare at the oceanic site where salinities and other environmental parameters were stable. A second aim of this study was to survey perkinsosis during annual cycles at 4 sites within Arcachon Bay. Prevalence and intensities (+/-SE) of the disease were high, on average between 70 and 100%, and 130 x 10(3) +/- 6.7 x 10(3) cells g(-1) wet gill. No seasonal cycle was evident. Clams were infected at 9 mm shell length and infection increased with clam size. The third objective was to determine the disinfection and infection kinetics through a 21 mo reciprocal transplantation between a nearly Perkinsus sp.-free area and a highly affected site. Disinfection appeared to be a very slow process and was similar at the site with favorable conditions for Perkinsus sp. as at the site with unfavorable conditions. Conversely, infection acquisition appeared to be episodic with spatially defined areas. Consequently, the overall lack of a clear seasonal infection pattern is interpreted as the combination of episodic infection events and slow disinfection kinetics.

(Diseases of Aquatic Organisms. vol. 91, n° 0177-5103, pp. 151-159, 24/02/2026)

EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, LRHA, HGS, IFREMER

Long-term evolution (1988-2008) of Zostera spp. meadows in Arcachon Bay (Bay of Biscay)

Plus Martin, Dalloyau Sébastien, Trut Gilles, Auby Isabelle, Xavier de Montaudouin, Éric Emery, Noël Claire, Viala Christophe

The spatial variability of seagrass meadows in Arcachon Bay, was studied between 1988 and 2008 using a combination of mapping techniques based on aerial photographs for intertidal dwarf-grass ( Zostera noltii) beds and acoustic sonar for permanently submerged eelgrass ( Zostera marina) populations. The results show a severe decline over the period for both species, as well as an acceleration of the decline since 2005 for Z. noltii. The total surface regression over the studied period is estimated to be 22.8 km 2 for Z. noltii and 2.7 km 2 for Z. marina, which represent declines of 33 and 74% respectively. Environmental data time series spanning the same period were investigated in order to seek the causes for such a decline. The calculated inter-annual trends for temperature, salinity, nitrate plus nitrite, ammonia, suspended sediment and chlorophyll a did not identify any clear environmental change capable of explaining the observed seagrass regression. For instance, no evident sign of eutrophication was observed over the study period. On the other hand, we suggest that the observed variations of ammonia in the inner part of the lagoon are a symptom of the seagrasses' disappearance and thus, a first sign indicating a change of the Arcachon Bay ecosystem towards more instability and vulnerability. Several hypotheses to explain the observed seagrass decay are proposed.

(Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science. vol. 87, n° 0272-7714, pp. 357-366, 24/02/2026)

IFREMER, EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS