Contents
Academic literature on the topic 'Pollinisation par les insectes – Société'
Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles
Consult the lists of relevant articles, books, theses, conference reports, and other scholarly sources on the topic 'Pollinisation par les insectes – Société.'
Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.
You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.
Journal articles on the topic "Pollinisation par les insectes – Société"
Ryckewaert, Philippe, Onja Razanamaro, Elysée Rasoamanana, Tantelinirina Rakotoarimihaja, Perle Ramavovololona, and Pascal Danthu. "Les Sphingidae, probables pollinisateurs des baobabs malgaches." BOIS & FORETS DES TROPIQUES 307, no. 307 (March 1, 2011): 55. http://dx.doi.org/10.19182/bft2011.307.a20482.
Full textTartier, Léon-M., Valérie Gravel, Carole Martinez, and Russell J. Tweddell. "La Société de protection des plantes du Québec, 1908-2008." Phytoprotection 89, no. 2-3 (November 20, 2009): 113–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/038240ar.
Full textCouture, Luc. "Évolution des publications de la Société de protection des plantes du Québec au fil des ans." Phytoprotection 89, no. 2-3 (November 20, 2009): 119–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/038242ar.
Full textBreton, Émilie, Sandra Jeppesen, Anna Kruzynski, and Rachel Sarrasin. "Les féminismes au coeur de l’anarchisme contemporain au Québec : des pratiques intersectionnelles sur le terrain1." Note d'action 28, no. 2 (November 30, 2015): 199–222. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1034182ar.
Full textZra Ganava, Venceslas, Sanda Mazi, Michelson Azo'o Ela, Sidonie Fameni Tope, and Fernand-Nestor Tchuenguem Fohouo. "Impact de l’activité de butinage de Dactylurina staudingeri Gribodo (Hymenoptera: Apidae) sur la pollinisation et les rendements de Cajanus cajan (L.) Millspaugh (Fabaceae) à Dang (Ngaoundéré, Cameroun)." Cameroon Journal of Experimental Biology 14, no. 1 (March 10, 2021): 1–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/cajeb.v14i1.1.
Full textMazzei, João Roberto Fortes, Estevão Freire, Eduardo Gonçalves Serra, José Ronaldo de Macedo, Angélica Castanheira de Oliveira, Lucia Helena Pinto Bastos, and Maria Helena Wohlers Morelli Cardoso. "Recherche sur le terrain: Une analyse comparative entre les méthodes conventionnelles, biologiques et durables de production de tomates." Revista Científica Multidisciplinar Núcleo do Conhecimento, February 16, 2021, 125–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.32749/nucleodoconhecimento.com.br/ingenierie-de-lenvironnement-fr/production-de-tomates.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Pollinisation par les insectes – Société"
Uwingabire, Zafarani. "Evaluating the impacts of pollinators decline on social welfare at different spatial scales : economic and nutritional aspects." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Toulouse 2, 2021. http://www.theses.fr/2021TOU20103.
Full textPollinators are threatened in many parts of the world. This alarming phenomenon; for which Human is mainly responsible, raises the following questions: what are the consequences of this decline for society? Should we take action? This thesis proposes economic valuation as a decision-making tool. It evaluates the impacts of the decline of pollinators on human well-being through economic and nutritional perspectives. The focus is on marketed and non-marketed benefits for the economic aspects and the quantitative and qualitative dimensions of nutrient intake for the nutritional aspects. The contribution of pollinators to a global food market, territories, and local landscapes in different contexts is examined alternately. More specifically, three case studies were treated each on different spatial scales: the international trade, the Comminges territory, in southwestern France, and the Huye District, in southern Rwanda. Inspired by welfare economics, our analysis builds on the production function approach, which integrates the dependence ratio of agricultural production on pollinators, the nutrients contained in crops, and the stated preferences approach. The proposed methods combine analytical approaches, field surveys, and simulations. Chapter 1 reviews the existing economic valuation approaches of the benefits of pollinators, highlights the need to consider various spatial scales of causes and impacts of pollinator decline, and reviews the existing policy responses regarding pollinator degradation. Chapter 2 analyzes global agricultural markets as a whole and shows the implications of pollinators' decline in international food trade and their impacts on global social welfare. Chapter 3 analyzes the importance people place on pollinators and their concerns about their decline by assessing the general public’s willingness to pay for the marketed and non-marketed benefits of pollinators. Chapter 4 values the contribution of insect pollination on the quantity of production and nutritional quality of consumption in the case of smallholder farm households where subsistence agriculture remains dominant. The thesis shows that the decline of insect pollinators could have significant consequences on human well-being at local and global scales. Under defined assumptions, results show that an average world price of crops will be 186% higher if pollinators are extinct on a global scale. They show that the decline of insect pollinators can induce a decrease in consumer surplus, producer profit, and trade balance value, thus an overall loss of human well-being on a global scale. In particular, these results draw attention to a loss of global nutrient intake, especially in regions where food scarcity is already present. The general public in the Comminges is willing to pay about €516 per household per year to avoid pollinator decline scenarios in order to maintain the diversity of local food, flora, and fauna. In smallholder households in the Huye District, pollinator-dependent crops account for about 20% of the total production value and have a significant share in the self-supply of micronutrients. This thesis argues that all countries can be impacted by this decline either as exporters or as importers of pollinator-dependent crops even if the impacts of this decline may be heterogeneous across countries due to differences in initial endowments. In fine, the decline of pollinators threatens the diversity and food security of worldwide consumers, the livelihoods of farm households, and local biodiversity. Therefore, arbitration among local decision-makers, national and international governmental bodies, and the general public is necessary to mitigate the decline of pollinators. In conclusion, this thesis points to the need to combine economic and nutritional aspects in shaping economic valuation literature and public policies and initiatives regarding ecosystem services and pollinators
Proffit, Magali. "Médiation chimique et structuration des communautés d'hyménoptères parasites du mutualisme figuier / pollinisateur." Montpellier 2, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007MON20026.
Full textAbed, Tammam. "Étude de quelques interférences biologiques entre la vie de la ruche et Varroa jocobsoni oudemans, 1904 fléau de l'apiculture : application à la lutte." Toulouse, INPT, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992INPT003A.
Full textGeslin, Benoît. "Etude multi-échelles de l’effet des perturbations anthropiques sur l’écologie des insectes pollinisateurs : du comportement individuel à la structure des communautés." Paris 6, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013PA066082.
Full textMore than 80% of wild plants and 70% of crops depend on pollinators for reproduction and food production. However, there is growing evidences that wild pollinators are declining worldwide. One of the major causes of this decline is the expansion of agricultural areas and urbanisation at the cost of natural habitats. This loss of natural habitats is likely to impact pollinator species abundance and richness, and thus the structure of pollinator communities, their interactions with flowering plants and the individual behaviour of foraging insects. In this thesis, we analyzed how anthropogenic disturbances may modify pollinator foraging behaviour, at the patch scale. Then, at the landscape scale, we tested if increasing levels of urbanisation can impact plant-pollinator interaction webs and on flower-visitor community composition and structure. At the patch scale, we found that the foraging behaviour of Bombus terrestris individuals was modified by the loss of conspecifics density. When foraging on an experimental plant community at low conspecific density, fewer visits were carried out on the most-well known plant species, resulting in a lower potential reproductive success for this plant. At the landscape scale, increased levels of urbanisation also led to a decrease in the number of interactions between wild pollinators and plants of an experimental plant community. The diversity and density of the wild pollinating fauna also decreased along this urbanisation gradient located in the Île-de-France region (France). In particular, small specialists insects such as Syrphidae and solitary bees were more impacted by urbanisation than large generalist species such as bumblebees. Finally, these variations had an impact on the reproductive success of the experimental plant community. This work illustrates how anthropogenic perturbations affect pollinating insects in several aspects of their ecology, from their foraging behaviour to the structure of their communities. In a global context characterised by incresing losses of natural habitats at the expense of urbanisation, these results should help designing conservation practices to promote ecological continuities in urban habitats, through the increase of flowered and green roof surfaces. Overall, these measures might help preserving pollinating faunas that will sustain the pollination ecological service
Gallai, Nicola. "Evaluation économique de l'impact des insectes pollinisateurs sur l'agriculture européenne." Montpellier 1, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009MON10036.
Full textInsect pollination is an ecosystem service that is threatened, though it contributes to the sexual reproduction of most of the wild and cultivated flora. This work aims to assess the impact of this service on agriculture. Fom a literature review, we identified three major questions related to this issue: What is the contribution of pollinators to agricultural production worldwide? How will the vulnerability of agriculture change during the coming century? What will be the impact of a pollinator decline on social welfare? Using a technical-economic approach, we valued the contribution of this service to world agriculture at 153 billion euros in 2005, which represented 10% of the total value of world agricultural production used for human food. The consequences of a pollinator loss on social welfare were modeled using a partial equilibrium and estimated between 228 and 310 billion euros based upon a price elasticity of demand of -1. 2 and -0. 8, respectively. To assess future trends, we simulated the evolution of European agriculture under several land use scenarios, and found that the contribution of pollinators will not diminish in the next century even under the most extreme scenarios. Finally, we analyzed the impact of pollinator loss in the framework of a general equilibrium with two consumers who share two goods, each produced by a single firm with one good dependent on insect pollination and the other not. This analysis indicated that the substitutability between the two markets enabled to reduce the welfare loss. It also showed that when the income distribution is linked to the different goods, the relative importance given in the society to industries related to these goods affects the welfare loss resulting from pollinator decline and it could even become nil
Lefebvre, Diane. "Approvisionnement en pollen et en nectar des colonies de bourdons Bombus terrestris. Ecologie comportementale et modélisation. Implications pour la pollinisation des fleurs de tomate en serre." Rennes 1, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004REN10068.
Full textRodet, Guy. "La pollinisation par l'abeille domestique (Apis mellifica L. ) des lignées mâles stériles de carotte (Daucus carota L. ) en enceintes grillagées pour la production de semences hybrides." Paris 11, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988PA112302.
Full textMoisan-De, Serres Joseph. "Influence du paysage de bleuetières sur les communautés de pollinisateurs indigènes du Lac-St-Jean et évaluation du potentiel de pollinisation des pollinisateurs du bleuet nain." Thesis, Université Laval, 2013. http://www.theses.ulaval.ca/2013/29330/29330.pdf.
Full textFlacher, Floriane. "Influence des interactions entre espèces végétales sur les relations plantes-pollinisateurs : cas de la compétition induite par la présence d'espèces anémophiles sur l'attractivité aux pollinisateurs d'espèces entomophiles." Thesis, Paris 6, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016PA066017/document.
Full textAttractiveness traits of insect-pollinated plants to pollinators (i.e. flowers and associated rewards) can be sensitive to variations of resources (e.g. nitrogen, phosphorous). As competition between plants can modify resource availability, we studied its effect on insect-pollinated plants and their floral traits involved in attractiveness to pollinators, especially in presence of wind-pollinated plants. We showed that the presence of a competitive wind-pollinated species could reduce total flower production, floral display size and total sucrose allocated to nectar of insect-pollinated species. Especially, the stronger the competitor, the stronger is the effect on floral traits. The study of wild pollinators’ visits on an insect-pollinated plant in competition with a wind-pollinated plant revealed a decrease in the number of visits associated to the decrease of floral display size and total flower production. Therefore, even though they do not interact directly with pollinators, wind-pollinated plant species can modulate plant-pollinator interactions through competitive interactions. This thesis raises new perspectives for the study of plant-pollinator networks, which are generally focused on insect-pollinated plants, by opening them up to the whole plant community
Anstett, Marie-Charlotte. "Contraintes et libertés dans l'évolution des mutualismes figuiers." Montpellier 2, 1994. http://www.theses.fr/1994MON20184.
Full textBooks on the topic "Pollinisation par les insectes – Société"
The incomparable honeybee & the economics of pollination. Victoria [B.C.]: Rocky Mountain Books, 2009.
Find full textIncomparable Honeybee and the Economics of Pollination. RMB Rocky Mountain Books, 2011.
Find full text