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Symposium > Symposium presentations

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      WEDNESDAY  
         
         
    00:40:00    
09:00 09:30   Welcome coffee  
09:40 10:00   Opening - F. Jean (IUEM Director) and (ISblue direction)  
10:00 10:50   Session 1: Theoretical and methodological developments and new applications  
      Openning conference - S.A.L.M. Kooijman  
      Vrije University (Amsterdam)  
      "What did we learn from the Add-my-Pet data base?"  
10:50 11:10   Domingos Tiago  
      Terraprima - Serviàos Ambientais (Portugal)  
      Minimizing direct greenhouse gas emissions in livestock production: the need for a metabolic theory  
11:10 11:30   De Cubber Lola  
    1 Laboratoire d'Océanologie et de Géosciences (France)  
    1 Annelid polychaetes experience metabolic acceleration as other Lophotrochozoans: the example of Arenicola marina  
11:30 11:50 1 Sangare Nathanaël  
    2 Institut français de recherche pour l'exploitation de la mer (French Polynesia)  
    2 Coupling field, laboratory and DEB approach to investigate the pearl-oyster life-cycle in the context of black pearl farming  
12:00 13:20 2 Lunch  
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13:30 14:20   Session 2: Evolution and biodiversity  
      Keynote - Craig White  
      Monash University (Australia)  
      The evolution of metabolic rate  
         
14:20 14:40   Sadoul Bastien  
      GABI, INRA, AgroParisTech, Université Paris-Saclay (France)  
      Accounting for genetic variability in fitness-related traits using a Dynamic Energy Budget model, an example on European Seabass  
14:40 15:00   Stubbs Jessica  
    4 School of Biological Sciences, The University of Western Australia (Australia)  
    4 From embryo energetics to a full life-cycle DEB model for a Western Australian green turtle population  
15:00 15:30 4 Break  
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15:30 15:50 5 Jusup Marko  
      World Hub Research Initiative, Institute of Innovative Research, Tokyo Institute of Technology (Japan)  
      Early-life ontogenetic developments drive tuna ecology and evolution  
      Session 1, continued : Theoretical and methodological developments and new applications  
15:50 16:10 6 Lefebvre Sébastien  
    6 Laboratoire d'Océanologie et Géosciences (France)  
    6 DEB theory and stable isotope dynamics: exploring alternative ways  
16:10 16:30   Souloumiac Audrey  
    7 Institut de Radioprotection et de Sureté Nucléaire (France)  
    7 Mecanistic and ecophysiologic study of carbon 14 transfer in fish  
16:30 16:50 7 Dambrine Chloé  
    8 Unité de recherche Sciences et Technologies Halieutiques (France)  
    8 Contribution of a bioenergetics model to investigate on growth and survival of European seabass in the North Atlantic  
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17:00 18:45 9 Poster / cocktail  
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      THURSDAY  
         
         
09:00 09:50   Session 3: Effects of anthropogenic and environmental stressors  
      Keynote - Roman Ashauer  
      Syngenta & University of York (UK)  
      Physiological modes of action are the key to (almost) everything  
09:50 10:10   Lika Dina  
      University of Crete (Greece)  
      Linking Adverse Outcome Pathways to Dynamic Energy Budgets: the case of hormone-driven energy allocation for egg loading  
10:10 10:30   Alonzo Frederic  
    11 IRSN, Radionuclide Ecotoxicology Laboratory (France)  
    11 "Molecular and metabolic mechanisms of transgenerational effects in Daphnia exposed to radionuclides"  
10:30 11:00 11 Break  
11:00 11:20 12 Jager Tjalling  
    12 DEBtox Research (Netherlands)  
    12 A roadmap for establishing DEBtox in environmental risk assessment practice  
11:20 11:40   Charles Sandrine  
    13 Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Evolutive (France)  
    13 Ready-to-use modelling and statistical tools for advanced environmental risk assessment  
11:40 12:00 13 Lavaud Romain  
    14 Dalhousie University (Canada)  
    14 Modeling the impact of hypoxia on the energy budget of Atlantic cod in two populations of the Gulf of Saint-Lawrence, Canada  
12:00 12:20 14 Aguirre-Velarde Arturo  
    15 Instituto del Mar del Peru (Peru)  
    15 Predicting the energy budget of the scallop Argopecten purpuratus in an oxygen-limiting environment  
12:30 13:50 15 Lunch  
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14:00 14:20   Klanjscek Tin  
      Institut Rucer Bockovic (Croatia)  
      Metabolic scaling of response to toxic stress  
14:20 14:40   Ren Jeffrey  
    17 NIWA (New Zealand)  
    17 Effect of ocean acidification on mussel growth: application of a DEB model to green-lipped mussel Perna canaliculus  
14:40 15:00 17 Marques Gonçalo  
    18 Marine Environment and Technology Center (Portugal)  
    18 A generic open source Dynamic Energy Budget model for aquatic and terrestrial organisms to predict toxic effects on the life-cycle on individuals  
15:00 15:20 18 Mounier Florence  
    19 Aquatic Ecosystems and Global Change Research Unit (France)  
    19 Sensitivity of POPs bioaccumulation to Global Change factors. Application of an original DEB-TK approach to the Gironde estuary common sole Solea solea.  
15:20 15:50 19 Break  
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15:50 16:10 20 Kearney Michael  
      The University of Melbourne, Melbourne (Australia  
      Integrating DEB theory into predictions of locust outbreaks  
         
16:10 16:30 21 Pousse Emilien  
    21 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (United States)  
    21 Studying costal acidification effect on the Eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica, through two individual based models  
16:30 16:50   Lagos Paulo  
    22 University of Otago (New Zealand)  
    22 Investigating the response of the krill Nyctiphanes australis (Euphausiacea) to stress caused by environmental change: a dynamic energy budget approach  
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  18:30   Boat trip and Symposium dinner  
         
      FRIDAY  
         
         
         
09:00 09:50   Session 4: Populations and ecosystems in a changing climate  
      Keynote - Brian Helmuth  
      Northeastern University (USA)  
      When do the details matter? DEB as an integrator of environmental variability multiple stressors and time history effects  
09:50 10:10   Guillaumot Charlene  
      Université Libre de Bruxelles (Belgium)  
      Inferring the responses of Southern Ocean benthic species to environmental changes using Dynamic Energy Budget models  
10:10 10:30   Bacher Cedric  
    24 DYNECO - IFREMER (France)  
    24 Modelling the response of the disctribution of benthic marine species to climate change  
10:30 11:00 24 Break  
11:00 11:20 25 Juan Bueno-Pardo  
    25 Unité de recherche Sciences et Technologies Halieutiques (France)  
    25 A DEB-IBM approach to understand past variation and projecting anchovy abundance in the Bay of Biscay  
11:20 11:40   Koch Josef  
    26 Laboratory of Environmental Toxicology and Aquatic Ecology, Ghent University (Belgium)  
    26 Implementing realistic biological variability into an individual-based DEB model for copepods  
11:40 12:00 26 Lavaud Romain  
    27 Institut des Sciences de la MER de Rimouski (Canada)  
    27 Integrating macroalgae & wild bivalve populations to improve ecosystem models for a sustainable development of bivalve culture in eutrophic estuarine complexes  
12:00 12:20 27 Marn Nina  
    28 Institut Rucer Bockovic (Croatia)  
    28 Metabolic and life-history trait responses of sea turtles to environmental cues  
12:30 13:50 28 Lunch  
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14:00 14:20   Lika Dina  
      University of Crete (Greece)  
      Impacts of climate-related drivers on finfish aquaculture  
14:20 14:40   Queiros Quentin  
    30 MARine Biodiversity Exploitation and Conservation (France)  
    30 Investigating overmortality of adult sardines in the Gulf of Lions using DEB approach  
14:40 15:00 30 Récapet Charlotte  
    31 Ecologie Comportementale et Biologie des Populations de Poissons (France)  
    31 Investigating potential causes of mortality at sea in Atlantic salmon through a simulation study  
15:00 15:30 31 DEB2019 Conclusions and Closing  
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