Symbioses in the Sea

Symbioses in the Sea
LabexMer Workshops in Evolutionary Marine Ecology
9:30
9:45
10:45
Welcome and opening remarks
Keynote Lecture: Joel Sachs, University of California Riverside
The evolutionary origins and diversification of bacterial symbioses
Coffee Break
Session 1: Bacterial symbioses
11:00
11:15
11:30
11:45
12:00
12:15
12:30
Mickael Le Gac
Evolution des interactions écologiques au cours de 40 000 générations d'évolution
Jean-Louis Nicolas
Peut-on appliquer le concept d'holobionte aux bivalves? Cas des larves et post-larves
d'huître, Crassostrea gigas.
Philippe Pondaven
Symbiosis in jellyfish from marine lakes of Palau
Arnaud Tanguy
Endosymbiotic bacteria in the bivalve Loripes lacteus: Localization, characterization and
aspects of symbiont regulation
Hayat GUEZI
Adaptation au mode de vie symbiotique chez les moules du genre Bathymodiolus des
écosystèmes chimiosynthétiques profonds : une approche transcriptomique.
Christine Paillard
A theoretical individual-based model of brown ring disease in manila clams, Ruditapes
philippinarum
Lunch
Session 2: Protist symbioses
14:00
14:15
14:30
14:45
15:00
15:15
15:30
15:45
16:00
17:00
Aurélie Chambouvet
Global prevalence and host/parasite interaction of an emerging protist parasite
(Perkinsea, Alveolata) of amphibians.
Fabrice Not
A brief overview of protist symbioses in the plankton
Andres Gutierrez
Dimethyl sulfur compounds as anti-oxidant system in marine photosymbiosis: physiomolecular basis and ecological significance
Loic Pillet
Kleptoplastidy in the genus Elphidium (Foraminifera)
Johan DECELLE
Ecology and Evolution of the photosymbiosis in Acantharia (Radiolaria)
Nicolas HENRY
Using metabarcodes and correlation statistics to unveil novel symbioses in the plankton
realm
Sebastien COLIN
e-HCFM: automated confocal microscopy to unravel symbioses in single pelagic protists.
Coffee break
Round-table discussion
A session dedicated to discussing recent topics in symbiosis, and stimulating interaction
and new ideas among the participants
Closing remarks