Jonathan Bonfanti

ORCID: 0000-0003-0049-4410
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Collembola Taxonomy and Ecology Studies
  • Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
  • Soil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics
  • Hemiptera Insect Studies
  • Invertebrate Taxonomy and Ecology
  • Marine and environmental studies
  • scientometrics and bibliometrics research
  • Sustainable Agricultural Systems Analysis
  • Fire effects on ecosystems
  • Plant and animal studies
  • Health and Medical Research Impacts
  • Plant Ecology and Taxonomy Studies
  • Species Distribution and Climate Change
  • Conservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management
  • Plant Ecology and Soil Science
  • Plant and fungal interactions
  • Study of Mite Species
  • Evolution and Genetic Dynamics
  • Agricultural Innovations and Practices
  • Legal Education and Practice Innovations
  • Plant Parasitism and Resistance
  • Environmental DNA in Biodiversity Studies
  • Isotope Analysis in Ecology
  • Agroforestry and silvopastoral systems
  • Philosophy and History of Science

Fondation Pour la Recherche Sur la Biodiversité
2023-2024

Institut de Recherche pour le Développement
2018-2024

Université de Montpellier
2018-2024

Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement
2023-2024

Ecologie fonctionnelle & biogéochimie des sols & des agro-systèmes
2023-2024

Institut Agro Montpellier
2024

Institut National de Recherche pour l'Agriculture, l'Alimentation et l'Environnement
2024

L'Institut Agro
2024

Centre d'Écologie Fonctionnelle et Évolutive
2018-2023

Fonctionnement agroécologique et performances des systèmes de culture horticoles
2023

Abstract The publish‐or‐perish culture in academia has catalysed the development of an unethical publishing system. This system is characterised by proliferation journals and publishers—unaffiliated with learned societies or universities—that maintain extremely large revenues profit margins diverting funds away from academic community. Early career researchers (ECRs) are particularly vulnerable to consequences this because intersecting factors, including pressure pursue high impact...

10.1111/ele.14395 article EN Ecology Letters 2024-03-01

Abstract Soil organic matter (SOM) transformation processes are regulated by the activities of plants, microbes, and fauna. Compared with plants effects soil fauna less understood because their high taxonomic functional diversity, mix direct indirect effect mechanisms. Trait‐based approaches offer a generic perspective to quantify mechanistic relationships between SOM transformations, including decomposition, translocation, stabilisation carbon. Yet, at present, we lack consensus concerning...

10.1111/1365-2435.14720 article EN cc-by-nc Functional Ecology 2024-12-20

Collembola have been proposed for several decades as a good model organisms to survey soil biodiversity; but most of the studies focused on taxonomic endpoints. The main objectives this study are compare effects different land uses, including urban and industrial while using both collembolan functional biodiversity approaches. We collected data 3,056 samples communities across 758 sites in various uses throughout France. types use considered included all human activity from forestry urban,...

10.3389/fevo.2021.630919 article EN cc-by Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 2021-07-14

Among the biggest challenges of modern society are biodiversity conservation and food security. Food security requires increase agricultural yields, though land use intensification is one main drivers loss. Environmentally friendly farming practices, such as organic farming, have positive effects on biodiversity, but accompanied by yield losses. Other diversification, result in a simultaneous yield. In this study, we quantitatively synthesize results multiple meta-analyses, to identify...

10.32942/x25620 preprint EN cc-by-nc 2025-01-14

Abstract Aim Agriculture depends heavily on biodiversity, yet unsustainable management practices continue to affect a wide range of organisms and ecosystems at unprecedented levels worldwide. Addressing the global challenge biodiversity loss requires access consolidated knowledge across practices, spatial levels, taxonomic groups. Location Global Time period 1994 2022 Major taxa studied Animals, microorganisms, plants. Methods We conducted comprehensive literature review synthesising data...

10.1101/2024.04.19.590051 preprint EN bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) 2024-04-24

Abstract Investigating the functional facet of biodiversity provides ecologists with a deeper understanding community assembly and ecosystem processes, from local to biogeographical scales. A central assumption in ecology is that interspecific trait variability higher than intraspecific variability. The “stable species hierarchy” hypothesis states for similar found different environmental conditions, their ranking conserved. In this study, we applied hierarchy concept prevalent plant growing...

10.1111/1365-2435.13194 article EN Functional Ecology 2018-08-07

Habitat loss and degradation due to global agriculture land use is a major threat biodiversity. Identifying agricultural management practices that mitigate these impacts urgently needed. Thousands of experiments have been conducted worldwide in the last decades compare various on The magnitudes difference biodiversity responses between pairs practices, i.e. effect sizes, now synthesised growing number meta-analyses. Yet, each meta-analysis generally focuses specific type farming practice...

10.1016/j.dib.2023.109555 article EN cc-by Data in Brief 2023-09-09

We here present a database of evidence on the impact agricultural management practices biodiversity and yield. This is result systematic literature review, that aimed to identify meta-analyses use as their response variables any measure After screening more than 1,086 titles abstracts, we identified 33 relevant meta-analyses, from which extracted overall estimates, subgroup estimates well all information related them (effect size metric, taxonomic group, crop type etc.). also relative...

10.1016/j.dib.2023.109696 article EN cc-by Data in Brief 2023-10-22

The publish-or-perish culture in academia has catalysed the development of an unethical publishing system. This system is characterised by proliferation journals and publishers—unaffiliated with learned societies or universities—that maintain extremely large revenues profit margins diverting funds away from academic community. Early career researchers (ECRs) are particularly vulnerable to consequences this because intersecting factors, including pressure pursue high impact publications,...

10.22541/au.169868591.11596604/v2 preprint EN Authorea (Authorea) 2024-03-15

The academic culture of publish-or-perish has served as a catalyst for an unethical publishing system. This system is characterized by the proliferation journals unaffiliated with organizations that maintain extremely large profit margins, diverting funds away from community. Early career researchers (ECRs) are particularly vulnerable to this due intersecting factors including pressure pursue prestigious publications, rising costs and job insecurity. Moving towards more ethical requires...

10.22541/au.169868591.11596604/v1 preprint EN Authorea (Authorea) 2023-10-30
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