Final meetings

PHENEC project final meetings

6th and 7th february 2024 - Orléans

  Click on the links to access the videos (in French only)

1. Project final scientific meeting, 6th february (INRAE Orléans)

2.    Public conference by Jérôme Rousselet - Museum d’Orléans pour la Biodiversité et l’Environnement (MOBE) - 6th february 2024 : "Caterpillars and men. They 'sting', they scratch, sometimes more… While insects are in global decline, some stinging caterpillars are a public health concern. For 10 years, our territory has been a place of experimentation to reconcile public health and biodiversity conservation". URZF, UEFM and CBGP partners present to answer questions from the public.

3.    Pine processionary: what’s new in risk management ? : Meeting about the pine processionary for urban or forest managers, conference organized by the URZF. Hybrid mode (visio/INRAE Orléans), 7th February, 2024.
   a.    Christelle Robinet (URZF) : meeting introduction
   b.    Jérôme Rousselet (URZF), Laurence Ziegler (ARS Grand Est), Alice Samama (FREDON France) : Introduction – stinging caterpillars. Challenges, control methods in a changing world, risk species, regulatory context.
   c.    Anne-Sophie Brinquin (UEFM) : Survey of mayors in France
   d.    Anne-Sophie Brinquin (UEFM) : AGIIR alert application
   e.    Jérôme Rousselet (URZF) : Study of phenology: four years of observations and experiments to model the occurrence of risk
   f.    Clément Bourgade (URZF) : Phenology modelling and risk prediction
   g.    Jérôme Rousselet (URZF) and Maurane Buradino (UEFM) : Urtiquand network - pine processionary monitoring
   h.    Chloé Petit (partnership service, SDAR, INRAE Val de Loire) : Partnership modalities
URZF, UEFM and CBGP partners present to answer questions from managers. Launch of the URTIQUAND network.

 

 

 

 

- Project final meeting - 6th febr. 2024

- Public meeting - MOBE (Muséum d'Orléans pour la Biodiversité et l'Environnement) - 6th febr. 2024 - 7:00 PM
Conference: "Caterpillars and men. They 'sting', they scratch, sometimes more… While insects are in global decline, some stinging caterpillars are a public health concern. For 10 years, our territory has been a place of experimentation to reconcile public health and biodiversity conservation".

- Meeting "Pine processionary: what’s new in risk management ?" , for urban or forest managers - 7th February morning (INRAE site)

- Launch of the URTIQUAND network, an observer network for monitoring the phenology of the pine processionary

Modification date: 03 July 2024 | Publication date: 01 July 2024 | By: RP