15 research outputs found
Expressing entitlement in colonial Algeria: villagers, medical doctors, and the state in the early 20th century
This article expands our understanding of state–society interactions in rural Algeria under French colonial rule, focusing specifically on villages in the eastern department of Constantine. I analyze previously unstudied administrative records, newspapers, petitions, and complaints to show how sanitary regulations and medical expertise came to shape relationships among villagers, local elites, and the colonial state from the early 20th century. Villagers responded to state-led medicalization by seeking the protection of medical doctors, not only from disease but also from the state itself. In particular, they sought to avoid heavy-handed treatment by qaʾids and local elites who applied disease control measures without appropriate medical knowledge. Furthermore, close examination of petitions sent during World War I suggests that hardships experienced by rural communities during the war accentuated nascent feelings of entitlement across demographic, ethnic, and religious communal boundaries toward state medical treatment
Conférence sur l'extension de la culture du coton en Algérie
23 avril 1908. Syndicat des filateurs de coton de Lille & environ
Using non-addive effects in genome-wide association studies and genomic predictions to improve biotic stress tolerance in peach
International audienceAccounting for genetic architecture is crucial to breed for sustainable disease resistances and tolerances in plants. Indeed, (i) harnessing together minor and major effects genes allows to design a more durable plant immunity with large spectrum (ii) access to non-additive variance allows for a better exploitation of the total genetic variance when it comes to breeding, which is particularly relevant for clonally propagated crops. Our study system, Prunus persica (peach tree), is a major temperate fruit crop characterized by an overall high susceptibility to several pests and diseases, illustrated by a frequency treatment index around five times higher than in cereals. In this work, we phenotyped symptoms of two pests (leafhopper and twig moth) and four diseases (rust, leaf curl, mildew and shot hole) under low pesticide cover over three years in a peach core-collection replicated at three sites. This population consists in 192 unique accessions representing peach worldwide diversity and has been genotyped with the IRSC 16K SNP array. We used linear mixed models and the natural orthogonal interactions approach (Vitezica et al. 2017) to explicitly decompose genetic variance into additive, dominant and epistatic effects, and genotype x environment interactions. Genome-wide associations studies (GWAS) were performed with single-locus mixed models including kinships accounting for different dominance inheritance patterns. Genomic predictions consisted in a comparison of five GBLUP models incorporating different combinations of non-additive and inbreeding effects. After describing significant non-additive genetic variance and inbreeding effects across traits, we show that in addition to additive quantitative trait loci (QTLs), three to eight additional QTLs have been detected when accounting for dominant architecture. We were also able to improve genomic predictions by up to +0.05 in predictive ability with models incorporating non-additive and inbreeding terms in comparison to the additive baseline GBLUP model. Our results indicate the presence of very contrasted genetic architectures within the six biotic stress responses studied, traits being more strongly influenced either by dominance, epistasis or inbreeding effects. We also present the exploitation of GxE variance to find robust QTLs and improve environment-specific predictions. Finally, we introduce a multitrait approach to exploit jointly the complementary between resistance and tolerance to several biotic stresses. Our results could translate into high genetic gain in peach given its long juvenile phase, and could contribute to a long-term reduction of pesticide reliance in fruit production