Ophelie Ronce, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | ISEM, Montpellier, France |
Website:
http://www.metapop.univ-montp2.fr/?page_id=91Google:
"Ophelie Ronce"Parents
Sign in to add mentorIsabelle Olivieri | grad student | 1996-1999 | ISEM, Montpellier, France |
Mark Kirkpatrick | post-doc | 1999-2000 | UT Austin |
BETA: Related publications
See more...
Publications
You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect. |
Soularue JP, Firmat C, Caignard T, et al. (2023) Antagonistic Effects of Assortative Mating on the Evolution of Phenotypic Plasticity along Environmental Gradients. The American Naturalist. 202: 18-39 |
Godineau C, Ronce O, Devaux C. (2021) Assortative mating can help adaptation of flowering time to a changing climate: insights from a polygenic model. Journal of Evolutionary Biology |
Tonnabel J, Klein EK, Ronce O, et al. (2021) Sex-specific spatial variation in fitness in the highly dimorphic Leucadendron rubrum. Molecular Ecology |
Gauzere J, Teuf B, Davi H, et al. (2020) Where is the optimum? Predicting the variation of selection along climatic gradients and the adaptive value of plasticity. A case study on tree phenology. Evolution Letters. 4: 109-123 |
Cotto O, Sandell L, Chevin LM, et al. (2019) Maladaptive Shifts in Life History in a Changing Environment. The American Naturalist. 194: 558-573 |
Anciaux Y, Lambert A, Ronce O, et al. (2019) Population persistence under high mutation rate: from evolutionary rescue to lethal mutagenesis. Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution |
Gauzere J, Lucas C, Ronce O, et al. (2019) Sensitivity analysis of tree phenology models reveals increasing sensitivity of their predictions to winter chilling temperature and photoperiod with warming climate Ecological Modelling. 411: 108805 |
Anciaux Y, Chevin LM, Ronce O, et al. (2018) Evolutionary Rescue over a Fitness Landscape. Genetics |
Tonnabel J, Schurr FM, Boucher F, et al. (2018) Life-History Traits Evolved Jointly with Climatic Niche and Disturbance Regime in the Genus Leucadendron (Proteaceae). The American Naturalist. 191: 220-234 |
Aguilée R, Raoul G, Rousset F, et al. (2016) Pollen dispersal slows geographical range shift and accelerates ecological niche shift under climate change. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |