Irène Till-Bottraud

Affiliations: 
Grenoble University, Grenoble, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France 
Area:
Local Adaptation, Population Genomics, Quantitative Genetics, Common garden, Arabis alpina, Statistical models
Google:
"Irène Till-Bottraud"
BETA: Related publications

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.

Mazal L, Fajardo A, Till-Bottraud I, et al. (2023) Kin selection, kin recognition and kin discrimination in plants revisited: A claim for considering environmental and genetic variability. Plant, Cell & Environment
Andrello M, de Villemereuil P, Carboni M, et al. (2020) Accounting for stochasticity in demographic compensation along the elevational range of an alpine plant. Ecology Letters
Fajardo A, Torres-Díaz C, Till-Bottraud I. (2016) Disturbance and density-dependent processes (competition and facilitation) influence the fine-scale genetic structure of a tree species' population. Annals of Botany. 117: 67-77
Till-Bottraud I, de Villemereuil P. (2016) Kin recognition or phenotype matching? The New Phytologist. 209: 13-4
Grassein F, Lavorel S, Till-Bottraud I. (2014) The importance of biotic interactions and local adaptation for plant response to environmental changes: field evidence along an elevational gradient. Global Change Biology. 20: 1452-60
Andrello M, Nicolè F, Till-Bottraud I, et al. (2012) Effect of stage-specific vital rates on population growth rates and effective population sizes in an endangered iteroparous plant. Conservation Biology : the Journal of the Society For Conservation Biology. 26: 208-17
Grassein F, Till-Bottraud I, Lavorel S. (2010) Plant resource-use strategies: the importance of phenotypic plasticity in response to a productivity gradient for two subalpine species. Annals of Botany. 106: 637-45
Till-Bottraud I, Gaggiotti OE. (2006) Going back to Darwin's works. Trends in Plant Science. 11: 471-2; author reply
Gaudeul M, Till-Bottraud I. (2003) Low selfing in a mass-flowering, endangered perennial, Eryngium alpinum L. (Apiaceae). American Journal of Botany. 90: 716-23
See more...