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Alice Feurtey

Researcher at Max Planck Society

Publications -  28
Citations -  651

Alice Feurtey is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genome & Population. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 22 publications receiving 384 citations. Previous affiliations of Alice Feurtey include Université Paris-Saclay & University of Paris-Sud.

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The population biology of fungal invasions.

TL;DR: It is shown that successful invasions can occur even when life history traits are particularly unfavourable to long‐distance dispersal and even with a strong bottleneck, and concluded that fungal invasions are valuable models to contribute to the authors' view of biological invasions.
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Anthropogenic and natural drivers of gene flow in a temperate wild fruit tree: a basis for conservation and breeding programs in apples.

TL;DR: This work provides the first evidence that both human activities and climate, through apple production, and human disturbance, through modifications of apple flower visitor diversity, have had a significant impact on crop‐to‐wild interspecific introgression rates.
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Independent domestication events in the blue-cheese fungus Penicillium roqueforti

TL;DR: This study reconstructed the domestication history of the blue cheese mould Penicillium roqueforti and showed that this fungus was domesticated twice independently, shedding light on the processes of rapid adaptation and raises questions about genetic resource conservation.
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Crop-to-wild gene flow and its fitness consequences for a wild fruit tree: Towards a comprehensive conservation strategy of the wild apple in Europe.

TL;DR: Substantial contemporary crop‐to‐wild gene flow is found in crab‐apple tree populations and superior fitness of hybrids compared to wild seeds and seedlings is found.
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Epigenetic modifications affect the rate of spontaneous mutations in a pathogenic fungus.

TL;DR: In this article, the direct impact of epigenetic modifications and temperature stress on mitotic mutation rates in a fungal pathogen using a mutation accumulation approach was determined, and it was shown that epigenetic modification and environmental conditions significantly increased the mutation rate.