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Insular woody daisies (Argyranthemum, Asteraceae) are more resistant to drought‐induced hydraulic failure than their herbaceous relatives
(Functional Ecology. vol. 32, n° 6, pp. 1467-1478, 2018)Article de revue -
Sex determines xylem anatomy in a dioecious conifer: hydraulic consequences in a drier world
(Tree Physiology. vol. 37, n° 11, pp. 1493-1502, 2017)Article de revue -
No role for xylem embolism or carbohydrate shortage in temperate trees during the severe 2015 drought
(Journal of Ecology. vol. 107, n° 1, pp. 334-349, 2019)Article de revue -
Are forest disturbances amplifying or canceling out climate change-induced productivity changes in European forests?
(Environmental Research Letters. vol. 12, n° 3, pp. 1-12, 2017)Article de revue -
The legacy of water deficit on populations having experienced negative hydraulic safety margin
(Global Ecology and Biogeography. vol. 27, n° 3, pp. 346-356, 2018)Article de revue -
Aridity drove the evolution of extreme embolism resistance and the radiation of conifer genus Callitris
(New Phytologist. vol. 215, n° 1, pp. 97-112, 2017)Article de revue -
Evolutionary dynamics of the leaf phenological cycle in an oak metapopulation along an elevation gradient.
(Journal of Evolutionary Biology. vol. 30, n° 12, pp. 2116-2131, 2017)Article de revue -
How reliable are methods to assess xylem vulnerability to cavitation? The issue of ‘open vessel’ artifact in oaks
(Tree Physiology. vol. 34, n° 8, pp. 894-905, 2014)Article de revue -
Plasticity in plant hydraulic traits: do we know what is going on?
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