Emese BaloghI graduated from the University of Veterinary Medicine as a biologist in 2022. During my BSc studies as a horticultural engineer at Szent István University I examined the S-allele system that determines self-incompatibility in the family Rosaceae. I joined the Lendület Evolutionary Ecology Research Group in 2020 as an MSc student. Since then I am mainly interested in the molecular mechanisms of amphibian sex reversal. Currently, I am working on the latter topic as a PhD student.

Contacts

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Phone: +36 1 3918608
E-mail: Balogh.Emese@student.univet.hu

Publications

Reprints from here.

Bókony V., Balogh E., Ujszegi J., Ujhegyi N., Szederkényi M., Hettyey A. 2024. Tadpoles develop elevated heat tolerance in urban heat islands regardless of sex. Evolutionary Biology 51: 209-216.

Nemesházi E., Sramkó G., Laczkó L., Balogh E., Szatmári L., Vili N,, Ujhegyi N., Üveges B., Bókony V. 2022. Novel genetic sex markers reveal unexpected lack of, and similar susceptibility to, sex reversal in free-living common toads in both natural and anthropogenic habitats. Molecular Ecology 31: 2032-2043.

Halász J., Balogh E., Makovics-Zsohár N. Hegedűs A. 2019. S-genotyping of Hungarian sour cherry cultivars. Acta Horticulturae 1231: 161-166. https://doi.org/10.17660/ActaHortic.2019.1231.27