نتایج جستجو برای: outbreeding

تعداد نتایج: 430  

Journal: :Journal of evolutionary biology 2009
N Thurin S Aron

Multiple functional queens in a colony (polygyny) and multiple mating by queens (polyandry) in social insects challenge kin selection, because they dilute inclusive fitness benefits from helping. Colonies of the ant Plagiolepis pygmaea brash contain several hundreds of multiply mated queens. Yet, within-colony relatedness remains unexpectedly high. This stems from low male dispersal, extensive ...

Journal: :Genetics 1997
J Z Lin K Ritland

Theoretical predictions about the evolution of selfing depend on the genetic architecture of loci controlling selfing (monogenic vs. polygenic determination, large vs. small effect of alleles, dominance vs. recessiveness), and studies of such architecture are lacking. We inferred the genetic basis of mating system differences between the outbreeding Mimulus guttatus and the inbreeding M. platyc...

Journal: :Genetics 2005
J Jansen

This article investigates the construction of linkage maps by means of the reconstruction of hidden inheritance vectors. An inheritance vector provides a description of the origin of marker alleles in an individual in terms of a binary code indicating the grandparental origin of the alleles. The practical application that is considered is the full-sib family of a diploid outbreeding species. Es...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2016
Irene Stefanini Leonardo Dapporto Luisa Berná Mario Polsinelli Stefano Turillazzi Duccio Cavalieri

The reproductive ecology of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is still largely unknown. Recent evidence of interspecific hybridization, high levels of strain heterozygosity, and prion transmission suggest that outbreeding occurs frequently in yeasts. Nevertheless, the place where yeasts mate and recombine in the wild has not been identified. We found that the intestine of social wasps hosts highly outbr...

Journal: :Ecology letters 2006
Lesley G Campbell Allison A Snow Caroline E Ridley

Crop-wild hybridization may produce offspring with lower fitness than their wild parents due to deleterious crop traits and outbreeding depression. Over time, however, selection for improved fitness could lead to greater invasiveness of hybrid taxa. To examine evolutionary change in crop-wild hybrids, we established four wild (Raphanus raphanistrum) and four hybrid radish populations (R. raphan...

Journal: :Genetics 2002
Jing-Zhong Lin Peter L Morrell Michael T Clegg

Patterns of nucleotide sequence diversity are analyzed for three duplicate alcohol dehydrogenase loci (adh1-adh3) within a species-wide sample of 25 accessions of wild barley (Hordeum vulgare ssp. spontaneum). The adh1 and adh2 loci are tightly linked (recombination fraction <0.01) while the adh3 locus is inherited independently. Wild barley is predominantly self-fertilizing (approximately 98%)...

2017
Jens Staal Emma Wedgwood

While clinical and basic biomedical research focus on diagnoses and cures for common and rare genetic diseases, they are unable to address one of the largest underlying causes for genetic disease: mating within families or other small genetically isolated sub-populations. This interdisciplinary literature study investigates theoretical, moral and practical aspects to solve this major cause for ...

2002
Willi Jahnen

S-Gene-associated glycoproteins (S-glycoproteins) from styles of Nicotiana alata, identified by non-equilibrium twodimensional electrophoresis, were purified by cation exchange fast protein liquid chromatography with yields of 0.5 to 8 micrograms of protein per style, depending on the S-genotype of the plant. The method relies on the highly basic nature of the S-glycoproteins. The elution profi...

2010
Rebecca Anderson

Ecological restoration projects often rely upon the introduction of nonlocal propagules, such as seed or clonal fragments, to replace or supplement threatened populations. In Minnesota, historical dune restoration projects introduced nonlocal propagules of Ammophila breviligulata from Michigan to augment the threatened native population. Despite the good intentions of such efforts, there is mou...

Journal: :Current Biology 2008
Juan S. Escobar Philippe Jarne Anne Charmantier Patrice David

Senescence, the decline in fitness components of an organism with age [1], is a nearly universal characteristic of living beings [2-6]. This ubiquity is challenging because natural selection does not favor the evolution of traits decreasing fitness [1, 7, 8]. Senescence may result from two nonexclusive mechanisms: the accumulation of deleterious mutations acting late in life, when the strength ...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید