نتایج جستجو برای: inbreeding depression

تعداد نتایج: 141119  

Journal: :Molecular ecology 2007
Stefan G Michalski Walter Durka

The mating system of a plant is the prime determinant of its population genetic structure. However, mating system effects may be modified by postzygotic mechanisms like inbreeding depression. Furthermore, historical as well as contemporary ecological factors and population characteristics, like the location within the species range can contribute to genetic variability. Using microsatellite mar...

Journal: :Hereditas 2002
Stefan Andersson Patrik Waldmann

Plants from a population of Scabiosa canescens, a locally rare species with a narrow ecological amplitude, were raised under uniform growth conditions to examine the phenotypic effects of one generation selfing and outcrossing. Particular attention was given to direct components of fitness (seedling biomass, rosette leaf number, head number, flower number per head), but two morphological charac...

Journal: :Biology letters 2005
Olof Liberg Henrik Andrén Hans-Christian Pedersen Håkan Sand Douglas Sejberg Petter Wabakken Mikael Kesson Staffan Bensch

The difficulty of obtaining pedigrees for wild populations has hampered the possibility of demonstrating inbreeding depression in nature. In a small, naturally restored, wild population of grey wolves in Scandinavia, founded in 1983, we constructed a pedigree for 24 of the 28 breeding pairs established in the period 1983-2002. Ancestry for the breeding animals was determined through a combinati...

Journal: :Journal of animal science 1998
F Pariacote L D Van Vleck M D MacNeil

Records of five inbred lines at the Livestock and Range Research Laboratory were used to evaluate effects of inbreeding and heterozygosity on preweaning traits. Members of each line were descendants of a single founder Hereford bull. A total of 8,065 records of birth weight and 7,380 records of preweaning daily gain and weaning weight were analyzed by derivative-free REML using a model that inc...

2013
Cornelis J. Vermeulen Kamilla S. Pedersen Hans C. Beck Jørgen Petersen Kristina Kirilova Gagalova Volker Loeschcke

Inbreeding depression is a widespread phenomenon of central importance to agriculture, medicine, conservation biology and evolutionary biology. Although the population genetic principles of inbreeding depression are well understood, we know little about its functional genomic causes. To provide insight into the molecular interplay between intrinsic stress responses, inbreeding depression and te...

Journal: :Molecular ecology 2007
Jim Moore

Perhaps the most important 'decision' made by any animal (or plant) is whether to disperse--leave kith and kin, or remain with the familiar and related. The benefits of staying at home are obvious, so dispersal requires an explanation--and the most popular is that dispersal functions to avoid inbreeding depression. Strong support comes from the observation that dispersal is so often sex biased....

Journal: :Current Biology 2006
Matthew J.G. Gage Alison K. Surridge Joseph L. Tomkins Emma Green Louise Wiskin Diana J. Bell Godfrey M. Hewitt

When close relatives are forced to reproduce, the resulting offspring inherit above average homozygosity and reduced fitness. Biologists now recognize inbreeding depression in the wild, a phenomenon that will probably increase as natural populations become depleted and fragmented. Inbreeding depression is most commonly expressed as compromised fertility and embryogenesis, but actual mechanisms ...

Journal: :Molecular ecology 2008
Paul L Leberg Brigette D Firmin

Inbreeding depression is a major force affecting the evolution and viability of small populations in captive breeding and restoration programmes. Populations that experience small sizes may be less susceptible to future inbreeding depression because they have been purged of deleterious recessive alleles. We review issues related to purging, as they apply to the management of small populations, ...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2008
Torsten N Kristensen J Stuart F Barker Kamilla S Pedersen Volker Loeschcke

The majority of experimental studies of the effects of population bottlenecks on fitness are performed under laboratory conditions, which do not account for the environmental complexity that populations face in nature. In this study, we test inbreeding depression in multiple replicates of inbred when compared with non-inbred lines of Drosophila melanogaster under different temperature condition...

2016
Kat Bebbington Lewis G. Spurgin Eleanor A. Fairfield Hannah L. Dugdale Jan Komdeur Terry Burke David S. Richardson

Inbreeding results in more homozygous offspring that should suffer reduced fitness, but it can be difficult to quantify these costs for several reasons. First, inbreeding depression may vary with ecological or physiological stress and only be detectable over long time periods. Second, parental homozygosity may indirectly affect offspring fitness, thus confounding analyses that consider offsprin...

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