نتایج جستجو برای: quantitative genetics

تعداد نتایج: 387258  

Journal: :The New phytologist 2012
Ruth G Shaw Julie R Etterson

Evolution proceeds unceasingly in all biological populations. It is clear that climate-driven evolution has molded plants in deep time and within extant populations. However, it is less certain whether adaptive evolution can proceed sufficiently rapidly to maintain the fitness and demographic stability of populations subjected to exceptionally rapid contemporary climate change. Here, we conside...

2011
N. Manikanda Boopathi K. Thiyagu B. Urbi M. Santhoshkumar A. Gopikrishnan S. Aravind Gat Swapnashri R. Ravikesavan

The dawdling development in genetic improvement of cotton with conventional breeding program is chiefly due to lack of complete knowledge on and precise manipulation of fiber productivity and quality. Naturally available cotton continues to be a resource for the upcoming breeding program, and contemporary technologies to exploit the available natural variation are outlined in this paper for fur...

Journal: :Genetics 1999
S D Pletcher C J Geyer

The extension of classical quantitative genetics to deal with function-valued characters (also called infinite-dimensional characters) such as growth curves, mortality curves, and reaction norms, was begun by Kirkpatrick and co-workers. In this theory, the analogs of variance components for single traits are covariance functions for function-valued traits. In the approach presented here, we emp...

Journal: :Genetics 2005
Zhao-Bang Zeng Tao Wang Wei Zou

A quantitative genetic model relates the genotypic value of an individual to the alleles at the loci that contribute to the variation in a population in terms of additive, dominance, and epistatic effects. This partition of genetic effects is related to the partition of genetic variance. A number of models have been proposed to describe this relationship: some are based on the orthogonal partit...

2011
Noémie Chervet Markus Zöttl Roger Schürch Michael Taborsky Dik Heg

Aim. The quantitative genetics underlying correlated behavioural traits (''animal personality") have hitherto been studied mainly in domesticated animals. Here we report the repeatability (R) and heritability (h(2)) of behavioural types in the highly social cichlid fish Neolamprologus pulcher. Methods. We tested 1779 individuals repeatedly and calculated the h(2) of behavioural types by varianc...

2014
Joel W. McGlothlin Jason B. Wolf Edmund D. Brodie Allen J. Moore

Hamilton's theory of inclusive fitness revolutionized our understanding of the evolution of social interactions. Surprisingly, an incorporation of Hamilton's perspective into the quantitative genetic theory of phenotypic evolution has been slow, despite the popularity of quantitative genetics in evolutionary studies. Here, we discuss several versions of Hamilton's rule for social evolution from...

Journal: :Journal of evolutionary biology 2012
N J Dingemanse I Barber J Wright J E Brommer

Behavioural ecologists have proposed various evolutionary mechanisms as to why different personality types coexist. Our ability to understand the evolutionary trajectories of personality traits requires insights from the quantitative genetics of behavioural reaction norms. We assayed > 1000 pedigreed stickleback for initial exploration behaviour of a novel environment, and subsequent changes in...

Journal: :The American naturalist 2008
Benjamin M Fitzpatrick

In the wake of seminal work by Dobzhansky and Muller, hybrid dysfunction is usually attributed to incompatible mutations in different genes arising in different populations. This Dobzhansky-Muller (D-M) model is among the most important contributions of theoretical population genetics. Here I make formal connections between the D-M model and the quantitative genetic interpretation of hybrid dys...

Journal: :Genetics 2005
R L Andrew R Peakall I R Wallis J T Wood E J Knight W J Foley

Marker-based methods for estimating heritability and genetic correlation in the wild have attracted interest because traditional methods may be impractical or introduce bias via G x E effects, mating system variation, and sampling effects. However, they have not been widely used, especially in plants. A regression-based approach, which uses a continuous measure of genetic relatedness, promises ...

Journal: :Genetics 2006
Katalin Csilléry Toby Johnson Dario Beraldi Tim Clutton-Brock Dave Coltman Bengt Hansson Goran Spong Josephine M Pemberton

Knowledge of relatedness between pairs of individuals plays an important role in many research areas including evolutionary biology, quantitative genetics, and conservation. Pairwise relatedness estimation methods based on genetic data from highly variable molecular markers are now used extensively as a substitute for pedigrees. Although the sampling variance of the estimators has been intensiv...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید