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The demography and population genomics of evolutionary transitions to self-fertilization in plants
by
Arunkumar, Ramesh
, Wright, Stephen I.
, Barrett, Spencer C. H.
in
Background Selection
/ Computer Simulation
/ Demography
/ Environment
/ Genetic Bottlenecks
/ Genetic Variation
/ Metagenomics - methods
/ Models, Genetic
/ Plant Mating
/ Plant Physiological Phenomena - genetics
/ Reproductive Assurance
/ Review
/ Selection, Genetic
/ Self-Fertilization
/ Self-Fertilization - genetics
/ Self-Fertilization - physiology
2014
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The demography and population genomics of evolutionary transitions to self-fertilization in plants
by
Arunkumar, Ramesh
, Wright, Stephen I.
, Barrett, Spencer C. H.
in
Background Selection
/ Computer Simulation
/ Demography
/ Environment
/ Genetic Bottlenecks
/ Genetic Variation
/ Metagenomics - methods
/ Models, Genetic
/ Plant Mating
/ Plant Physiological Phenomena - genetics
/ Reproductive Assurance
/ Review
/ Selection, Genetic
/ Self-Fertilization
/ Self-Fertilization - genetics
/ Self-Fertilization - physiology
2014
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Do you wish to request the book?
The demography and population genomics of evolutionary transitions to self-fertilization in plants
by
Arunkumar, Ramesh
, Wright, Stephen I.
, Barrett, Spencer C. H.
in
Background Selection
/ Computer Simulation
/ Demography
/ Environment
/ Genetic Bottlenecks
/ Genetic Variation
/ Metagenomics - methods
/ Models, Genetic
/ Plant Mating
/ Plant Physiological Phenomena - genetics
/ Reproductive Assurance
/ Review
/ Selection, Genetic
/ Self-Fertilization
/ Self-Fertilization - genetics
/ Self-Fertilization - physiology
2014
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The demography and population genomics of evolutionary transitions to self-fertilization in plants
Journal Article
The demography and population genomics of evolutionary transitions to self-fertilization in plants
2014
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Overview
The evolution of self-fertilization from outcrossing has occurred on numerous occasions in flowering plants. This shift in mating system profoundly influences the morphology, ecology, genetics and evolution of selfing lineages. As a result, there has been sustained interest in understanding the mechanisms driving the evolution of selfing and its environmental context. Recently, patterns of molecular variation have been used to make inferences about the selective mechanisms associated with mating system transitions. However, these inferences can be complicated by the action of linked selection following the transition. Here, using multilocus simulations and comparative molecular data from related selfers and outcrossers, we demonstrate that there is little evidence for strong bottlenecks associated with initial transitions to selfing, and our simulation results cast doubt on whether it is possible to infer the role of bottlenecks associated with reproductive assurance in the evolution of selfing. They indicate that the effects of background selection on the loss of diversity and efficacy of selection occur rapidly following the shift to high selfing. Future comparative studies that integrate explicit ecological and genomic details are necessary for quantifying the independent and joint effects of selection and demography on transitions to selfing and the loss of genetic diversity.
Publisher
The Royal Society
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