FIVE GENERATIONS OF ENFORCED SELFING AND OUTCROSSING IN MIMULUS GUTTATUS: INBREEDING DEPRESSION VARIATION AT THE POPULATION AND FAMILY LEVEL.

FIVE GENERATIONS OF ENFORCED SELFING AND OUTCROSSING IN MIMULUS GUTTATUS: INBREEDING DEPRESSION VARIATION AT THE POPULATION AND FAMILY LEVEL.
Authors: 
Dudash MR, Carr DE, Fenster CB
Summary
Publication Date
1997 Feb
Abstract

The focus of this study was to examine the consequences of five sequential generations of enforced selfing and outcrossing in two annual populations of the mixed-mating Mimulus guttatus. Our primary goal was to determine whether purging of deleterious recessive alleles occurs uniformly between populations and among families, and thus gain insights into the mode of gene action (dominance, overdominance, and/or epistasis) governing the expression of inbreeding depression at both the population and family levels across the life cycle.

Publication Type
Journal Article
DOI
10.1111/j.1558-5646.1997.tb02388.x
Citation
Dudash MR, Carr DE, Fenster CB. FIVE GENERATIONS OF ENFORCED SELFING AND OUTCROSSING IN MIMULUS GUTTATUS: INBREEDING DEPRESSION VARIATION AT THE POPULATION AND FAMILY LEVEL.. Evolution; international journal of organic evolution. 1997 Feb; 51(1):54-65.
Series Name: 
Evolution; international journal of organic evolution
Page Numbers: 
54-65
Publisher: