Self-fertilization in brooding hermaphroditic Caribbean corals: Evidence from molecular markers
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] E. Pollak,et al. On the theory of partially inbreeding finite populations. I. Partial selfing. , 1988, Genetics.
[2] B. Charlesworth,et al. Genetic loads and estimates of mutation rates in highly inbred plant populations , 1990, Nature.
[3] P. Hedrick. Hitchhiking: a comparison of linkage and partial selfing. , 1980, Genetics.
[4] D. Falconer,et al. Introduction to Quantitative Genetics. , 1962 .
[5] R. Babcock,et al. Self- and cross-fertilization in scleractinian corals , 1986 .
[6] R. Black,et al. Asexual viviparity and population genetics of Actinia tenebrosa , 1979 .
[7] R. Babcock,et al. Aspects of the Fertilization Ecology of Broadcast Spawning Corals: Sperm Dilution Effects and in situ Measurements of Fertilization. , 1992, The Biological bulletin.
[8] B. Weir,et al. Allozyme diversity in plant species. , 1990 .
[9] L. Noble,et al. Parent and larval RAPD fingerprints reveal outcrossing in freshwater bryozoans , 1994, Molecular ecology.
[10] J. Stoddart. Asexual production of planulae in the coral Pocillopora damicornis , 1983 .
[11] J. Antonovics,et al. Determinants of outcrossing rate in a predominantly self-fertilizing weed, Datura stramonium (Solanaceae) , 1992 .
[12] L. Harder,et al. Ecology and evolution of plant mating. , 1996, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[13] K. Ritland,et al. INBREEDING DEPRESSION IN TWO MIMULUS TAXA MEASURED BY MULTIGENERATIONAL CHANGES IN THE INBREEDING COEFFICIENT , 1993, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[14] R. Lande,et al. THE EVOLUTION OF SELF‐FERTILIZATION AND INBREEDING DEPRESSION IN PLANTS. II. EMPIRICAL OBSERVATIONS , 1985, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[15] M. R. Dudash. RELATIVE FITNESS OF SELFED AND OUTCROSSED PROGENY IN A SELF‐COMPATIBLE, PROTANDROUS SPECIES, SABATIA ANGULARIS L. (GENTIANACEAE): A COMPARISON IN THREE ENVIRONMENTS , 1990, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[16] D. Crisp,et al. Evidence of self-fertilization in certain species of barnacles , 1956, Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom.
[17] K. Holsinger. Mass-Action Models of Plant Mating Systems: The Evolutionary Stability of Mixed Mating Systems , 1991, The American Naturalist.
[18] J. Antonovics,et al. Evolution in closely adjacent plant populations , 1978, Heredity.
[19] J. Gee,et al. Self- and cross-fertilization in Spirorbis borealis and S. pagenstecheri , 1965 .
[20] M. Parker. Local genetic differentiation for disease resistance in a selfing annual , 1991 .
[21] D. G. Lloyd,et al. Some Reproductive Factors Affecting the Selection of Self-Fertilization in Plants , 1979, The American Naturalist.
[22] Charles Darwin,et al. The Effects of Cross and Self Fertilisation in the Vegetable Kingdom , 1972 .
[23] Sarah Cohen. Outcrossing in field populations of two species of self-fertile ascidians , 1990 .
[24] L. Wolfe. INBREEDING DEPRESSION IN HYDROPHYLLUM APPENDICULATUM: ROLE OF MATERNAL EFFECTS, CROWDING, AND PARENTAL MATING HISTORY , 1993, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[25] P. Jarne,et al. Hermes meets Aphrodite: an animal perspective. , 1996, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[26] D. Charlesworth,et al. The Evolution of the Selfing Rate in Functionally Hermaphrodite Plants and Animals , 1993 .
[27] K. Ritland. INFERENCES ABOUT INBREEDING DEPRESSION BASED ON CHANGES OF THE INBREEDING COEFFICIENT , 1990, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[28] D. Levitan. Influence of Body Size and Population Density on Fertilization Success and Reproductive Output in a Free-Spawning Invertebrate. , 1991, The Biological bulletin.
[29] J. Orr,et al. Biochemical genetic confirmation of the asexual reproduction of brooded offspring in the sea anemone Actinia equina. , 1982 .
[30] D. Potts,et al. Population genetic structure in brooding sea anemones (Epiactis spp.) with contrasting reproductive modes , 1997 .
[31] R. Beckwitt. Electrophoretic Evidence for Self-fertilization in Two Species of Spirorbid Polychaetes , 1982 .
[32] E. Bermingham,et al. DNA fingerprints of a gorgonian coral: a method for detecting clonal structure in a vegetative species , 1992 .
[33] T. Aide. THE INFLUENCE OF WIND AND ANIMAL POLLINATION ON VARIATION IN OUTCROSSING RATES , 1986, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[34] M. Miller,et al. Hybridization within the species complex of the scleractinan coral Montastraea annularis , 1997 .
[35] Partial selfing as an optimal mating strategy , 1992, Heredity.
[36] D. G. Lloyd,et al. Self- and Cross-Fertilization in Plants. I. Functional Dimensions , 1992, International Journal of Plant Sciences.
[37] P. Harrison,et al. Reproduction, dispersal and recruitment of scleractinian corals , 1990 .
[38] A. Szmant-Froelich,et al. Sexual reproduction of Favia fragum (ESPER): lunar patterns of gametogenesis, embryogenesis and planulation in Puerto Rico , 1986 .
[39] J. Tomlinson,et al. The advantages of hermaphroditism and parthenogenesis. , 1966, Journal of theoretical biology.
[40] P. Jarne. Mating system, bottlenecks and genetic polymorphism in hermaphroditic animals , 1995 .
[41] P. Yund,et al. MALE REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS IN SESSILE INVERTEBRATES: COMPETITION FOR FERTILIZATIONS' , 1994 .
[42] D. Ayre,et al. Sexual and asexual production of planulae in reef corals , 1986 .
[43] Deborah Charlesworth,et al. INBREEDING DEPRESSION AND ITS EVOLUTIONARY CONSEQUENCES , 1987 .
[44] R. Babcock,et al. Self-fertilization and maternal enzymes in the planulae of the coral Goniastrea favulus , 1988 .
[45] W. C. Clark. Hermaphroditism as a reproductive strategy for metazoans; some correlated benefits , 1978 .
[46] J. Ryland,et al. Enzyme electrophoretic evidence for the prevalence of outcrossing in the hermaphroditic brooding ascidian Dendrodoa grossularia (Chordata, Urochordata) , 1993 .
[47] D. Hedgecock,et al. Genetic evidence of self-fertilization in the sea anemone Epiactis prolifera , 1984 .
[48] Dominant vs. codominant genetic markers in the estimation of male mating success , 1993 .
[49] M. A. Farris,et al. POPULATION DENSITY, OUTCROSSING RATE, AND HETEROZYGOTE SUPERIORITY IN PONDEROSA PINE , 1984, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[50] K. Soong. Sexual reproductive patterns of shallow-water reef corals in Panama , 1991 .
[51] D. Ayre,et al. Genetic subdivision within the eastern Australian population of the sea anemoneActinia tenebrosa , 1991 .
[52] C. Cohen. THE EFFECTS OF CONTRASTING MODES OF FERTILIZATION ON LEVELS OF INBREEDING IN THE MARINE INVERTEBRATE GENUS CORELLA , 1996, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[53] E. Chornesky,et al. SEXUAL REPRODUCTION AND COLONY GROWTH IN THE SCLERACTINIAN CORAL PORITES ASTREOIDES , 1987 .
[54] D. Brazeau,et al. Reproductive success in the Caribbean octocoral Briareum asbestinum , 1992, Marine Biology.
[55] N. Knowlton,et al. Direct evidence for reproductive isolation among the three species of the Montastraea annularis complex in Central America (Panamá and Honduras) , 1997 .
[56] R. Lande,et al. THE EVOLUTION OF SELF‐FERTILIZATION AND INBREEDING DEPRESSION IN PLANTS. I. GENETIC MODELS , 1985, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[57] Mary A. Sewell,et al. How Distribution and Abundance Influence Fertilization Success in the Sea Urchin Strongylocentotus Franciscanus , 1992 .
[58] B. Charlesworth,et al. Allocation of resources to male and female functions in hermaphrodites , 1981 .
[59] D. Levitan,et al. Sperm limitation in the sea. , 1995, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[60] E. Hunter,et al. Self-fertilisation in Celleporella hyalina , 1993 .
[61] S. Edmands. Mating systems in the sea anemone genus Epiactis , 1995 .
[62] S. K. Jain,et al. The Evolution of Inbreeding in Plants , 1976 .
[63] M. Coffroth,et al. Identification of marine invertebrate larvae by means of PCR-RAPD species-specific markers , 1995 .
[64] N. Ouborg,et al. THE EFFECTS OF POPULATION SIZE AND PLANT DENSITY ON OUTCROSSING RATES IN LOCALLY ENDANGERED SALVIA PRATENSIS , 1993, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[65] N. Knowlton,et al. A multi-character analysis of the Caribbean coral Montastraea annularis (Ellis and Solander, 1786) and its two sibling species, M. Faveolata (Ellis and Solander, 1786) and M. Franksi (Gregory, 1895) , 1994 .
[66] K. Rylaarsdam. Life histories and abundance patterns of colonial corals on Jamaican reefs , 1983 .