Genetic diversity and the survival of populations
暂无分享,去创建一个
Ben Vosman | Rob J. J. Hendriks | J. Groenendael | M. Smulders | G. Booy | B. Vosman | J. M. van Groenendael | G. Booy | Marinus J. M. Smulders | J. M. Groenendael
[1] P. Arens,et al. Molecular genetic analysis of black poplar (Populus nigra L.) along Dutch rivers , 1998 .
[2] T. J. Stewart,et al. Genetic strategies for lake trout rehabilitation: a synthesis , 1995 .
[3] M. Clegg,et al. Estimation of life cycle components of selection in an experimental plant population. , 1978, Genetics.
[4] T. Beacham. Developmental stability, heterozygosity, and genetic analysis of morphological variation in pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) , 1991 .
[5] Guy F. Midgley,et al. Repeated exposure to enhanced UV‐B radiation in successive generations increases developmental instability (leaf fluctuating asymmetry) in a desert annual , 1998 .
[6] Carl D. Schlichting,et al. The Evolution of Phenotypic Plasticity in Plants , 1986 .
[7] R. Vrijenhoek. Conservation Genetics of North America Desert Fishes , 1996 .
[8] M. Whitlock,et al. THE DISTRIBUTION OF PHENOTYPIC VARIANCE WITH INBREEDING , 1999, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[9] J. Crow,et al. Mutations affecting fitness in Drosophila populations. , 1977, Annual review of genetics.
[10] Ingrid M. Parker,et al. Evaluating approaches to the conservation of rare and endangered plants , 1994 .
[11] J. P. Grime,et al. Testing predictions of the resistance and resilience of vegetation subjected to extreme events , 1995 .
[12] J. P. Grime. Biodiversity and Ecosystem Function: The Debate Deepens , 1997, Science.
[13] Tomoko Ohta,et al. Associative overdominance caused by linked detrimental mutations , 1971 .
[14] E. Parker. Ecological Implications of Clonal Diversity in Parthenogenetic Morphospecies , 1979 .
[15] A. Møller. Developmental Stability and Fitness: A Review , 1997, The American Naturalist.
[16] R. Lacy. The Effects of Inbreeding on Isolated Populations: Are Minimum Viable Population Sizes Predictable? , 1992 .
[17] H. Deng,et al. Conditions for positive and negative correlations between fitness and heterozygosity in equilibrium populations. , 1998, Genetics.
[19] S. Sultan. Evolutionary Implications of Phenotypic Plasticity in Plants , 1987 .
[20] W. Rice. Parent-Offspring Pathogen Transmission: A Selective Agent Promoting Sexual Reproduction , 1983, The American Naturalist.
[21] D. L. Bell,et al. Dynamic phenotypic plasticity for root growth in Polygonum: a comparative study. , 1999, American journal of botany.
[22] B. Husband,et al. EVOLUTION OF THE MAGNITUDE AND TIMING OF INBREEDING DEPRESSION IN PLANTS , 1996, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[23] M. Sun. Genetic diversity in three colonizing orchids with contrasting mating systems. , 1997, American journal of botany.
[24] N. Ryman,et al. INBREEDING AS A STRATEGY IN SUBDIVIDED POPULATIONS , 1986, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[25] F. Ledig,et al. Human impacts on genetic diversity in forest ecosystems , 1992 .
[26] M Slatkin,et al. Gene flow and the geographic structure of natural populations. , 1987, Science.
[27] M. Nei,et al. THE BOTTLENECK EFFECT AND GENETIC VARIABILITY IN POPULATIONS , 1975, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[28] J. Harding,et al. The estimation and use of selective values in predicting population change1 , 1966, Heredity.
[29] T. Brown,et al. The population genetic consequences of habitat fragmentation for plants. , 1996, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[30] P. Parsons. Conservation strategies: adaptation to stress and the preservation of genetic diversity☆ , 1996 .
[31] P. Pamilo,et al. Associative overdominance, heterozygosity and fitness , 1998, Heredity.
[32] H. A. Orr,et al. INCREASED HERITABLE VARIATION FOLLOWING POPULATION BOTTLENECKS: THE ROLE OF DOMINANCE , 1993, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[33] F. Allendorf,et al. Developmental stability and enzyme heterozygosity in rainbow trout , 1983, Nature.
[34] A. Qvarnström. GENOTYPE‐BY‐ENVIRONMENT INTERACTIONS IN THE DETERMINATION OF THE SIZE OF A SECONDARY SEXUAL CHARACTER IN THE COLLARED FLYCATCHER (FICEDULA ALBICOLLIS) , 1999, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[35] James Mallet,et al. Genetic Analysis of Founder Bottlenecks in the Rare British Butterfly Plebejus argus , 1997 .
[36] R. Holderegger,et al. Genetic variation in small, isolated fern populations , 1996 .
[37] C. Araneda,et al. Bottleneck effects in local populations of fossorial Ctenomys (Rodentia, Ctenomyidae) affected by vulcanism , 1995, Heredity.
[38] F. Allendorf,et al. Superior Developmental Stability of Heterozygotes at Enzyme Loci in Salmonid Fishes , 1984, The American Naturalist.
[39] D. Tautz,et al. Molecular technologies for biodiversity evaluation: Opportunities and challenges , 1997, Nature Biotechnology.
[40] E. Menges. Stochastic Modeling of Extinction in Plant Populations , 1992 .
[41] T. Mackay,et al. QTL mapping of genotype-environment interaction for fitness in Drosophila melanogaster. , 1998, Genetical research.
[42] R. Lande,et al. Evolution of genetic variability in a spatially heterogeneous environment: effects of genotype-environment interaction. , 1987, Genetical research.
[43] M. Koornneef,et al. Natural allelic variation at seed size loci in relation to other life history traits of Arabidopsis thaliana. , 1999, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[44] R. Lande,et al. THE EVOLUTION OF SELF‐FERTILIZATION AND INBREEDING DEPRESSION IN PLANTS. I. GENETIC MODELS , 1985, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[45] S. Guttman. Population genetic structure and ecotoxicology. , 1994, Environmental health perspectives.
[46] P. Vitousek,et al. The Effects of Plant Composition and Diversity on Ecosystem Processes , 1997 .
[47] Geoffrey M. Clarke,et al. Relationships Between Developmental Stability and Fitness: Application for Conservation Biology , 1995 .
[48] R. Lande,et al. Viable Populations for Conservation: Effective population size, genetic variation, and their use in population management , 1987 .
[49] S. Jain. Patterns of Survival and Microevolution in Plant Populations , 1976 .
[50] H. Ellegren,et al. Major histocompatibility complex monomorphism and low levels of DNA fingerprinting variability in a reintroduced and rapidly expanding population of beavers. , 1993, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[51] L. Nunney,et al. Assessing minimum viable population size: Demography meets population genetics. , 1993, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[52] A. Storfer,et al. Quantitative genetics: a promising approach for the assessment of genetic variation in endangered species. , 1996, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[53] L. Affre,et al. Population genetic structure and levels of inbreeding depression in the Mediterranean island endemic Cyclamen creticum (Primulaceae) , 1997 .
[54] M. Taper,et al. ON THE COEXISTENCE AND COEVOLUTION OF ASEXUAL AND SEXUAL COMPETITORS , 1986, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[55] M. Rausher. Genetic analysis of coevolution between plants and their natural enemies. , 1996, Trends in genetics : TIG.
[56] W. W. Smoker,et al. A perspective on the adaptive importance of genetic infrastructure in salmon populations to ocean ranching in Alaska , 1993 .
[57] B. L. Boeuf,et al. Male-male Competition and Reproductive Success in Elephant Seals , 1974 .
[58] Climatic adaptation of trees: rediscovering provenance tests , 1997 .
[59] R. Lande. Genetics and demography in biological conservation. , 1988, Science.
[60] E. H. Bryant,et al. MULTIVARIATE PHENOTYPIC DIFFERENTIATION AMONG BOTTLENECK LINES OF THE HOUSEFLY , 1990, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[61] T. Prout. The estimation of fitnesses from population data. , 1969, Genetics.
[62] F. Aravanopoulos,et al. Heterozygosity and biomass production in Salix eriocephala , 1998, Heredity.
[63] Ilkka Hanski,et al. Metapopulation dynamics : empirical and theoretical investigations , 1991 .
[64] M. C. Grant,et al. EVOLUTIONARY SIGNIFICANCE OF LOCAL GENETIC DIFFERENTIATION IN PLANTS , 1996 .
[65] Geoffrey M. Clarke,et al. The genetic basis of developmental stability. I: Relationships between stability, heterozygosity and genomic coadaptation , 1993 .
[66] L. V. Valen,et al. A STUDY OF FLUCTUATING ASYMMETRY , 1962 .
[67] R. Lande,et al. THE ROLE OF GENETIC VARIATION IN ADAPTATION AND POPULATION PERSISTENCE IN A CHANGING ENVIRONMENT , 1996, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[68] P. Parsons,et al. FLUCTUATING ASYMMETRY: AN EPIGENETIC MEASURE OF STRESS , 1990, Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society.
[69] P. David. Heterozygosity–fitness correlations: new perspectives on old problems , 1998, Heredity.
[70] Peter M. Vitousek,et al. GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE: An Introduction , 1992 .
[71] C. Packer,et al. Case Study of a Population Bottleneck: Lions of the Ngorongoro Crater , 1991 .
[72] E Zouros,et al. Allozyme and RFLP heterozygosities as correlates of growth rate in the scallop Placopecten magellanicus: a test of the associative overdominance hypothesis. , 1994, Genetics.
[73] M. Nei. Analysis of gene diversity in subdivided populations. , 1973, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[74] P. Reich,et al. Relation between genetic diversity and pollution impact in a 1912 experiment with East European Pinus sylvestris provenances. , 1994 .
[75] W. Hamilton. Sex versus non-sex versus parasite , 1980 .
[76] Robert K. Peet,et al. The Measurement of Species Diversity , 1974 .
[77] J. Mitton. MOLECULAR APPROACHES TO POPULATION BIOLOGY , 1994 .
[78] G. M. Clarke,et al. Developmental stability of insecticide resistant phenotypes in blowfly; a result of canalizing natural selection , 1987, Nature.
[79] Charles J Goodnight,et al. THE COMPARISON OF PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY AND GENETIC VARIATION IN POPULATIONS OF THE GRASS DANTHONIA SPICATA , 1984, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[80] Hurst. The evolution of genomic anatomy. , 1999, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[81] J. Patton,et al. Associations between heterozygosity and morphological variance. , 1985, The Journal of heredity.
[82] P. David,et al. Heterozygosity and growth in the marine bivalve Spisula ovalis : testing alternative hypotheses , 1997 .
[83] R. Lande,et al. GENOTYPE‐ENVIRONMENT INTERACTION AND THE EVOLUTION OF PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY , 1985, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[84] R. Vrijenhoek. Genetic diversity and fitness in small populations , 1994 .
[85] S. Guttman,et al. Genetic indicators of environmental stress in central mudminnow (Umbra Limi) populations exposed to acid deposition in the Adirondack Mountains , 1992 .
[86] S. Lougheed,et al. MORPHOLOGICAL VARIABILITY AND ENZYME HETEROZYGOSITY: INDIVIDUAL AND POPULATION LEVEL CORRELATIONS , 1992, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[87] R. Lande. The maintenance of genetic variability by mutation in a polygenic character with linked loci. , 1975, Genetical research.
[88] M. Turelli,et al. Genotype-environment interactions and the maintenance of polygenic variation. , 1989, Genetics.
[89] D. Wardle,et al. The Influence of Island Area on Ecosystem Properties , 1997 .
[90] D. Levin. Dispersal Versus Gene Flow in Plants , 1981 .
[91] R. Lande,et al. Genetic Variation and Phenotypic Evolution During Allopatric Speciation , 1980, The American Naturalist.
[92] D. Coltman,et al. PARASITE‐MEDIATED SELECTION AGAINST INBRED SOAY SHEEP IN A FREE‐LIVING ISLAND POPULATON , 1999, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[93] P. J. Boer,et al. Spreading the Risk of Extinction By Genetic Diversity in Populations of the Carabid Beetle Pterostichus Oblongopunctatus F. (Coleoptera, Carabidae) , 1992 .
[94] C. Strobeck,et al. Fluctuating Asymmetry: Measurement, Analysis, Patterns , 1986 .
[95] Hoffmann,et al. Heritable variation and evolution under favourable and unfavourable conditions. , 1999, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[96] E. Kobyliansky,et al. Relationship between levels of biochemical heterozygosity and morphological variability in human populations , 1983, Annals of human genetics.
[97] J. Oostermeijer,et al. Analysis of the relationship between allozyme heterozygosity and fitness in the rare Gentiana pneumonanthe L. , 1995 .
[98] I. Winicov. New Molecular Approaches to Improving Salt Tolerance in Crop Plants , 1998 .
[99] P. Harvey,et al. Inbreeding: Do animals avoid incest? , 1986, Nature.
[100] S. Jayakar,et al. A mathematical model for interaction of gene frequencies in a parasite and its host. , 1970, Theoretical population biology.
[101] A. Yanchuk,et al. A comparison of isozyme and quantitative genetic variation in Pinus contorta ssp. latifolia by FST. , 1996, Genetics.
[102] D. Levin,et al. Gene Flow in Seed Plants , 1974 .
[103] R. Selander,et al. Elephant Seals: Genetic Variation and Near Extinction , 1974, Science.
[104] M. Taper,et al. Evolution of Body Size: Consequences of an Energetic Definition of Fitness , 1993, The American Naturalist.
[105] E. Álvarez-Buylla,et al. DEMOGRAPHIC AND GENETIC MODELS IN CONSERVATION BIOLOGY: Applications and Perspectives for Tropical Rain Forest Tree Species , 1996 .
[106] C. Goodnight. ON THE EFFECT OF FOUNDER EVENTS ON EPISTATIC GENETIC VARIANCE , 1987, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[107] J. Cheverud,et al. Quantitative and Molecular Genetic Variation in Captive Cotton‐Top Tamarins (Saguinus oedipus) , 1994 .
[108] S. O'Brien,et al. Interactive influence of infectious disease and genetic diversity in natural populations , 1988, Trends in Ecology & Evolution.
[109] P. David. MODELING THE GENETIC BASIS OF HETEROSIS: TESTS OF ALTERNATIVE HYPOTHESES , 1997, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[110] J. S. Jones. An asymmetrical view of fitness , 1987, Nature.
[111] M. Kimura. The Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution: Introduction , 1983 .
[112] S. O’Brien,et al. A role for molecular genetics in biological conservation. , 1994, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[113] M. C. Grant,et al. Associations Among Protein Heterozygosity, Growth Rate, and Developmental Homeostasis , 1984 .
[114] I. Hanski,et al. Inbreeding and extinction in a butterfly metapopulation , 1998, Nature.
[115] R. Sherry,et al. DEVELOPMENTAL STABILITY IN LEAVES OF CLARKIA TEMBLORIENSIS (ONAGRACEAE) AS RELATED TO POPULATION OUTCROSSING RATES AND HETEROZYGOSITY , 1996, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[116] M. Shaffer. Minimum Population Sizes for Species Conservation , 1981 .
[117] B. Charlesworth,et al. INBREEDING DEPRESSION, GENETIC LOAD, AND THE EVOLUTION OF OUTCROSSING RATES IN A MULTILOCUS SYSTEM WITH NO LINKAGE , 1990, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[118] J. Weber,et al. Mutation of human short tandem repeats. , 1993, Human molecular genetics.
[119] A. D. Bradshaw,et al. Evolutionary Significance of Phenotypic Plasticity in Plants , 1965 .
[120] F. Allendorf,et al. Conservation and Genetics of Salmonid Fishes , 1996 .
[121] B. Weir,et al. Measuring Genetic Variability in Plant Populations , 1983 .
[122] J. McGraw,et al. ENVIRONMENT‐DEPENDENCE OF QUANTITATIVE GENETIC PARAMETERS IN IMPATIENS PALLIDA , 1996, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[123] K. Leonard,et al. SELECTION PRESSURES AND PLANT PATHOGENS , 1977 .
[124] G. M. Clarke,et al. Fluctuating Asymmetry: A Technique for Measuring Developmental Stress Caused by Inbreeding , 1986 .
[125] D. Schemske,et al. OUTCROSSING RATE AND INBREEDING DEPRESSION IN TWO ANNUAL MONOECIOUS HERBS, BEGONIA HIRSUTA AND B. SEMIOVATA , 1993, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[126] M. Shaffer. Viable Populations for Conservation: Minimum viable populations: coping with uncertainty , 1987 .
[127] Michael E. Gilpin,et al. Viable Populations for Conservation: Spatial structure and population vulnerability , 1987 .
[128] S. O’Brien,et al. Genetic basis for species vulnerability in the cheetah. , 1985, Science.
[129] T. Johnson,et al. Quantitative trait loci affecting survival and fertility-related traits in Caenorhabditis elegans show genotype-environment interactions, pleiotropy and epistasis. , 1999, Genetics.
[130] D. Waller,et al. Do Plant Populations Purge Their Genetic Load? Effects of Population Size and Mating History on Inbreeding Depression , 1999 .
[131] L. Nunney,et al. Estimating the effective population size of conserved populations , 1994 .
[132] L. Nunney. THE INFLUENCE OF MATING SYSTEM AND OVERLAPPING GENERATIONS ON EFFECTIVE POPULATION SIZE , 1993, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[133] D. Sulzbach,et al. Quantitative-Genetic Analysis of Temperature Regulation in Mus domesticus. IV. Pleiotropy and Genotype-by-Environment Interactions , 1988, The American Naturalist.
[134] Michael Lynch,et al. A Quantitative-Genetic Perspective on Conservation Issues , 1996 .
[135] T. Mitchell-Olds. GENETIC CONSTRAINTS ON LIFE‐HISTORY EVOLUTION: QUANTITATIVE‐TRAIT LOCI INFLUENCING GROWTH AND FLOWERING IN ARABIDOPSIS THALIANA , 1996, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[136] C. Perrins,et al. Inbreeding and dispersal in the great tit , 1978, Nature.
[137] B. K. Thompson,et al. Life history and allozyme variation in populations of the weed species Setaria faberi , 1987 .
[138] F. Allendorf,et al. Protein variation, fitness, and captive propagation , 1986 .
[139] N. Barton,et al. Evolutionary quantitative genetics: how little do we know? , 1989, Annual review of genetics.
[140] J. Hamrick,et al. Population genetic analysis of Elliottiaracemosa (Ericaceae), a rare Georgia shrub , 1999 .
[141] P. Reich,et al. The Influence of Functional Diversity and Composition on Ecosystem Processes , 1997 .
[142] S. Sultan,et al. PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY IN POLYGONUM PERSICARIA. II. NORMS OF REACTION TO SOIL MOISTURE AND THE MAINTENANCE OF GENETIC DIVERSITY , 1993, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[143] D. Campbell. GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL VARIATION IN LIFE‐HISTORY TRAITS OF A MONOCARPIC PERENNIAL: A DECADE‐LONG FIELD EXPERIMENT , 1997, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[144] R. Allard,et al. AN EXPERIMENTAL EVALUATION OF THE RECOVERY POTENTIAL OF RYEGRASS POPULATIONS FROM GENETIC STRESS RESULTING FROM RESTRICTION OF POPULATION SIZE , 1989, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[145] W. Prus-Głowacki. Chapter 5 - Biochemical polymorphism , 1991 .
[146] L. V. Valen,et al. MORPHOLOGICAL VARIATION AND WIDTH OF ECOLOGICAL NICHE , 1965 .
[147] A. S. Evans,et al. Developmental instability in Brassica campestris (Cruciferae): fluctuating asymmetry of foliar and floral traits , 1996 .
[148] A. Watkinson,et al. Seedling recruitment and the maintenance of clonal diversity in plant populations-a computer simulation of Ranunculus repens , 1993 .
[149] F. Allendorf,et al. Fluctuating asymmetry as an indicator of stress: Implications for conservation biology. , 1989, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[150] K. Holsinger. INBREEDING DEPRESSION DOESN'T MATTER: THE GENETIC BASIS OF MATING‐SYSTEM EVOLUTION , 1988, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[151] W. Hamilton. Pathogens as Causes of Genetic Diversity in their Host Populations , 1982 .
[152] D. H. Reed,et al. Experimental Tests of Captive Breeding for Endangered Species , 1999 .
[153] R. Frankham,et al. Rapid Loss of Genetic Variation in Large Captive Populations of Drosophila Flies: Implications for the Genetic Management of Captive Populations , 1992 .
[154] Larry J. Leamy,et al. Morphometric Studies in Inbred and Hybrid House Mice. V. Directional and Fluctuating Asymmetry , 1984, The American Naturalist.
[155] J. Silander,et al. Microevolution and Clone Structure in Spartina patens , 1979, Science.
[156] N. Ellstrand,et al. INBREEDING EFFECTS IN CLARKIA TEMBLORIENSIS (ONAGRACEAE) POPULATIONS WITH DIFFERENT NATURAL OUTCROSSING RATES , 1990, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[157] J. Burdon. INTRA-SPECIFIC DIVERSITY IN A NATURAL POPULATION OF TRIFOLIUM REPENS , 1980 .
[158] H. Gregorius. The importance of genetic multiplicity for tolerance of atmospheric pollution , 1989 .
[159] D. Levin,et al. ALLOZYME, SI GENE, CYTOLOGICAL, AND MORPHOLOGICAL POLYMORPHISMS IN A POPULATION OF OENOTHERA BIENNIS , 1977, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[160] R. W. Allard,et al. Implications of Genotype‐Environmental Interactions in Applied Plant Breeding1 , 1964 .
[161] G. Fox. Tinkering with the tinkerer: pollution versus evolution. , 1995, Environmental health perspectives.
[162] P. Smouse. THE FITNESS CONSEQUENCES OF MULTIPLE‐LOCUS HETEROZYGOSITY UNDER THE MULTIPLICATIVE OVERDOMINANCE AND INBREEDING DEPRESSION MODELS , 1986, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[163] B. Wilsey,et al. Leaf fluctuating asymmetry increases with hybridization and elevation in tree-line birches , 1998 .
[164] C. Goodnight. EPISTASIS AND THE EFFECT OF FOUNDER EVENTS ON THE ADDITIVE GENETIC VARIANCE , 1988, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[165] R. Frankham. Inbreeding and Extinction: A Threshold Effect , 1995 .
[166] Kermit Ritland,et al. A MARKER‐BASED METHOD FOR INFERENCES ABOUT QUANTITATIVE INHERITANCE IN NATURAL POPULATIONS , 1996, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[167] M. Lynch,et al. The rate of polygenic mutation. , 1988, Genetical research.
[168] Hugh B Britten,et al. META‐ANALYSES OF THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN MULTILOCUS HETEROZYGOSITY AND FITNESS , 1996, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[169] E. Parker. PHENOTYPIC CONSEQUENCES OF PARTHENOGENESIS IN CNEMIDOPHORUS LIZARDS. I. VARIABILITY IN PARTHENOGENETIC AND SEXUAL POPULATIONS , 1979, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[170] R. E. Strauss,et al. CORRELATIONS BETWEEN HETEROZYGOSITY AND PHENOTYPIC VARIABILITY IN COTTUS (TELEOSTEI: COTTIDAE): CHARACTER COMPONENTS , 1991, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[171] S. Wright. THE INTERPRETATION OF POPULATION STRUCTURE BY F‐STATISTICS WITH SPECIAL REGARD TO SYSTEMS OF MATING , 1965 .
[172] B. E. Giles. A COMPARISON BETWEEN QUANTITATIVE AND BIOCHEMICAL VARIATION IN THE WILD BARLEY HORDEUM MURINUM , 1984, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[173] S. O’Brien,et al. Elephant seal genetic variation and the use of simulation models to investigate historical population bottlenecks. , 1993, The Journal of heredity.
[174] S. Guttman,et al. Genetics indicators of environmental tolerance among fish populations exposed to acid deposition , 1994 .
[175] G. Cussans,et al. The importance of seeds and sexual reproduction in the population biology of Cirsium arvense ‐ a literature review , 1996 .
[176] A. Møller. Developmental instability of plants and radiation from Chernobyl , 1998 .
[177] E. H. Bryant,et al. The Effect of an Experimental Bottleneck upon Quantitative Genetic Variation in the Housefly. , 1986, Genetics.
[178] S. Strauss. Heterosis at Allozyme Loci under Inbreeding and Crossbreeding in PINUS ATTENUATA. , 1986, Genetics.
[179] R. Vrijenhoek,et al. Fitness differences among remnant populations of the endangered sonoran topminnow. , 1989, Science.
[180] Stephen J. O'Brien,et al. Evidence for African origins of founders of the asiatic lion species survival plan , 1987 .
[181] Marinus J. M. Smulders,et al. Dispersal patterns of Lonicera periclymenum determined by genetic analysis , 1998 .
[182] W. J. Müller,et al. Phenotypic Variation and Plasticity in the Colonizing Species Xanthium Strumarium L. (Noogoora Burr) , 1981 .
[183] P. Keim,et al. An analysis of genetic variation in Astragalus cremnophylax var. cremnophylax, a critically endangered plant, using AFLP markers , 1996, Molecular ecology.
[184] G. Pogson,et al. DNA HETEROZYGOSITY AND GROWTH RATE IN THE ATLANTIC COD GADUS MORHUA (L) , 1998, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[185] J. Leebens-Mack,et al. Conservation genetics: beyond the maintenance of marker diversity , 1994 .
[186] P. Hedrick. GENETIC LOAD AND THE MATING SYSTEM IN HOMOSPOROUS FERNS , 1987, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[187] O. Solbrig,et al. Components of regulation of a population of dandelions in Michigan. , 1974 .
[188] G. Carvalho. Evolutionary aspects of fish distribution: genetic variability and adaptation , 1993 .
[189] F. Allendorf,et al. INHERITANCE OF MERISTIC VARIATION AND THE EVOLUTION OF DEVELOPMENTAL STABILITY IN RAINBOW TROUT , 1985, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[190] D. Charlesworth,et al. Inbreeding depression in two highly inbreeding populations of Leavenworthia , 1994, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[191] N. Ellstrand,et al. Patterns of Genotypic Diversity in Clonal Plant Species , 1987 .
[192] Abraham Blum. Crop responses to drought and the interpretation of adaptation , 1996 .
[193] A. Meyer,et al. Low Genetic Variability in the Hawaiian Monk Seal , 1997 .
[194] D. Houle. Comparing evolvability and variability of quantitative traits. , 1992, Genetics.
[195] N. Ellstrand,et al. POPULATION GENETIC CONSEQUENCES OF SMALL POPULATION SIZE: Implications for Plant Conservation , 1993 .
[196] W. W. Smoker,et al. Genetic Components in Life History Traits Contribute to Population Structure , 1993 .
[197] D. Roff. Evolution of threshold traits: the balance between directional selection, drift and mutation , 1998, Heredity.
[198] J. Hamrick,et al. Conservation Genetics of Endemic Plant Species , 1996 .
[199] E. Nevo,et al. Natural selection causes microscale allozyme diversity in wild barley and a lichen at ‘Evolution Canyon’, Mt. Carmel, Israel , 1997, Heredity.
[200] A. Dobson,et al. Pathogens and the structure of plant communities. , 1994, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[201] A. Templeton,et al. Inbreeding: one word, several meanings, much confusion. , 1994, EXS.
[202] P. Reich,et al. Industrial Pollutants Tend to Increase Genetic Diversity: Evidence from Field-Grown European Scots Pine Populations , 1999 .
[203] Deborah Charlesworth,et al. INBREEDING DEPRESSION AND ITS EVOLUTIONARY CONSEQUENCES , 1987 .
[204] R. J. Czochor,et al. Theory of Genetic Interactions Among Populations of Plants and their Pathogens , 1980 .
[205] A. Templeton. Biodiversity at the molecular genetic level: experiences from disparate macroorganisms. , 1994, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.
[206] H. C. Prentice,et al. Associations between allele frequencies in Festuca ovina and habitat variation in the alvar grasslands on the Baltic island of Oland , 1995 .
[207] D. Charlesworth. The apparent selection on neutral marker loci in partially inbreeding populations , 1991 .