HETEROZYGOSITY‐FITNESS CORRELATIONS IN RAINBOW TROUT: EFFECTS OF ALLOZYME LOCI OR ASSOCIATIVE OVERDOMINANCE?
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] J. Avise,et al. Balancing selection at allozyme loci in oysters: implications from nuclear RFLPs. , 1992, Science.
[2] Null alleles at two lactate dehydrogenase loci in rainbow trout are associated with decreased developmental stability , 1993 .
[3] Dianne B. Morris,et al. Microsatellites from rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and their use for genetic study of salmonids , 1996 .
[4] F. Allendorf,et al. DIFFERENCES IN INBREEDING COEFFICIENTS DO NOT EXPLAIN THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN HETEROZYGOSITY AT ALLOZYME LOCI AND DEVELOPMENTAL STABILITY IN RAINBOW TROUT , 1987, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[5] F. Allendorf,et al. Heterozygosity and Oxygen-Consumption Rate as Predictors of Growth and Developmental Rate in Rainbow Trout , 1987, Physiological Zoology.
[6] F. Allendorf,et al. Gene Nomenclature for Protein‐Coding Loci in Fish , 1990 .
[7] J. McDonald,et al. Lack of geographic variation in anonymous nuclear polymorphisms in the American oyster, Crassostrea virginica. , 1996, Molecular biology and evolution.
[8] N. Okamoto,et al. Rapid communication: dinucleotide repeat polymorphism of rainbow trout, FGT5(1). , 1994, Journal of animal science.
[9] W. B. Watt,et al. Allozymes in evolutionary genetics: self-imposed burden or extraordinary tool? , 1994, Genetics.
[10] K. Scribner,et al. Isolation and characterization of novel salmon microsatellite loci: cross-species amplification and population genetic applications , 1996 .
[11] Blouin,et al. Isolation and inheritance of novel microsatellites in Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tschawytscha) , 1999 .
[12] F. Allendorf,et al. Adaptive significance of differences in the tissue-specific expression of a phosphoglucomutase gene in rainbow trout. , 1983, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[13] J. Wright,et al. Linkage relationships reflecting ancestral tetraploidy in salmonid fish. , 1987, Genetics.
[14] T. Ota. Associative overdominance caused by linked detrimental mutations. , 1971, Genetical research.
[15] P. David. MODELING THE GENETIC BASIS OF HETEROSIS: TESTS OF ALTERNATIVE HYPOTHESES , 1997, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[16] François Rousset,et al. GENEPOP (version 1.2): population genetic software for exact tests and ecumenicism , 1995 .
[17] Donald A. Jackson,et al. Ratios in aquatic sciences : statistical shortcomings with mean depth and the morphoedaphic index , 1990 .
[18] F. Allendorf,et al. Heterozygosity and components of fitness in a strain of rainbow trout , 1988 .
[19] F. Ledig,et al. THE RELATION OF GROWTH TO HETEROZYGOSITY IN PITCH PINE , 1983, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[20] D. Rubin,et al. Maximum likelihood from incomplete data via the EM - algorithm plus discussions on the paper , 1977 .
[21] P. Bentzen,et al. Characterization of seven microsatellite loci derived from pink salmon. , 1998, Molecular ecology.
[22] F. Allendorf,et al. CONCORDANCE OF GENETIC DIVERGENCE AMONG SOCKEYE SALMON POPULATIONS AT ALLOZYME, NUCLEAR DNA, AND MITOCHONDRIAL DNA MARKERS , 2000, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[23] F. Allendorf,et al. Does enzyme heterozygosity influence developmental rate in rainbow trout? , 1986, Heredity.
[24] B. Weir,et al. ESTIMATING F‐STATISTICS FOR THE ANALYSIS OF POPULATION STRUCTURE , 1984, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[25] J. Valkonen,et al. Development of SCAR markers to the PVY resistance gene Ryadg based on a common feature of plant disease resistance genes. , 2000, Genome.
[26] 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.
[27] J. Brookfield. A simple new method for estimating null allele frequency from heterozygote deficiency , 1996, Molecular ecology.
[28] P. Smouse. THE FITNESS CONSEQUENCES OF MULTIPLE‐LOCUS HETEROZYGOSITY UNDER THE MULTIPLICATIVE OVERDOMINANCE AND INBREEDING DEPRESSION MODELS , 1986, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[29] S. Khoo,et al. A microsatellite linkage map of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) characterized by large sex-specific differences in recombination rates. , 2000, Genetics.
[30] M. Brown,et al. CHAPTER IX – EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES ON GROWTH , 1957 .
[31] F. Allendorf,et al. Major morphological effects of a regulatory gene: Pgm1-t in rainbow trout. , 1984, Molecular biology and evolution.
[32] M W Feldman,et al. An evaluation of genetic distances for use with microsatellite loci. , 1994, Genetics.
[33] F. Allendorf,et al. Tetraploidy and the Evolution of Salmonid Fishes , 1984 .
[34] P. Hedrick,et al. Heterozygosity and fitness: no association in Scots pine. , 1995, Genetics.
[35] P. Pamilo,et al. Associative overdominance, heterozygosity and fitness , 1998, Heredity.
[36] Buchanan Fc,et al. Microsatellites from the Atlantic walrus Odobenus rosmarus rosmarus. , 1998 .
[37] P. Bentzen,et al. Polymorphic microsatellite loci from Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar): genetic differentiation of North American and European populations , 1995 .
[38] D. Coltman,et al. Birth weight and neonatal survival of harbour seal pups are positively correlated with genetic variation measured by microsatellites , 1998, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[39] P. O’Reilly,et al. Rapid analysis of genetic variation in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) by PCR multiplexing of dinucleotide and tetranucleotide microsatellites , 1996 .
[40] P. David,et al. An inbreeding model of associative overdominance during a population bottleneck. , 2000, Genetics.
[41] F. Allendorf,et al. Gene-centromere mapping of 312 loci in pink salmon by half-tetrad analysis , 2000 .
[42] F. Allendorf,et al. Allelic differences in initial expression of paternal alleles at an isocitrate dehydrogenase locus in rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri) , 1984 .
[43] F. Allendorf,et al. Silencing of duplicate genes: a null allele polymorphism for lactate dehydrogenase in brown trout (Salmo trutta). , 1984, Molecular biology and evolution.
[44] F. Allendorf,et al. Identification of a gene regulating the tissue expression of a phosphoglucomutase locus in rainbow trout. , 1982, Genetics.
[45] H. N. Barber. Selection in natural populations , 1965, Heredity.
[46] F. Allendorf,et al. HETEROZYGOSITY AND DEVELOPMENTAL RATE IN A STRAIN OF RAINBOW TROUT (SALMO GAIRDNERI) , 1986, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[47] F. Allendorf,et al. Secondary tetrasomic segregation of MDH-B and preferential pairing of homeologues in rainbow trout. , 1997, Genetics.
[48] P. Schulte,et al. Structural and functional differences in the promoter and 5' flanking region of Ldh-B within and between populations of the teleost Fundulus heteroclitus. , 1997, Genetics.
[49] F. Allendorf,et al. Developmental stability and enzyme heterozygosity in rainbow trout , 1983, Nature.
[50] F. Allendorf,et al. Superior Developmental Stability of Heterozygotes at Enzyme Loci in Salmonid Fishes , 1984, The American Naturalist.
[51] T. B. Robertson,et al. EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES ON GROWTH. , 1925 .
[52] F. Allendorf,et al. Sex-linkage of two enzyme loci in Oncorhyncus mykiss (rainbow trout) , 1994, Heredity.
[53] T. C. Marshall,et al. Microsatellites reveal heterosis in red deer , 1998, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[54] Hugh B Britten,et al. META‐ANALYSES OF THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN MULTILOCUS HETEROZYGOSITY AND FITNESS , 1996, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[55] P. David. Heterozygosity–fitness correlations: new perspectives on old problems , 1998, Heredity.