Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.Inbreeding depression is difficult to purge in self-incompatible populations of Leavenworthia alabamica
Sarah J. Baldwin et al.
NEW PHYTOLOGIST (2019)
Effects of partial selfing on the equilibrium genetic variance, mutation load, and inbreeding depression under stabilizing selection
Diala Abu Awad et al.
EVOLUTION (2018)
The Contemporary Evolution of Fitness
Andrew P. Hendry et al.
ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECOLOGY, EVOLUTION, AND SYSTEMATICS, VOL 49 (2018)
The decline in fitness with inbreeding: evidence for negative dominance-by-dominance epistasis in Drosophila melanogaster
N. P. Sharp et al.
JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY (2016)
Effects of Interference Between Selected Loci on the Mutation Load, Inbreeding Depression, and Heterosis
Denis Roze
GENETICS (2015)
Maintenance of Quantitative Genetic Variance Under Partial Self-Fertilization, with Implications for Evolution of Selfing
Russell Lande et al.
GENETICS (2015)
Effects of Interference Between Selected Loci on the Mutation Load, Inbreeding Depression, and Heterosis
Denis Roze
GENETICS (2015)
Maintenance of Quantitative Genetic Variance Under Partial Self-Fertilization, with Implications for Evolution of Selfing
Russell Lande et al.
GENETICS (2015)
EPISTASIS, PLEIOTROPY, AND THE MUTATION LOAD IN SEXUAL AND ASEXUAL POPULATIONS
Denis Roze et al.
EVOLUTION (2014)
GENETIC ARCHITECTURE OF INBREEDING DEPRESSION AND THE MAINTENANCE OF GAMETOPHYTIC SELF-INCOMPATIBILITY
Camille Gervais et al.
EVOLUTION (2014)
TRANSMISSION ADVANTAGE FAVORS SELFING ALLELE IN EXPERIMENTAL POPULATIONS OF SELF-INCOMPATIBLE WITHERINGIA SOLANACEA (SOLANACEAE)
Judy L. Stone et al.
EVOLUTION (2014)
Selfing, adaptation and background selection in finite populations
A. Kamran-Disfani et al.
JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY (2014)
The demography and population genomics of evolutionary transitions to self-fertilization in plants
Spencer C. H. Barrett et al.
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (2014)
Is self-fertilization an evolutionary dead end?
Boris Igic et al.
NEW PHYTOLOGIST (2013)
The relative importance of reproductive assurance and automatic selection as hypotheses for the evolution of self-fertilization
Jeremiah W. Busch et al.
ANNALS OF BOTANY (2012)
Fitness Landscapes: An Alternative Theory for the Dominance of Mutation
Federico Manna et al.
GENETICS (2011)
THE EVOLUTION OF ASSORTATIVE MATING AND SELFING WITH IN- AND OUTBREEDING DEPRESSION
Guillaume Epinat et al.
EVOLUTION (2009)
The Evolution of Epistasis and Its Links With Genetic Robustness, Complexity and Drift in a Phenotypic Model of Adaptation
Pierre-Alexis Gros et al.
GENETICS (2009)
FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS IN GENETICS The genetics of inbreeding depression
Deborah Charlesworth et al.
NATURE REVIEWS GENETICS (2009)
Data and theory point to mainly additive genetic variance for complex traits
William G. Hill et al.
PLOS GENETICS (2008)
Epistasis between deleterious mutations and the evolution of recombination
Roger D. Kouyos et al.
TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION (2007)
Distributions of epistasis in microbes fit predictions from a fitness landscape model
Guillaume Martin et al.
NATURE GENETICS (2007)
Quantifying Organismal Complexity using a Population Genetic Approach
Olivier Tenaillon et al.
PLOS ONE (2007)
The evolution of sex: empirical insights into the roles of epistasis and drift
J. Arjan G. M. de Visser et al.
NATURE REVIEWS GENETICS (2007)
The evolution of self-fertilization and inbreeding depression under pollen discounting and pollen limitation
E Porcher et al.
JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY (2005)
Evolution of recombination due to random dirift
NH Barton et al.
GENETICS (2005)
Recent approaches into the genetic basis of inbreeding depression in plants
DE Carr et al.
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (2003)