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Inbreeding Depression Across Multiple Life-History Traits in a Long-Lived Mammal. [PDF]
Auclair L +4 more
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Inbreeding and inbreeding avoidance in wild giant pandas
Molecular Ecology, 2017AbstractInbreeding can have negative consequences on population and individual fitness, which could be counteracted by inbreeding avoidance mechanisms. However, the inbreeding risk and inbreeding avoidance mechanisms in endangered species are less studied.
Yibo Hu +11 more
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Biodemography and Social Biology, 1982
Data on inbreeding in several contemporary human populations are compared, showing the highest local rates of inbreeding to be in Brazil, Japan, India, and Israel.
James F. Crow, Arthur P. Mange
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Data on inbreeding in several contemporary human populations are compared, showing the highest local rates of inbreeding to be in Brazil, Japan, India, and Israel.
James F. Crow, Arthur P. Mange
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Inbreeding, inbreeding depression and extinction
Conservation Genetics, 2007Inbreeding is unavoidable in small, isolated populations and can cause substantial fitness reductions compared to outbred populations. This loss of fitness has been predicted to elevate extinction risk giving it substantial conservation significance.
Lucy I. Wright +2 more
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Inbreeding and Inbreeding Depression
2020Inbreeding (also referred to as “consanguinity”) occurs when mates are related to each other due to incest, assortative mating, small population size, or population sub-structuring. Inbreeding results in an excess of homozygotes and hence a deficiency of heterozygotes.
Donald M. Waller, Lukas F. Keller
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Inbreeding avoidance behaviors
Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 1988Inbreeding is defined as mating between individuals related by common ancestry. Thus, the degree to which a particular mating is inbred depends on how far back in a pedigree one begins counting common ancestors. In general practice, the term inbreeding is used to describe mating between close relatives (first cousins or closer).
S F, Blouin, M, Blouin
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Clinical Genetics, 1986
The unique situation that the Norwegian 1891 census included information on consanguineous relation between spouses and that first admissions to psychiatric hospitals by diagnosis were available for the years 1921‐40, formed the basis for the present study.
L, Saugstad, O, Odegård
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The unique situation that the Norwegian 1891 census included information on consanguineous relation between spouses and that first admissions to psychiatric hospitals by diagnosis were available for the years 1921‐40, formed the basis for the present study.
L, Saugstad, O, Odegård
openaire +2 more sources
2022
AbstractPopulations may respond to environmental changes through phenotypic plasticity, adaptation, migration, or suffer demographic declines if they are unable to respond. Climate change is already causing shifts in species ranges, changes in phenotypes, and altered life history traits and interspecific interactions.
Fred W. Allendorf +4 more
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AbstractPopulations may respond to environmental changes through phenotypic plasticity, adaptation, migration, or suffer demographic declines if they are unable to respond. Climate change is already causing shifts in species ranges, changes in phenotypes, and altered life history traits and interspecific interactions.
Fred W. Allendorf +4 more
openaire +1 more source

