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Hybridization And Population Structure Of Western Gulf Coast Mottled Ducks, Robert Joseph Ford
Hybridization And Population Structure Of Western Gulf Coast Mottled Ducks, Robert Joseph Ford
LSU Master's Theses
Rates of hybridization between species that do not normally interbreed have increased due to human impacts on natural environments, such as habitat alteration or introductions of non-native species. Human-induced hybridization can be detrimental to wildlife and contribute to species extinctions. In Florida, feral Mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) hybridize with endemic Mottled Ducks (A. fulvigula) at rates close to 9%. However, levels of hybridization between these two species have not been extensively examined in the western Gulf Coast (from Alabama to northern Mexico) despite the potential impact on the Mottled Duck lineage. In this study, I examined the degree of hybridization between …
Effects Of Inbreeding On Endangered Red Wolves (Canis Rufus), Kristin E. Brzeski
Effects Of Inbreeding On Endangered Red Wolves (Canis Rufus), Kristin E. Brzeski
LSU Doctoral Dissertations
Inbreeding depression, the reduction in offspring fitness caused by mating among close relatives, is widespread in small populations and a major concern in conservation biology because it can affect population persistence. The negative effects of inbreeding results in the evolution of inbreeding avoidance behaviors; within small populations, such behaviors may encourage individuals to select mates outside of their respective species. Mate choice may also be facilitated by variation at major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes, a gene group critical for immune response and disease resistance. Given broad impacts of inbreeding and MHC variation on fitness and behavior, evaluating their effects is …