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Life Sciences Commons

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Biology

2021

Portland State University

Genomes -- research

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Weak Coupling Among Barrier Loci And Waves Of Neutral And Adaptive Introgression Across An Expanding Hybrid Zone, Mitchell Cruzan, Pamela G. Thompson, Nicolas Alexander Diaz, Elizabeth C. Hendrickson, Katie R. Gerloff, Katie A. Kline, Hannah M. Machiorlete, Jessica Persinger Oct 2021

Weak Coupling Among Barrier Loci And Waves Of Neutral And Adaptive Introgression Across An Expanding Hybrid Zone, Mitchell Cruzan, Pamela G. Thompson, Nicolas Alexander Diaz, Elizabeth C. Hendrickson, Katie R. Gerloff, Katie A. Kline, Hannah M. Machiorlete, Jessica Persinger

Biology Faculty Publications and Presentations

Hybridization can serve as an evolutionary stimulus, but we have little understanding of introgression at early stages of hybrid zone formation. We analyze reproductive isolation and introgression between a range-limited and a widespread species. Reproductive barriers are estimated based on differences in flowering time, ecogeographic distributions, and seed set from crosses. We find an asymmetrical mating barrier due to cytonuclear incompatibility that is consistent with observed clusters of coincident and concordant tension zone clines (barrier loci) for mtDNA haplotypes and nuclear SNPs. These groups of concordant clines are spread across the hybrid zone, resulting in weak coupling among barrier loci …


The Genetic Architecture Of Sexual Dimorphism In The Moss, Leslie M. Kollar, Scott Kiel, Ashley J. James, Cody T. Carnley, Danielle N. Scola, Taylor N. Clark, Tikahari Khanal, Todd Rosenstiel, Elliott T. Gall, Karl Grieshop, Stuart F. Mcdaniel Mar 2021

The Genetic Architecture Of Sexual Dimorphism In The Moss, Leslie M. Kollar, Scott Kiel, Ashley J. James, Cody T. Carnley, Danielle N. Scola, Taylor N. Clark, Tikahari Khanal, Todd Rosenstiel, Elliott T. Gall, Karl Grieshop, Stuart F. Mcdaniel

Biology Faculty Publications and Presentations

A central problem in evolutionary biology is to identify the forces that maintain genetic variation for fitness in natural populations. Sexual antagonism, in which selection favours different variants in males and females, can slow the transit of a polymorphism through a population or can actively maintain fitness variation. The amount of sexually antagonistic variation to be expected depends in part on the genetic architecture of sexual dimorphism, about which we know relatively little. Here, we used a multivariate quantitative genetic approach to examine the genetic architecture of sexual dimorphism in a scent-based fertilization syndrome of the moss We found sexual …