Populations in previously glaciated regions are often genetically depauperate in comparison with populations at lower latitudes, due either to bottlenecks experienced in post-glacial colonization, or to contemporary genetic drift in small, peripheral populations. Populations of the rare self-fertilizing North American orchid Isotria medeoloides are largest in the previously glaciated region near the northern range limit, allowing us to examine the role of historical versus contemporary processes in determining population genetic diversity and structure. If contemporary processes predominate, genetic diversity should increase with increasing census size. In contrast, if sequential bottlenecks associated with colonization are paramount, diver...
The European Alpine system is an extensive mountain range, whose heterogeneous landscape together wi...
Colonization at expanding range edges often involves few founders, reducing effective population siz...
A leading hypothesis for the immense diversity of the Orchidaceae is that skewed mating success and ...
Populations in previously glaciated regions are often genetically depauperate in comparison with pop...
Populations at the margins of a species` distribution range are often smaller and more spatially iso...
Colonization is crucial to habitat restoration projects that rely on the spontaneous regeneration of...
Because of harsh conditions, suboptimal habitat quality and poor connectivity to other populations, ...
Demography determines the strength of genetic drift, which generally reduces genetic variation and t...
Aim: This study aims to link demographic traits and post-glacial recolonization processes with genet...
Species population genetics could be an important factor explaining variation in clade species richn...
Background and aims: Historical changes in environmental conditions and colonization-extinction dyna...
Aim: We investigated the phylogeographic history of a clonal-sexual orchid, to test the hypothesis t...
Populations of many species are isolated within narrow elevation bands of Neotropical mountain habit...
Cypripedium reginae is a terrestrial orchid with a boreal-temperate main range and a glacial-disjunc...
In this thesis, I combined controlled crosses with genetic and demographic data to examine how a mai...
The European Alpine system is an extensive mountain range, whose heterogeneous landscape together wi...
Colonization at expanding range edges often involves few founders, reducing effective population siz...
A leading hypothesis for the immense diversity of the Orchidaceae is that skewed mating success and ...
Populations in previously glaciated regions are often genetically depauperate in comparison with pop...
Populations at the margins of a species` distribution range are often smaller and more spatially iso...
Colonization is crucial to habitat restoration projects that rely on the spontaneous regeneration of...
Because of harsh conditions, suboptimal habitat quality and poor connectivity to other populations, ...
Demography determines the strength of genetic drift, which generally reduces genetic variation and t...
Aim: This study aims to link demographic traits and post-glacial recolonization processes with genet...
Species population genetics could be an important factor explaining variation in clade species richn...
Background and aims: Historical changes in environmental conditions and colonization-extinction dyna...
Aim: We investigated the phylogeographic history of a clonal-sexual orchid, to test the hypothesis t...
Populations of many species are isolated within narrow elevation bands of Neotropical mountain habit...
Cypripedium reginae is a terrestrial orchid with a boreal-temperate main range and a glacial-disjunc...
In this thesis, I combined controlled crosses with genetic and demographic data to examine how a mai...
The European Alpine system is an extensive mountain range, whose heterogeneous landscape together wi...
Colonization at expanding range edges often involves few founders, reducing effective population siz...
A leading hypothesis for the immense diversity of the Orchidaceae is that skewed mating success and ...