Many species suffer from anthropogenic habitat fragmentation. The resulting small and isolated populations are more prone to extinction due to, amongst others, genetic erosion, inbreeding depression and Allee-effects. Genetic rescue can help mitigate such problems, but might result in outbreeding depression. We evaluated offspring fitness after selfing and outcrossing within and among three very small and isolated remnant populations of the heterostylous plant Primula vulgaris. We used greenhouse-grown offspring from these populations to test several fitness components. One population was fixed for the pin-morph, and was outcrossed with another population in the field to obtain seeds. Genetic diversity of parent and offspring populations wa...
The effects of self-fertilization, within-population crosses (WPC) and between-population crosses (B...
Analyses of phenotypic selection and demography in field populations are powerful ways to establishi...
Most flowering plants are hermaphroditic and experience strong pressures to evolve self‐pollination ...
Many species suffer from anthropogenic habitat fragmentation. The resulting small and isolated popul...
Background and aims – Due to habitat fragmentation and degradation many plant species have been led ...
Habitat fragmentation commonly causes genetic problems and reduced fitness when populations become s...
ABSTRACT. — We examined the ecological, demographic and genetic consequences of agricultural land us...
Understanding the relative importance of heterosis and outbreeding depression over multiple generati...
Understanding the relative importance of heterosis and outbreeding depression over multiple generati...
1. Habitat fragmentation and the resulting decline in population size can affect biotic interactions...
Inbreeding depression (delta) is a major selective force favoring outcrossing in flowering plants. M...
Land-use changes and associated extinction/colonization dynamics can have a large impact on populati...
The effects of self-fertilization, within-population crosses (WPC) and between-population crosses (B...
Analyses of phenotypic selection and demography in field populations are powerful ways to establishi...
If, because of genetic erosion, the level of homozygosity in small populations is high, additional s...
The effects of self-fertilization, within-population crosses (WPC) and between-population crosses (B...
Analyses of phenotypic selection and demography in field populations are powerful ways to establishi...
Most flowering plants are hermaphroditic and experience strong pressures to evolve self‐pollination ...
Many species suffer from anthropogenic habitat fragmentation. The resulting small and isolated popul...
Background and aims – Due to habitat fragmentation and degradation many plant species have been led ...
Habitat fragmentation commonly causes genetic problems and reduced fitness when populations become s...
ABSTRACT. — We examined the ecological, demographic and genetic consequences of agricultural land us...
Understanding the relative importance of heterosis and outbreeding depression over multiple generati...
Understanding the relative importance of heterosis and outbreeding depression over multiple generati...
1. Habitat fragmentation and the resulting decline in population size can affect biotic interactions...
Inbreeding depression (delta) is a major selective force favoring outcrossing in flowering plants. M...
Land-use changes and associated extinction/colonization dynamics can have a large impact on populati...
The effects of self-fertilization, within-population crosses (WPC) and between-population crosses (B...
Analyses of phenotypic selection and demography in field populations are powerful ways to establishi...
If, because of genetic erosion, the level of homozygosity in small populations is high, additional s...
The effects of self-fertilization, within-population crosses (WPC) and between-population crosses (B...
Analyses of phenotypic selection and demography in field populations are powerful ways to establishi...
Most flowering plants are hermaphroditic and experience strong pressures to evolve self‐pollination ...