In Drosophila and humans, there are accumulating examples of loci with a significant excess of high-frequency-derived alleles or high levels of linkage disequilibrium, relative to a neutral model of a random-mating population of constant size. These are features expected after a recent selective sweep. Their prevalence suggests that positive directional selection may be widespread in both species. However, as I show here, these features do not persist long after the sweep ends: The high-frequency alleles drift to fixation and no longer contribute to polymorphism, while linkage disequilibrium is broken down by recombination. As a result, loci chosen without independent evidence of recent selection are not expected to exhibit either of these ...
Selfing species are prone to extinction, possibly because highly selfing populations can suffer from...
Since the initial description of the genomic patterns expected under models of positive selection ac...
Factors such as genetic drift and natural selection shape genetic variation between populations. To ...
In Drosophila and humans, there are accumulating examples of loci with a significant excess of high-...
<p><strong>Abstract</strong>: Heritable phenotypic variation in natural populations exceeds the leve...
<p><strong>Abstract</strong>: Heritable phenotypic variation in natural populations exceeds the leve...
<p><strong>Abstract</strong>: Heritable phenotypic variation in natural populations exceeds the leve...
<p><strong>Abstract</strong>: Heritable phenotypic variation in natural populations exceeds the leve...
Polymorphism data can be used to identify loci at which a beneficial allele has recently gone to fix...
Polymorphism data can be used to identify loci at which a beneficial allele has recently gone to fix...
The long-running debate about the role of selection in maintaining genetic variation has been given ...
A correlation between diversity levels and rates of recombination is predicted both by models of pos...
A selective sweep describes the reduction of diversity due to strong positive selection. If the muta...
<p>Heritable phenotypic variation in natural populations exceeds the levels predicted under mutation...
SummaryGenetic recombination associated with sexual reproduction is expected to have important conse...
Selfing species are prone to extinction, possibly because highly selfing populations can suffer from...
Since the initial description of the genomic patterns expected under models of positive selection ac...
Factors such as genetic drift and natural selection shape genetic variation between populations. To ...
In Drosophila and humans, there are accumulating examples of loci with a significant excess of high-...
<p><strong>Abstract</strong>: Heritable phenotypic variation in natural populations exceeds the leve...
<p><strong>Abstract</strong>: Heritable phenotypic variation in natural populations exceeds the leve...
<p><strong>Abstract</strong>: Heritable phenotypic variation in natural populations exceeds the leve...
<p><strong>Abstract</strong>: Heritable phenotypic variation in natural populations exceeds the leve...
Polymorphism data can be used to identify loci at which a beneficial allele has recently gone to fix...
Polymorphism data can be used to identify loci at which a beneficial allele has recently gone to fix...
The long-running debate about the role of selection in maintaining genetic variation has been given ...
A correlation between diversity levels and rates of recombination is predicted both by models of pos...
A selective sweep describes the reduction of diversity due to strong positive selection. If the muta...
<p>Heritable phenotypic variation in natural populations exceeds the levels predicted under mutation...
SummaryGenetic recombination associated with sexual reproduction is expected to have important conse...
Selfing species are prone to extinction, possibly because highly selfing populations can suffer from...
Since the initial description of the genomic patterns expected under models of positive selection ac...
Factors such as genetic drift and natural selection shape genetic variation between populations. To ...