In an experimental study of adaptation to negative pleiotropic effects of a major fungicide resistance mutation in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans we have investigated the relative effectiveness of artificial selection vs. natural selection on the rate of compensatory evolution. Using mycelial growth rate as a fitness measure, artificial selection involved the weekly transfer of the fastest growing sector onto a fresh plate. Natural selection was approximated by transferring random samples of all the spores produced by the mycelium. Fungicide resistant and fungicide sensitive haploid and diploid strains were used in an evolution experiment over 10 weekly transfers, which is equivalent to 1200 cell cycles. Two different environme...
Natural selection acts on phenotypes within populations, yet it is allele frequency changes at the g...
Life history theory explains how an organism’s reproductive success is driven by trade-offs among li...
Evolution proceeds through genetic changes to individuals, which are either propagated or disappear ...
In an experimental study of adaptation to negative pleiotropic effects of a major fungicide resistan...
We have studied compensatory evolution in a fludioxonil resistant mutant of the filamentous fungus A...
Fungal populations can adapt to their environment by the generation and fixation of spontaneous bene...
<p>Knowledge of the number and nature of genetic changes responsible for adaptation is essential for...
Knowledge of the number and nature of genetic changes responsible for adaptation is essential for un...
Adaptation involves the successive substitution of beneficial mutations by selection, a process know...
A model of compensatory evolution with respect to fungicide resistance in a haploid clonally reprodu...
The ability to improve fitness via adaptive evolution may be affected by environmental change. We te...
The rarity of beneficial mutations has frustrated efforts to develop a quantitative theory of adapta...
The rarity of beneficial mutations has frustrated efforts to develop a quantitative theory of adapta...
In this chapter we describe a method to generate mutants of filamentous fungi using their genomic pl...
Determining the probability of fixation of beneficial mutations is critically important for building...
Natural selection acts on phenotypes within populations, yet it is allele frequency changes at the g...
Life history theory explains how an organism’s reproductive success is driven by trade-offs among li...
Evolution proceeds through genetic changes to individuals, which are either propagated or disappear ...
In an experimental study of adaptation to negative pleiotropic effects of a major fungicide resistan...
We have studied compensatory evolution in a fludioxonil resistant mutant of the filamentous fungus A...
Fungal populations can adapt to their environment by the generation and fixation of spontaneous bene...
<p>Knowledge of the number and nature of genetic changes responsible for adaptation is essential for...
Knowledge of the number and nature of genetic changes responsible for adaptation is essential for un...
Adaptation involves the successive substitution of beneficial mutations by selection, a process know...
A model of compensatory evolution with respect to fungicide resistance in a haploid clonally reprodu...
The ability to improve fitness via adaptive evolution may be affected by environmental change. We te...
The rarity of beneficial mutations has frustrated efforts to develop a quantitative theory of adapta...
The rarity of beneficial mutations has frustrated efforts to develop a quantitative theory of adapta...
In this chapter we describe a method to generate mutants of filamentous fungi using their genomic pl...
Determining the probability of fixation of beneficial mutations is critically important for building...
Natural selection acts on phenotypes within populations, yet it is allele frequency changes at the g...
Life history theory explains how an organism’s reproductive success is driven by trade-offs among li...
Evolution proceeds through genetic changes to individuals, which are either propagated or disappear ...