When a new individual is formed (independently of the reproduction process) it inherits harmful mutations. Moreover, new mutations are acquired even in the genetic code formation, most of them deleterious ones. This might lead to a time decay in the mean fitness of the whole population that, for long enough time, would produce the extinction of the species. This process is called Mutational Meltdown and such question used to be considered in the biological literature as a problem that only occurs in small populations. In contrast with earlier biological assumptions, here we present results obtained in different models showing that the mutational meltdown can occur in large populations, even in sexual reproductive ones. We used a bit-string ...
Loss of fitness due to the accumulation of deleterious mutations appears to be inevitable in small, ...
Loss of fitness due to the accumulation of deleterious mutations appears to be inevitable in small, ...
Loss of fitness due to the accumulation of deleterious mutations appears to be inevitable in small, ...
When a new individual is formed (independently of the reproduction process) it inherits harmful muta...
When a new individual is formed (independently of the reproduction process) it inherits harmful muta...
In the time evolution of finite populations, the accumulation of harmful mutations in further gene...
International audienceMutational meltdown, in which demographic and genetic processes mutually reinf...
International audienceMutational meltdown, in which demographic and genetic processes mutually reinf...
International audienceMutational meltdown, in which demographic and genetic processes mutually reinf...
International audienceMutational meltdown, in which demographic and genetic processes mutually reinf...
International audienceMutational meltdown, in which demographic and genetic processes mutually reinf...
We extend our earlier work on the role of deleterious mutations in the extinction of obligately asex...
Loss of fitness due to the accumulation of deleterious mutations appears to be inevitable in small, ...
We extend our earlier work on the role of deleterious mutations in the extinction of obligately asex...
We extend our earlier work on the role of deleterious mutations in the extinction of obligately asex...
Loss of fitness due to the accumulation of deleterious mutations appears to be inevitable in small, ...
Loss of fitness due to the accumulation of deleterious mutations appears to be inevitable in small, ...
Loss of fitness due to the accumulation of deleterious mutations appears to be inevitable in small, ...
When a new individual is formed (independently of the reproduction process) it inherits harmful muta...
When a new individual is formed (independently of the reproduction process) it inherits harmful muta...
In the time evolution of finite populations, the accumulation of harmful mutations in further gene...
International audienceMutational meltdown, in which demographic and genetic processes mutually reinf...
International audienceMutational meltdown, in which demographic and genetic processes mutually reinf...
International audienceMutational meltdown, in which demographic and genetic processes mutually reinf...
International audienceMutational meltdown, in which demographic and genetic processes mutually reinf...
International audienceMutational meltdown, in which demographic and genetic processes mutually reinf...
We extend our earlier work on the role of deleterious mutations in the extinction of obligately asex...
Loss of fitness due to the accumulation of deleterious mutations appears to be inevitable in small, ...
We extend our earlier work on the role of deleterious mutations in the extinction of obligately asex...
We extend our earlier work on the role of deleterious mutations in the extinction of obligately asex...
Loss of fitness due to the accumulation of deleterious mutations appears to be inevitable in small, ...
Loss of fitness due to the accumulation of deleterious mutations appears to be inevitable in small, ...
Loss of fitness due to the accumulation of deleterious mutations appears to be inevitable in small, ...