The frozen niche variation hypothesis proposes that asexual clones exploit a fraction of a total resource niche available to the sexual population from which they arise. Differences in niche breadth may allow a period of coexistence between a sexual population and the faster reproducing asexual clones. Here, we model the longer term threat to the persistence of the sexual population from an accumulation of clonal diversity, balanced by the cost to the asexual population resulting from a faster rate of accumulation of deleterious mutations. We use Monte-Carlo simulations to quantify the interaction of niche breadth with accumulating deleterious mutations. These two mechanisms may act synergistically to prevent the extinction of the sexual po...
The adaptation of large asexual populations is hampered by the competition between independently ari...
We study the process of fixation of beneficial mutations in an asexual population by means of a theo...
It has been suggested that sexual reproduction is maintained because it reduces the load imposed by ...
A generic model of the interaction between sexual and asexual morphs in an ecological context was de...
We extend our earlier work on the role of deleterious mutations in the extinction of obligately asex...
At carrying capacity, small advantages in competitive ability can compensate a sexual population for...
Although there is no known general explanation as to why sexual populations resist asexual invasion,...
This thesis investigates how breaking apart selection interference (‘Hill-Robertson’ effects) that a...
With the two-fold cost of sex, derived asexual organisms have an immediate reproductive advantage ov...
In sexual populations, selection operates neither on the whole genome, which is repeatedly taken apa...
In sexual population, recombination reshuffles genetic variation and produces novel combinations of ...
The accumulation of deleterious mutations reduces individual and mean population fitness. Therefore,...
SummaryBackgroundThe rate at which beneficial mutations accumulate determines how fast asexual popul...
In large populations, multiple beneficial mutations may be simultaneously spreading. In asexual popu...
Adaptation often involves the acquisition of a large number of genomic changes which arise as mutati...
The adaptation of large asexual populations is hampered by the competition between independently ari...
We study the process of fixation of beneficial mutations in an asexual population by means of a theo...
It has been suggested that sexual reproduction is maintained because it reduces the load imposed by ...
A generic model of the interaction between sexual and asexual morphs in an ecological context was de...
We extend our earlier work on the role of deleterious mutations in the extinction of obligately asex...
At carrying capacity, small advantages in competitive ability can compensate a sexual population for...
Although there is no known general explanation as to why sexual populations resist asexual invasion,...
This thesis investigates how breaking apart selection interference (‘Hill-Robertson’ effects) that a...
With the two-fold cost of sex, derived asexual organisms have an immediate reproductive advantage ov...
In sexual populations, selection operates neither on the whole genome, which is repeatedly taken apa...
In sexual population, recombination reshuffles genetic variation and produces novel combinations of ...
The accumulation of deleterious mutations reduces individual and mean population fitness. Therefore,...
SummaryBackgroundThe rate at which beneficial mutations accumulate determines how fast asexual popul...
In large populations, multiple beneficial mutations may be simultaneously spreading. In asexual popu...
Adaptation often involves the acquisition of a large number of genomic changes which arise as mutati...
The adaptation of large asexual populations is hampered by the competition between independently ari...
We study the process of fixation of beneficial mutations in an asexual population by means of a theo...
It has been suggested that sexual reproduction is maintained because it reduces the load imposed by ...