Background and Aims: Gene flow from crops to their wild relatives has the potential to alter population growth rates and demography of hybrid populations, especially when a new crop has been genetically modified (GM). This study introduces a comprehensive approach to assess this potential for altered population fitness, and uses a combination of demographic data in two habitat types and mathematical (matrix) models that include crop rotations and outcrossing between parental species. Methods: Full life-cycle demographic rates, including seed bank survival, of non-GM Brassica rapa × B. napus F1 hybrids and their parent species were estimated from experiments in both agricultural and semi-natural habitats. Altered fitness potential was mo...
Brassica rapa grows as a wild and weedy species throughout the world and is the most likely recipien...
Introgression of genes from crops into ruderal populations is a multi-step process requiring sympatr...
Background: The cropping area of genetically modified (GM) crops has constantly increased since 1996...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Oxford University Press via the DOI in this...
The interest in the possible persistence of crop x wild relative hybrids in agricultural fields is t...
Background, aim, and scope We strive to predict consequences of genetically modified plants (GMPs) b...
Fitness of hybrids between genetically modified (GM) crops and wild relatives influences the likelih...
Research on the environmental risks of gene flow from genetically modified (GM) crops to wild relati...
Gene flow, which is the successful movement of genes among populations by mating or migration of see...
Unpredicted persistence of all forms of B. napus present in the agro-ecosystem is the most common co...
The creation of transgenic plants through genetic engineering has focused interest on how the fitnes...
One concern about climate change is its effects on maintaining stable food production (food security...
There is general scientific agreement that gene flow from GM crops to sexually compatible wild relat...
International audienceGene flow and introgression from crops to wild species can modify the adaptive...
Brassica rapa grows as a wild and weedy species throughout the world and is the most likely recipien...
Introgression of genes from crops into ruderal populations is a multi-step process requiring sympatr...
Background: The cropping area of genetically modified (GM) crops has constantly increased since 1996...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Oxford University Press via the DOI in this...
The interest in the possible persistence of crop x wild relative hybrids in agricultural fields is t...
Background, aim, and scope We strive to predict consequences of genetically modified plants (GMPs) b...
Fitness of hybrids between genetically modified (GM) crops and wild relatives influences the likelih...
Research on the environmental risks of gene flow from genetically modified (GM) crops to wild relati...
Gene flow, which is the successful movement of genes among populations by mating or migration of see...
Unpredicted persistence of all forms of B. napus present in the agro-ecosystem is the most common co...
The creation of transgenic plants through genetic engineering has focused interest on how the fitnes...
One concern about climate change is its effects on maintaining stable food production (food security...
There is general scientific agreement that gene flow from GM crops to sexually compatible wild relat...
International audienceGene flow and introgression from crops to wild species can modify the adaptive...
Brassica rapa grows as a wild and weedy species throughout the world and is the most likely recipien...
Introgression of genes from crops into ruderal populations is a multi-step process requiring sympatr...
Background: The cropping area of genetically modified (GM) crops has constantly increased since 1996...