This article explores how introgressive hybridization enhances the evolutionary effects of natural selection and how, reciprocally, natural selection can enhance the evolutionary effects of introgression. Both types of interaction were observed during a 40-year study of Darwin’s finches (Geospiza) on the small Galapagos island of Daphne Major. Hybrids, produced rarely by Geospiza fortis (medium ground finch) breeding with Geospiza scandens (cactus finch) and Geospiza fuliginosa (small ground finch), survived and bred as well as the parental species in the past 3 decades. By backcrossing, they increased the standing genetic variation and thereby the evolutionary responsiveness of the populations to natural selection. Natural selection ...
Humans are an increasingly common influence on the evolution of natural populations. Potential arena...
Species hybridization can lead to fitness costs, species collapse, and novel evolutionary trajectori...
Humans are an increasingly common influence on the evolution of natural populations. Potential arena...
Introgressive hybridization, i.e. hybridization with backcrossing, can lead to the fusion of two spe...
Introgressive hybridization, i.e. hybridization with backcrossing, can lead to the fusion of two spe...
Introgressive hybridization, i.e. hybridization with backcrossing, can lead to the fusion of two spe...
Recent research on speciation has identified a central role for ecological divergence, which can ini...
In this four-part study, I use selection analyses to examine the evolutionary significance of morpho...
The consequences of hybridization for biodiversity depend on the specific ecological and evolutionar...
Article first published online: 8 MAR 2012The divergence-with-gene-flow model of speciation has a st...
In this four-part study, I use selection analyses to examine the evolutionary significance of morpho...
Species hybridization can lead to fitness costs, species collapse, and novel evolutionary trajectori...
Natural selection acts on existing genetic variation to drive genetic adaptation of organisms to var...
Natural selection acts on existing genetic variation to drive genetic adaptation of organisms to var...
Species hybridization can lead to fitness costs, species collapse, and novel evolutionary trajectori...
Humans are an increasingly common influence on the evolution of natural populations. Potential arena...
Species hybridization can lead to fitness costs, species collapse, and novel evolutionary trajectori...
Humans are an increasingly common influence on the evolution of natural populations. Potential arena...
Introgressive hybridization, i.e. hybridization with backcrossing, can lead to the fusion of two spe...
Introgressive hybridization, i.e. hybridization with backcrossing, can lead to the fusion of two spe...
Introgressive hybridization, i.e. hybridization with backcrossing, can lead to the fusion of two spe...
Recent research on speciation has identified a central role for ecological divergence, which can ini...
In this four-part study, I use selection analyses to examine the evolutionary significance of morpho...
The consequences of hybridization for biodiversity depend on the specific ecological and evolutionar...
Article first published online: 8 MAR 2012The divergence-with-gene-flow model of speciation has a st...
In this four-part study, I use selection analyses to examine the evolutionary significance of morpho...
Species hybridization can lead to fitness costs, species collapse, and novel evolutionary trajectori...
Natural selection acts on existing genetic variation to drive genetic adaptation of organisms to var...
Natural selection acts on existing genetic variation to drive genetic adaptation of organisms to var...
Species hybridization can lead to fitness costs, species collapse, and novel evolutionary trajectori...
Humans are an increasingly common influence on the evolution of natural populations. Potential arena...
Species hybridization can lead to fitness costs, species collapse, and novel evolutionary trajectori...
Humans are an increasingly common influence on the evolution of natural populations. Potential arena...