Experimental evolution is a powerful tool to study adaptation under controlled conditions. Laboratory natural selection experiments mimic adaptation in the wild with better-adapted genotypes having more offspring. Because the selected traits are frequently not known, adaptation is typically measured as fitness increase by comparing evolved populations against an unselected reference population maintained in a laboratory environment. With adaptation to the laboratory conditions and genetic drift, however, it is not clear to what extent such comparisons provide unbiased estimates of adaptation. Alternatively, ancestral variation could be preserved in isofemale lines that can be combined to reconstitute the ancestral population. Here, we asses...
The relative contributions of ancestry, chance, and past and ongoing election to variation in one ad...
Direct observation of evolution in response to natural environmental change can resolve fundamental ...
Adaptation to a new environment (as well as its underlying mechanisms) is one of the most important ...
Experimental evolution is a powerful tool to study adaptation under controlled conditions. Laborator...
Background: Natural selection and genetic drift are major forces responsible for temporal genetic ch...
The combination of experimental evolution and next-generation sequencing, termed E&R, has emerge...
Most founding events entail a reduction of population size, which in turn leads to genetic drift eff...
The genomic basis of adaptation to novel environments is a fundamental problem in evolutionary biol...
founder effects; laboratory populations; life-history evolution; molecular evolution. Most founding ...
Evolve and resequencing (E&R) studies investigate the genomic responses of adaptation during experim...
Evolution depends on genetic variation generated by mutation or recombination from standing genetic ...
The combination of experimental evolution with high-throughput sequencing of pooled individuals-i.e....
The roles of history, chance and selection have long been debated in evolutionary biology. Though un...
Experimental evolution is a powerful tool to understand the adaptive potential of populations under ...
The molecular mechanisms underlying adaptation have eluded evolutionary biologists even with the adv...
The relative contributions of ancestry, chance, and past and ongoing election to variation in one ad...
Direct observation of evolution in response to natural environmental change can resolve fundamental ...
Adaptation to a new environment (as well as its underlying mechanisms) is one of the most important ...
Experimental evolution is a powerful tool to study adaptation under controlled conditions. Laborator...
Background: Natural selection and genetic drift are major forces responsible for temporal genetic ch...
The combination of experimental evolution and next-generation sequencing, termed E&R, has emerge...
Most founding events entail a reduction of population size, which in turn leads to genetic drift eff...
The genomic basis of adaptation to novel environments is a fundamental problem in evolutionary biol...
founder effects; laboratory populations; life-history evolution; molecular evolution. Most founding ...
Evolve and resequencing (E&R) studies investigate the genomic responses of adaptation during experim...
Evolution depends on genetic variation generated by mutation or recombination from standing genetic ...
The combination of experimental evolution with high-throughput sequencing of pooled individuals-i.e....
The roles of history, chance and selection have long been debated in evolutionary biology. Though un...
Experimental evolution is a powerful tool to understand the adaptive potential of populations under ...
The molecular mechanisms underlying adaptation have eluded evolutionary biologists even with the adv...
The relative contributions of ancestry, chance, and past and ongoing election to variation in one ad...
Direct observation of evolution in response to natural environmental change can resolve fundamental ...
Adaptation to a new environment (as well as its underlying mechanisms) is one of the most important ...