North America has seen a massive increase in cropland use since 1800, accompanied more recently by the intensification of agricultural practices. Through genome analysis of present-day and historical samples spanning environments over the last two centuries, we studied the impact of these changes in farming on the extent and tempo of evolution across the native range of common waterhemp (Amaranthus tuberculatus), a now pervasive agricultural weed. Modern agriculture has imposed strengths of selection rarely observed in the wild, with striking shifts in allele frequency trajectories since agricultural intensification in the 1960s. An evolutionary response to this extreme selection was facilitated by a concurrent human-mediated range shift. B...
Despite the negative economic and ecological impact of weeds, relatively little is known about the e...
Despite the negative economic and ecological impact of weeds, relatively little is known about the e...
Genetic diversity within a population can be understood by looking at polymorphisms in the genome. ...
North America has experienced a massive increase in cropland use since 1800, accompanied more recent...
North America has seen a massive increase in cropland use since 1800, accompanied more recently by t...
North America has seen one of the greatest increases in agricultural land use over the last two cent...
Causal mutations and their frequency in agricultural fields are well-characterized for herbicide res...
The evolution of resistance in response to herbicides is a striking example of repeated, human-induc...
The selection pressure exerted by herbicides has led to the repeated evolution of herbicide resistan...
Premise of the study—The evolution of invasiveness has been extensively studied in natural ecosystem...
There is increasing interest in documenting adaptation of weedy plant species to agricultural ecosys...
If a weed is defined as a plant that is “growing where it is not wanted”, then agricultural weeds, o...
Premise of the study: The evolution of invasiveness has been extensively studied in natural ecosyste...
Amaranthus tuberculatus (Moq.) Sauer is a driver weed species within maize and soybean production sy...
Much of what we know about the genetic basis of herbicide resistance has come from detailed investig...
Despite the negative economic and ecological impact of weeds, relatively little is known about the e...
Despite the negative economic and ecological impact of weeds, relatively little is known about the e...
Genetic diversity within a population can be understood by looking at polymorphisms in the genome. ...
North America has experienced a massive increase in cropland use since 1800, accompanied more recent...
North America has seen a massive increase in cropland use since 1800, accompanied more recently by t...
North America has seen one of the greatest increases in agricultural land use over the last two cent...
Causal mutations and their frequency in agricultural fields are well-characterized for herbicide res...
The evolution of resistance in response to herbicides is a striking example of repeated, human-induc...
The selection pressure exerted by herbicides has led to the repeated evolution of herbicide resistan...
Premise of the study—The evolution of invasiveness has been extensively studied in natural ecosystem...
There is increasing interest in documenting adaptation of weedy plant species to agricultural ecosys...
If a weed is defined as a plant that is “growing where it is not wanted”, then agricultural weeds, o...
Premise of the study: The evolution of invasiveness has been extensively studied in natural ecosyste...
Amaranthus tuberculatus (Moq.) Sauer is a driver weed species within maize and soybean production sy...
Much of what we know about the genetic basis of herbicide resistance has come from detailed investig...
Despite the negative economic and ecological impact of weeds, relatively little is known about the e...
Despite the negative economic and ecological impact of weeds, relatively little is known about the e...
Genetic diversity within a population can be understood by looking at polymorphisms in the genome. ...