R Frankham - Molecular ecology, 2008 - Wiley Online Library
As wild environments are often inhospitable, many species have to be captive‐bred to save them from extinction. In captivity, species adapt genetically to the captive environment and …
Behaviours are exceptionally complex quantitative traits. Sensitivity to environmental variation and genetic background, the presence of sexual dimorphism, and the widespread …
Explanations for the genetic variation ubiquitous in natural populations are often classified by the population–genetic processes they emphasize: natural selection or mutation and …
Many threatened species are being maintained in captivity to save them from extinction, often with the eventual aim of reintroduction. The objective of genetic management in …
Equalization of parental contributions is one of the most simple and widely recognized methods to maintain genetic diversity in conservation programs, as it halves the rate of …
We assess the relative importance of migration rate, size and number of subpopulations on the genetic load of subdivided populations. Using diffusion approximations, we show that in …
Optimal outbreeding theory predicts fitness benefits to intermediate levels of inbreeding. In the present study, we test for linear (consistent with inbreeding depression) and nonlinear …
R Frankham - Adaptation and fitness in animal populations …, 2009 - Springer
Reproductive fitness characters are crucial in animal and plant breeding, evolutionary genetics and conservation biology. However, the nature of their variation is not well …
There is mounting evidence consistent with a general role of positive selection acting on the Drosophila melanogaster X‐chromosome. However, this positive selection need not …