Fabbri, Giulia; Molinaro, Ludovica; 155799; Mucci, Nadia; Pagani, Luca; Scandura, Massimo;
The wild boar (Sus scrofa meridionalis) arrived in Sardinia with the first human settlers in the early Neolithic with the potential to hybridize with the domestic pig (S. s. domesticus) throughout its evolution on the island. In this paper, we investigated the possible microevolutionary effects of such introgressive hybridization on the present wil...
Decru, Eva; 81311; Snoeks, Jos; 12784; Walanga, Albert; Vreven, Emmanuel JWMN;
status: published
Sardos, Julie; Breton, Catherine; Perrier, Xavier; van den Houwe, Ines; Carpentier, Sebastien; 35432; Paofa, Janet; Rouard, Mathieu; Roux, Nicolas;
Hybridization and introgressions are important evolutionary forces in plants. They contribute to the domestication of many species, including understudied clonal crops. Here, we examine their role in the domestication of a clonal crop of outmost importance, banana (Musa ssp.). We used genome-wide SNPs generated for 154 diploid banana cultivars and ...
Vanavermaete, David Fostier, Jan Maenhout, Steven De Baets, Bernard
Published in
TAG. Theoretical and applied genetics. Theoretische und angewandte Genetik
The deep scoping method incorporates the use of a gene bank together with different population layers to reintroduce genetic variation into the breeding population, thus maximizing the long-term genetic gain without reducing the short-term genetic gain or increasing the total financial cost. Genomic prediction is often combined with truncation sele...
Zhao, Tao Zwaenepoel, Arthur Xue, Jia-Yu Kao, Shu-Min Li, Zhen Schranz, M. Eric Van de Peer, Yves
Published in
Nature Communications
Molecular phylogenies are traditionally based on sequence variation, but genome rearrangements also contain phylogenetic information. Here, Zhao et al. develop an approach to reconstruct phylogenies based on microsynteny and illustrate it with a reconstruction of the angiosperm phylogeny.
Bawin, Yves Ruttink, Tom Staelens, Ariane Haegeman, Annelies Stoffelen, Piet ItheMwanga Mwanga, Jean‐Claude Roldán-Ruiz, Isabel Honnay, Olivier Janssens, Steven B.
Interspecific hybridization events have played a major role in plant speciation, yet the evolutionary origin of hybrid species often remains enigmatic. Here, we inferred the evolutionary origin of the allotetraploid species Coffea arabica, which is widely cultivated for Arabica coffee production. We estimated genetic distances between C. arabica an...
Mendes Ferreira, Helena; 133481; Henriques, Dora; Neves, Cátia; Machado, Clyce; Azevedo, João; Pinto, Maria Alice;
status: Published online
Krehenwinkel, Henrik Pomerantz, Aaron Henderson, James B Kennedy, Susan R Lim, Jun Ying Swamy, Varun Shoobridge, Juan Diego Graham, Natalie Patel, Nipam H Gillespie, Rosemary G
...
10.1093/gigascience/giz006 / GIGASCIENCE / 8 / 5
Lamare, M. Harianto, J. Uthicke, S. Aguera, A. Karelitz, S. Pecorino, D. Chin, J. Byrne, M.
For marine species that hybridize, the maintenance of separate lineages requires natural barriers that limit hybridization zones or species distributions in which hybrid progeny cannot survive across the entire range of the parent species. We examined this potential in the sea urchin species Pseudoboletia maculata and P. indiana, which have overlap...
Barrera-Guzmán, Alfredo O. Aleixo, Alexandre Shawkey, Matthew D. Weir, Jason T.
Hybrid speciation is rare in vertebrates, and reproductive isolation arising from hybridization is infrequently demonstrated. Here, we present evidence supporting a hybrid-speciation event involving the genetic admixture of the snow-capped (Lepidothrix nattereri) and opal-crowned (Lepidothrix iris) manakins of the Amazon basin, leading to the forma...