Standing and flowing: the complex origins of adaptive variation |
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Authors: | John J. Welch Chris D. Jiggins |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Genetics, University of Cambridge, , Cambridge, CB23EH UK;2. Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, , Cambridge, CB23EJ UK |
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Abstract: | A population faced with a new selection pressure can only adapt if appropriate genetic variation is available. This genetic variation might come from new mutations or from gene exchange with other populations or species, or it might already segregate in the population as standing genetic variation (which might itself have arisen from either mutation or gene flow). Understanding the relative importance of these sources of adaptive variation is a fundamental issue in evolutionary genetics (Orr & Betancourt 2001 ; Barrett & Schluter 2008 ; Gladyshev et al. 2008 ) and has practical implications for conservation, plant and animal breeding, biological control and infectious disease prevention (e.g. Robertson 1960 ; Soulé & Wilcox 1980 ; Prentis et al. 2008 ; Pennings 2012 ). In this issue of Molecular Ecology, Roesti et al. ( 2014 ) make an important contribution to this longstanding debate. |
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Keywords: | adaptation development and evolution ecological genetics fish genomics hybridization |
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