THE EVOLUTION OF LANDSCAPE GENETICS |
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Authors: | K. Petren |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cincinnati, , Cincinnati, Ohio, 45221 |
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Abstract: | The main objective of this special section is not to review the broad field of landscape genetics, but to provide a glimpse of how the developing landscape genetics perspective has the potential to change the way we study evolution. Evolutionary landscape genetics is the study of how migration and population structure affects evolutionary processes. As a field it dates back to Sewall Wright and the origin of theoretical population genetics, but empirical tests of adaptive processes of evolution in natural landscapes have been rare. Now, with recent developments in technology, methodology, and modeling tools, we are poised to trace adaptive genetic variation across space and through time. Not only will we see more empirical tests of classical theory, we can expect to see new phenomena emerging, as we reveal complex interactions among evolutionary processes as they unfold in natural landscapes. |
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Keywords: | Adaptation evolutionary genomics gene flow hybridization models/simulations population genetics |
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