Stresses affect inbreeding depression in complex ways: Disentangling stress-specific genetic effects from effects of initial size in plants
收藏DataONE2021-06-23 更新2025-05-03 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:a47ce021c850e0344aaac9e0222a77322c47709f0a1a16d2acd6351a0e55ebeb
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
The magnitude of inbreeding depression (ID) varies unpredictably among environments. ID often increases in stressful environments suggesting that these expose more deleterious alleles to selection or increase their effects. More simply, ID could increase under conditions that amplify phenotypic variation (CV²), e.g. by accentuating size hierarchies among plants. These mechanisms are difficult to distinguish when stress increases both ID and phenotypic variation. We grew in- and outbred progeny of Mimulus guttatus under six abiotic stress treatments (control, waterlogging, drought, nutrient deficiency, copper addition and clipping) with and without competition by the grass Poa palustris. ID differed greatly among stress treatments with δ varying from 7% (control) to 61% (waterlogging) but did not consistently increase with stress intensity. Poa competition increased ID under nutrient deficiency but not other stresses. Analyzing effects of initial size on performance of outbred plants sug...
创建时间:
2025-04-21



