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1 associated microbiomes influence patterns of microevolutionary adaptation in plants and animals.
2                                         This microevolutionary adaptation is produced by a genetic el
3                          Here, we show rapid microevolutionary adaptation of a harmful cyanobacterium
4 us, we document a highly polygenic heritable microevolutionary adaptive change over a single generati
5 tive use of microsatellite loci as tools for microevolutionary analysis requires knowledge of the fac
6                  Populations may thus face a microevolutionary and gene flow challenge to advance fir
7 le studies means that the connection between microevolutionary and macroevolutionary events is poorly
8 l lineages, providing a crucial link between microevolutionary and macroevolutionary explanations of
9  findings allow more rigorous comparisons of microevolutionary and macroevolutionary patterns and pro
10 arch avenues, emphasizing the integration of microevolutionary and macroevolutionary perspectives.
11         The model exhibits a wide variety of microevolutionary and macroevolutionary phenomena which
12 nessential genes over both relatively short (microevolutionary) and longer (macroevolutionary) time s
13 ricts the potential for adaptive phenotypic, microevolutionary, and population dynamic responses to c
14 highlight the value of using both macro- and microevolutionary approaches in studying the duplication
15 ponse in L. fasciculata and the oldest known microevolutionary arms race between predator and prey.
16 able because it reveals the genetic basis of microevolutionary change across many more generations th
17                        Our results show that microevolutionary change in a wild population is charact
18 (directional, episodic, and balancing) drive microevolutionary change in correlated traits over time.
19 d, which would affect any predicted rates of microevolutionary change in response to sexually antagon
20 ose a conceptual framework that explores how microevolutionary change in the elemental phenotype occu
21 is species, and underscore the potential for microevolutionary change in this important developmental
22 d resource exploitation driving directional, microevolutionary change over thousands of years.
23 nts the most highly resolved evidence yet of microevolutionary change within an early hominin species
24 ntial knowledge gap in the iconic example of microevolutionary change, adding a further layer of insi
25 iple mutualisms extends to key components of microevolutionary change, emphasising the importance of
26 ion, speciation, and extinction, with little microevolutionary change.
27 lation assumed by many theoretical models of microevolutionary change.
28 y, and by assessing its capacity to identify microevolutionary changes both in vitro and in vivo.
29           This work demonstrates that simple microevolutionary changes can have profound macroevoluti
30 tching of C. glabrata is not associated with microevolutionary changes identified by the DNA fingerpr
31 cal invasions seldom considers phenotypic or microevolutionary changes that occur following introduct
32 o investigate adaptive processes and to time microevolutionary changes that precede macroevolutionary
33 hich are more than an accumulation of steady microevolutionary changes.
34 limb size was reduced by gradually operating microevolutionary changes.
35  genetic group methods potentially allow the microevolutionary consequences of local selection to be
36  variation when making predictions about the microevolutionary consequences of selection.
37 sses have not been studied and linked in the microevolutionary context of breeding for improved disea
38 orker body sizes in a manner consistent with microevolutionary divergence.
39                                         This microevolutionary dynamics is reminiscent of an ecologic
40          Such data provide a window into the microevolutionary dynamics that drive successful immune
41 efore to build a synthesis to understand how microevolutionary dynamics unfold over millions of years
42 n with paleolimnology enable us to associate microevolutionary dynamics with detailed information on
43 ve research has demonstrated host-retrovirus microevolutionary dynamics, it has been difficult to gai
44 life-history traits is central to predicting microevolutionary dynamics.
45 f breeding locations, impeding prediction of microevolutionary dynamics.
46 cing cyanobacteria in their diet, suggesting microevolutionary effects.
47                                We describe a microevolutionary event of a prevalent strain of Mycobac
48 p to understanding the significance of these microevolutionary events and their impact on the genome
49 ification of the brown algal orders, down to microevolutionary events at the genus level.
50 outbreak strain relatedness and characterise microevolutionary events in the accessory genomes of a c
51 break of tuberculosis enabled us to identify microevolutionary events observable during transmission,
52 ghts the ability of NGS to clarify molecular microevolutionary events within antibiotic-resistant org
53 ttempts to explain macroevolution as well as microevolutionary events.
54           However, even with an explosion of microevolutionary field studies over the past four decad
55                    Overall, these macro- and microevolutionary findings demonstrate that organisms pr
56 y divergence among genera also contribute to microevolutionary fine-tuning of adaptive traits within
57 ore complex interaction of environmental and microevolutionary forces.
58    Among fishes, well-known examples include microevolutionary habitat transitions into the water col
59                                          The microevolutionary history of pspA differed from that of
60    Our results provide macroevolutionary and microevolutionary insights into a model species originat
61                                       At the microevolutionary level, the likely existence of a billi
62 uld be studied at both macroevolutionary and microevolutionary levels.
63                      These results provide a microevolutionary mechanism for the long-term persistenc
64 s, we also find that dominance can evolve by microevolutionary mechanisms and thus are able to reconc
65 rocesses involved in immune responses and of microevolutionary mechanisms that create and maintain va
66 ive results are broadly compatible with both microevolutionary models and observations from the fossi
67            It is unknown, however, how these microevolutionary patterns translate to a macroevolution
68 gillus minisclerotigenes and discuss how the microevolutionary patterns we uncover inform macroevolut
69 arasite natural history and its influence on microevolutionary patterns, including contributions to z
70 present an analysis of rates and patterns of microevolutionary phenomena that have shaped the human,
71 teractions, the varying local ecologies, and microevolutionary population processes in both the bioco
72 re deep sequenced to elucidate the intrahost microevolutionary process after a single transmission ev
73  studies of extant taxa, thereby integrating microevolutionary process and macroevolutionary pattern.
74                                We reveal the microevolutionary process underlying speciation: Hosts r
75 cs to better link macroevolutionary pattern, microevolutionary process, and molecular mechanisms.
76              Considering carcinogenesis as a microevolutionary process, best described in the context
77 experiment, we test the role of an important microevolutionary process-the propensity for population
78            This expectation implicitly links microevolutionary processes (the evolution of population
79 r-level patterns of divergence arise through microevolutionary processes acting within populations.
80          To mechanistically characterize the microevolutionary processes active in altering transcrip
81  how a narrow latitudinal gradient can shape microevolutionary processes and contribute to broader sc
82                        Here, we test whether microevolutionary processes are linked to environmental
83 s are presumably more frequently involved in microevolutionary processes but have rarely been discove
84         Davidson and Erwin argued that known microevolutionary processes cannot explain the evolution
85  and, conversely, competitive release on the microevolutionary processes driving microhabitat niche e
86 Collectively, these results demonstrate that microevolutionary processes driving spatial variation in
87 ture in sympatric An. cruzii populations and microevolutionary processes driving these populations.
88          Our work establishes how changes in microevolutionary processes impact changes in molecular
89 erii Our overall goal is to precisely assess microevolutionary processes in the clade to ascertain mo
90  of divergence help us better understand the microevolutionary processes involved in rapid phenotypic
91      Although the role of gene regulation in microevolutionary processes is gaining wide acceptance,
92 y of reproductive strategies, to address the microevolutionary processes leading to phenotypic and ge
93 species raise questions about how macro- and microevolutionary processes made the genus Quercus an ev
94 he most thorough descriptions to date of how microevolutionary processes result in trait change in a
95                                 Variation in microevolutionary processes results in across-species va
96                               Clarifying how microevolutionary processes scale to macroevolutionary p
97 riving force of adaptive radiations, but how microevolutionary processes scale up to shape the expans
98 At the same time, quantitative models of the microevolutionary processes shaping microbial population
99 onsidered typical anthropogenic pressures on microevolutionary processes that are responsible for the
100 of metabolic allometry in animals by linking microevolutionary processes to macroevolutionary pattern
101                 The temporal element linking microevolutionary processes to macroevolutionary pattern
102  increase biodiversity, but evidence linking microevolutionary processes to macroevolutionary pattern
103 ntal question in evolutionary biology is how microevolutionary processes translate into species diver
104                     To understand better the microevolutionary processes underlying these interspecif
105 s a balance between adaptive and nonadaptive microevolutionary processes within a species.
106                                              Microevolutionary processes, including mutation, genetic
107                                       Unlike microevolutionary processes, little is known about the g
108 isms for interspecific competition and other microevolutionary processes, yet fully explains the shap
109 whether these marked changes can emerge from microevolutionary processes.
110  18) and elucidated the functional effect of microevolutionary processes.
111  theory) has allowed a reevaluation of these microevolutionary processes.
112  to these processes are linked to changes in microevolutionary processes.
113 ration length is an important determinant of microevolutionary rates, and body size is often used as
114 nthropogenic influences, we also explore the microevolutionary response of migratory strategies to en
115 ust signals through phenotypic plasticity or microevolutionary response to natural selection.
116 bility to predict the pattern and process of microevolutionary responses to changing environments.
117                   Quantifying and predicting microevolutionary responses to environmental change requ
118 ogical observations, recent phenological and microevolutionary responses, experiments, and computatio
119 isparate phenomena evolve by well-understood microevolutionary rules, they are also subject to the ma
120 c regions implicated in trait evolution on a microevolutionary scale in many species, but whether the
121                                         On a microevolutionary scale, the observed large epistatic va
122 for investigating population affinities at a microevolutionary scale.
123 angle to questions traditionally explored at microevolutionary scale.
124 hort evolutionary trajectories, those on the microevolutionary scale.
125                                       In our microevolutionary selection experiments, the infectivity
126 ssed with respect to what is known about the microevolutionary signatures that result from these proc
127  their own than adjust their life history by microevolutionary steps.
128                                        While microevolutionary studies have described examples in whi
129                                              Microevolutionary studies of the coevolutionary process
130 which together present a fascinating test of microevolutionary theory.
131 atural variation in adaptive morphology on a microevolutionary timescale.
132        Some of these transitions occurred on microevolutionary timescales, indicating that HOX gene e
133 utations that are overlooked by conventional microevolutionary tools.
134  dynamics: Competitive interactions affected microevolutionary trajectories on a timescale relevant t
135                              This unexpected microevolutionary trend is explained by genetic linkage
136                          In order to explore microevolutionary trends in bacteria and archaea, we con
137 ctive relationships per se in accounting for microevolutionary unities and discontinuities in sexuall
138  particularly useful system for studying (i) microevolutionary variation in natural populations, and
139 As such, each ATGC is suited for analysis of microevolutionary variations within a cohesive group of
140 ng a broader framework for understanding how microevolutionary within-species dynamics shape macroevo

 
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