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1 he Parsi reflects their recent isolation and inbreeding.
2 s but also in their level of relatedness and inbreeding.
3 usceptibility to the genetic perturbation of inbreeding.
4 FP) or by genomic (marker-based) measures of inbreeding.
5 hose that lie between, including selfing and inbreeding.
6 ats, including loss of genetic diversity and inbreeding.
7 l selection, we revealed mutation load using inbreeding.
8 rol the trade-off between diploidization and inbreeding.
9 f the recruit families was not due to higher inbreeding.
10 g the highest diversity and lowest levels of inbreeding.
11 of identity disequilibrium (ID), a proxy for inbreeding.
12 imited levels of within-band relatedness and inbreeding.
13 kers usually provides little power to detect inbreeding.
14 territory, independent of pressures to avoid inbreeding.
15 tend to have large families with evidence of inbreeding.
16 nsion at each generation along the course to inbreeding.
17 the expression of CHT and the past levels of inbreeding.
18 ion from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium owing to inbreeding.
19  and may reflect responses to the effects of inbreeding.
20 pression may be underestimated in studies of inbreeding.
21 at an arbitrary generation along the path to inbreeding.
22 r an individual's own inbreeding or maternal inbreeding.
23 ably due to differential levels of drift and inbreeding.
24 ations across Europe, potentially indicating inbreeding.
25 tion and breed formation, rather than recent inbreeding.
26 y the expression of a recessive allele under inbreeding.
27 ated with the loss of SI and/or the shift to inbreeding; (2) a population bottleneck may have played
28 onditioned on effects of male coefficient of inbreeding, age and social status.
29         Recent research has found that plant inbreeding alters resistance and tolerance to herbivores
30 de environmental effects of captive rearing, inbreeding among close relatives, relaxed natural select
31 forcement to initial colonists, help relieve inbreeding among founders, or increase the hazard of the
32 evealed few sexual differences in biparental inbreeding among other gynodioecious species.
33  which pistils reject self-pollen to prevent inbreeding and accept non-self pollen to promote out-cro
34 e it measures the rates of genetic drift and inbreeding and affects the efficacy of systematic evolut
35  found that domestication is associated with inbreeding and an excess of deleterious mutations.
36 population, we found no associations between inbreeding and any of our six fitness measurements.
37  both ideal and actual conditions (including inbreeding and double reduction) were compared.
38  such disruptions in the short term, whereas inbreeding and genetic structure may respond more strong
39 cument multiple instances of father-daughter inbreeding and high levels of intraspecific strife, incl
40 generally exacerbates the harmful effects of inbreeding and it has been proposed that this could be e
41 red by BORICE may prove useful in studies of inbreeding and its consequences.
42 computing genealogical measurements, such as inbreeding and kinship coefficients of individuals, depe
43 Ne ) is a key parameter that shapes rates of inbreeding and loss of genetic diversity, thereby influe
44 as 30, suggesting that rates of increase of inbreeding and loss of genetic variation per generation
45  reproductive assurance, but it also fosters inbreeding and potential reduction in fitness.
46  1995-2013, resulting in increased levels of inbreeding and reduced fitness via inbreeding depression
47 ions are expected to shift towards increased inbreeding and reduced pollen diversity, with fitness co
48  for all populations, we found low levels of inbreeding and relatedness between individuals within po
49 ecades of human-driven artificial selection, inbreeding, and adaptation to captivity, is of limited u
50 election showed rapid fitness declines under inbreeding, and all were extinct after generation 10.
51                   Most plants are capable of inbreeding, and also exhibit a remarkable suite of adapt
52                      Population bottlenecks, inbreeding, and artificial selection can all, in princip
53 e we assess temporal variation in gene flow, inbreeding, and fitness using longitudinal genomic, demo
54       Many generations are required to reach inbreeding, and so a number of investigators have sought
55  revealing reduced heterozygosity, increased inbreeding, and variable introgression of domestic allel
56 e played a role in driving the transition to inbreeding; and (3) the mutation(s) underlying the loss
57  of the populations indicated a low level of inbreeding, as suggested by the high number of alleles.
58 t may confer considerable benefits including inbreeding avoidance and nepotism.
59                         To determine whether inbreeding avoidance and/or biparental inbreeding can ac
60 sex determination, inbreeding depression and inbreeding avoidance in Neodiprion lecontei, a gregariou
61  the conservation of threatened species, and inbreeding avoidance is thought to be a key driver in th
62 tive behavior may have acted as an important inbreeding avoidance mechanism allowing the species to e
63 ed, is often interpreted as a consequence of inbreeding avoidance mechanisms, but we show that it can
64          This pattern cannot be explained by inbreeding avoidance or as a response to more intense lo
65 ss, may evolve one or more of the following: inbreeding avoidance, functional diploid males or altern
66 nge members, thus facilitating gene flow and inbreeding avoidance.
67 t most a 1-14% increase in seed fitness from inbreeding avoidance.
68 ce the evolution of mating systems and other inbreeding-avoidance mechanisms.
69 systems, however, there was selection during inbreeding because the diversity patterns of 337 single-
70 ions and cannot be explained by differential inbreeding, but are consistent with relaxed selection ma
71                    Despite the potential for inbreeding by facultative self-fertilisation, substantia
72 nked portions of the genome owing to extreme inbreeding by self-fertilization.
73 plication via self-fertilization and intense inbreeding by simultaneous hermaphrodites.
74 ether inbreeding avoidance and/or biparental inbreeding can account for female persistence in Geraniu
75                                   Biparental inbreeding can affect relative female fitness only if it
76                                Thus, just as inbreeding can elevate the occurrence of rare recessive
77                      Furthermore, occasional inbreeding can explain why some multiple-patriline colon
78 e and beyond what pedigree-based measures of inbreeding can explain.
79                            Here we show that inbreeding causes early death in the zebra finch Taeniop
80 he population outcrossing rate (t) and adult inbreeding coefficient (F) are key parameters in mating
81 ta, and among inbred individuals of the same inbreeding coefficient (F), those that die early are mor
82 t (IBDG) is predicted better by the pedigree inbreeding coefficient (FP) or by genomic (marker-based)
83 gree, finding strong concordance between the inbreeding coefficient and heterozygosity measured at 13
84  success in both sexes, and between maternal inbreeding coefficient and offspring survival.
85 of our proposed method by applying it to the inbreeding coefficient computation.
86                              We compared the inbreeding coefficient estimated using known height asso
87 rogram BORICE (Bayesian Outcrossing Rate and Inbreeding Coefficient Estimation) that effectively esti
88 al and joint posterior distributions for the inbreeding coefficient in females and the male to female
89                                              Inbreeding coefficient indicated an overall 10% decrease
90 als given that every individual has the same inbreeding coefficient, F.
91 tion in nucleotide diversity, or increase in inbreeding coefficient, relative to history of exposure.
92 eeding date varied with female, but not male inbreeding coefficient, revealing direct, but not indire
93 rates, locus-specific dropout rates, and the inbreeding coefficient; and (3) successfully correct the
94 data, it is necessary to obtain estimates of inbreeding coefficients (F) for each individual before c
95 mes and across individuals, and estimates of inbreeding coefficients are subject to unexpected levels
96  the efficiency of our method for evaluating inbreeding coefficients as compared to previous methods
97  sheep population of St Kilda, using genomic inbreeding coefficients based on 37 037 single-nucleotid
98                                 In contrast, inbreeding coefficients calculated from a deep and compa
99 Cervus elaphus) in Scotland using individual inbreeding coefficients derived from dense Single-Nucleo
100             We observed significantly higher inbreeding coefficients for the height associated varian
101  Here, we present two methods for estimating inbreeding coefficients from NGS data based on an expect
102        However, the estimation of individual inbreeding coefficients in natural populations has been
103                                      Genomic inbreeding coefficients may resolve the long-standing pa
104 ser Cakile maritima has replaced an earlier, inbreeding, colonizer Cakile edentula (Brassicaceae).
105 rate that a careful choice of the measure of inbreeding combined with LDMS stratification improves bo
106 expression of lethal recessive alleles under inbreeding conditions in wild populations.
107 nt metabolites, suggesting that variation in inbreeding could be a predictor of defence trait variati
108 contribute to variability in the strength of inbreeding depression (ID) observed across adverse envir
109 nbreeding measures commonly used to estimate inbreeding depression (ID).
110 ctions with insects can increase or decrease inbreeding depression (the loss of fitness due to self-f
111 se data to determine the extent and cause of inbreeding depression across other plant genomes.
112 find strong support for interactions between inbreeding depression and environmental variation compar
113                              We investigated inbreeding depression and genetic load in a small (N(e)
114      Here, we investigate sex determination, inbreeding depression and inbreeding avoidance in Neodip
115               Siring probability also showed inbreeding depression and increased with male age, while
116                                              Inbreeding depression and lack of genetic diversity in i
117 tically established, despite being linked to inbreeding depression and sexual selection.
118  species may be particularly at risk because inbreeding depression and stochastic fluctuations in mal
119                             The magnitude of inbreeding depression as expressed in the field can be e
120 ought to increase relative female fitness is inbreeding depression avoidance, the magnitude of which
121                 We investigated evidence for inbreeding depression by environment interactions in nin
122 depression." There is mounting evidence that inbreeding depression can be exacerbated by environmenta
123 ns and compared mean fitness, heterosis, and inbreeding depression for eight large and eight small po
124                         We found significant inbreeding depression for germination rate (delta=0.33),
125 gest evidence to date of an HFC being due to inbreeding depression in a natural population lacking a
126                          Here we investigate inbreeding depression in a range of life history traits
127 resolve the long-standing paucity of data on inbreeding depression in adult traits and total fitness.
128 and suggest that, to date, the prevalence of inbreeding depression in adult traits may have been unde
129         We also confirm previous findings of inbreeding depression in birth weight and juvenile survi
130 y, which revealed similar starting levels of inbreeding depression in both breeding systems, but also
131 ing) influence the experimental evolution of inbreeding depression in Caenorhabditis elegans.
132 and comparatively complete pedigree detected inbreeding depression in juvenile survival, but not in a
133                     There was no significant inbreeding depression in most traits due to one generati
134 eding provide a powerful tool for evaluating inbreeding depression in natural populations, and sugges
135  study were to: (1) quantify the strength of inbreeding depression in North-American populations of A
136 t tool for mitigating detrimental effects of inbreeding depression in small, inbred populations, but
137 ny genetic disorders in humans and producing inbreeding depression in the majority of sexually reprod
138 y play an important role as a buffer against inbreeding depression in the offspring by alleviating th
139 um effective population size to avoid severe inbreeding depression in the short term is of the order
140             Determining the genetic basis of inbreeding depression is important for understanding the
141    Understanding the genetic architecture of inbreeding depression is important in the context of the
142         Experimental studies often find that inbreeding depression is more severe in harsh environmen
143                                              Inbreeding depression is of major concern for the conser
144 th America except in southern Florida, where inbreeding depression led to reproductive failure [3-5].
145     Therefore, we identify two ways by which inbreeding depression may be underestimated in studies o
146  Taken together, these findings suggest that inbreeding depression negatively impacts the overall pat
147                                              Inbreeding depression occurs when inbred individuals exp
148                                              Inbreeding depression refers to lower fitness among offs
149         We observed preliminary evidence for inbreeding depression related to stress caused by fungal
150 non-lethal mutations, reducing the amount of inbreeding depression relative to that expected without
151         Together, these results suggest that inbreeding depression stemming from CSD has shaped matin
152 nding inconvertible evidence of the cause of inbreeding depression still presents a difficult challen
153  large populations (mean = 7%, SE = 27); and inbreeding depression was lower, although not significan
154 terious mutations, reducing mean fitness and inbreeding depression within populations and increasing
155 anscription play a role in hybrid vigour and inbreeding depression, and also in the absence of parent
156 scue in facilitating adaptation and reducing inbreeding depression, and suggest that demographic resc
157 luding the rate of adaptation, the extent of inbreeding depression, and the load of deleterious mutat
158 levels of inbreeding and reduced fitness via inbreeding depression, even as the population remained d
159 inance was responsible for the observed high inbreeding depression, heterozygote advantage could not
160                      The cost of inbreeding (inbreeding depression, ID) is an important variable in t
161 and improvements in biomedical correlates of inbreeding depression, provide strong evidence that gene
162 t in captivity may decrease the intensity of inbreeding depression, relative to the stressful conditi
163 as the potential to moderate the severity of inbreeding depression, which in turn may favor inbreedin
164 fects on viability, are contributing to this inbreeding depression.
165  to strong genetic drift and at high risk of inbreeding depression.
166 lations have rendered the species at risk of inbreeding depression.
167 als dynamic genome evolution and hotspots of inbreeding depression.
168 aphroditic selfing rates and the strength of inbreeding depression.
169 ay express recessive genetic load and suffer inbreeding depression.
170  S-linked genetic load compared with overall inbreeding depression.
171 itland approach for field-based estimates of inbreeding depression.
172 while simultaneously estimating sex-specific inbreeding depression.
173 or inviable, sl-CSD can generate substantial inbreeding depression.
174 ficient, revealing direct, but not indirect, inbreeding depression.
175 eduction in fitness-related traits known as "inbreeding depression." There is mounting evidence that
176  lower fertility; (ii) offspring suffer from inbreeding depression; (iii) parents have more grandchil
177                                    Moreover, inbreeding disrupted growth trait responses to damage, i
178 versity remained high, suggesting occasional inbreeding does not impair local population persistence.
179 ges in population size, arbitrary amounts of inbreeding, dominance and distributions of selective eff
180 ing season while reducing the risk of hidden inbreeding due to related founders from the same habitat
181                        Further, we show that inbreeding effects on breeding date can also be sex spec
182 ct) and male (indirect) additive genetic and inbreeding effects on breeding date, and estimated the c
183 eeding, indicating a phytohormonal basis for inbreeding effects on growth and defence trait regulatio
184                    Our results indicate that inbreeding effects on plant-herbivore interactions are m
185 nagement methods are performed, one avoiding inbreeding (equalisation of parental contributions (EC))
186 ual maturity provides evidence that realized inbreeding, estimated from a high density of markers spr
187 ed and pollen dispersal can create localized inbreeding even within outcrossing plants.
188                                   First, via inbreeding experiments and flow cytometry, we demonstrat
189  African American cohort had a low degree of inbreeding (F ~ 0.006).
190 gether, this evidence strongly suggests that inbreeding, favored by postdomestication selection for c
191 land plants, and the significance of extreme inbreeding for fern evolution has been a subject of deba
192 en -2.3 and -5.2 phenotypic SDs for complete inbreeding; [Formula: see text]).
193 27 individuals of varying levels of apparent inbreeding from 6 human populations.
194 ariation to facilitate adaptation and reduce inbreeding (genetic rescue).
195                                              Inbreeding had negative effects, whereas outbreeding gen
196  (SI) and subsequent mating system shifts to inbreeding has intrigued evolutionary geneticists for de
197 onsequences of mating system variation (e.g. inbreeding) have been studied for at least 200 years, ye
198 ddition, we describe how individual maternal inbreeding histories inferred by BORICE may prove useful
199 Here, we present a new method for estimating inbreeding IBD tracts from low coverage NGS data.
200 retical examination of the genomic effect of inbreeding in a forest tree and provides an approach to
201 nean for I. fasciculata, with high levels of inbreeding in all locations and bottleneck signs in most
202 lity (SI) is a biological mechanism to avoid inbreeding in allogamous plants.
203  mechanism to prevent self-fertilization and inbreeding in higher plants and also is known to utilize
204 enetically controlled system used to prevent inbreeding in higher plants.
205  genetically controlled mechanism to prevent inbreeding in higher plants.
206 ntal inbreeding only, the amount of observed inbreeding in natural populations is generally low compa
207 ted activities of CHT and GLU in response to inbreeding in plants from 13 Ragged Robin (Lychnis flos-
208 to intrinsic genetic stress brought about by inbreeding in some populations depending on the allele f
209 nvestigated both long distance dispersal and inbreeding in the bird's nest fungus Cyathus stercoreus,
210 ect of parental care on the fitness costs of inbreeding in the burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloide
211 st diversity that is related to the level of inbreeding in the population.
212 nificant evidence of variation in individual inbreeding in this population, we found no associations
213 are neither a peculiarity of cultivation nor inbreeding in Z. mays.
214                                  The cost of inbreeding (inbreeding depression, ID) is an important v
215 idence indicate that CentC loss is linked to inbreeding, including (i) CEN10 of temperate lineages, p
216                                      Because inbreeding increases the probability of producing diploi
217 ic acid were all significantly reduced under inbreeding, indicating a phytohormonal basis for inbreed
218 sity to elucidate how ancestry, kinship, and inbreeding interact in three populations with different
219               We assess the impact of taking inbreeding into account when calling genotypes or estima
220 llen donors occur, an increase in biparental inbreeding is a potential problem.
221                   Quantifying the effects of inbreeding is critical to characterizing the genetic arc
222                   Thus, measuring individual inbreeding is crucial for ecology, evolution and conserv
223  ferns to date that the capacity for extreme inbreeding is prevalent in this lineage, and we discuss
224 e population size, rather than just avoiding inbreeding, is a critical factor for preventing the accu
225 lo has been associated with higher levels of inbreeding, leading to an increase in the prevalence of
226 utcrossing) to self-compatibility (increased inbreeding) leads to the evolution of an inducible (vs.
227 n, they also appear to be constrained by the inbreeding-like effect of loss of heterozygosity that ac
228 e evaluate the effects of genetic purging of inbreeding load in small populations, assuming genetic m
229 that genetic purging efficiently removes the inbreeding load of both lethal and non-lethal mutations,
230 d two past bottlenecks that resulted in some inbreeding load.
231                        We show that, for the inbreeding loads considered, CM leads to unacceptably hi
232                             When there is no inbreeding loop in the pedigree, the Elston-Stewart algo
233                                 If there are inbreeding loops in the pedigree, we recommend the Bayes
234 ork algorithm that copes with pedigrees with inbreeding loops without losing calculation precision on
235 ozygotes for strongly deleterious mutations, inbreeding magnifies the occurrence of mildly deleteriou
236                                              Inbreeding (mating between relatives) can dramatically r
237 sequent phenotypic changes in inbred plants, inbreeding may alter plant-insect interactions.
238                                     Although inbreeding may facilitate colonization by the fungus, it
239 trengths and shortcomings of three SNP-based inbreeding measures commonly used to estimate inbreeding
240 of wheat hybrids is difficult because of the inbreeding nature of wheat and the lack of a practical f
241 etics because they bypass the generations of inbreeding needed for fixation of recessive mutations.
242 t record differences in genetic diversity or inbreeding, nor did we record any differences between ad
243 s, such as the loss of genetic diversity and inbreeding on an evolutionary timescale.
244                   We examined the effects of inbreeding on constitutive and herbivore-induced volatil
245 ess well studied is the effect of biparental inbreeding on female fitness.
246 nging, and, consequently, the full effect of inbreeding on fitness remains unclear.
247                          The total effect of inbreeding on lifetime breeding success (LBS) was substa
248 orophyte level, we observed a weak effect of inbreeding on offspring fitness, but no effect of brood
249   We tested the consequences of experimental inbreeding on phenotypic plasticity in resistance and gr
250 de novel information on the effects of plant inbreeding on plant-enemy interactions on a biochemical
251 derlying genetic variation in the effects of inbreeding on plant-insect interactions and the conseque
252  gametophytic selfing, is an extreme form of inbreeding only possible in homosporous groups.
253           First, for species with biparental inbreeding only, the amount of observed inbreeding in na
254 ession because of either an individual's own inbreeding or maternal inbreeding.
255 ctivity do not undergo dramatic changes upon inbreeding or outcrossing.
256 necks (that is, founder effects), biparental inbreeding or self-fertilization, any of which might inc
257 implications of these diverse mechanisms for inbreeding/outbreeding balance regulation.
258 ozygosity and an upward bias in estimates of inbreeding, owing to mistaken classifications of heteroz
259 dual variations that probably reflect recent inbreeding patterns, with higher values occurring more o
260 et of PEGs maintains functional roles in the inbreeding plant Arabidopsis that become evident upon de
261 but only two, S1 and S19, are shared by most inbreeding populations.
262                                We find that: inbreeding promotes paternal genome elimination in the h
263 ults demonstrate that SNP-based estimates of inbreeding provide a powerful tool for evaluating inbree
264 wever, complex mating schemes and systematic inbreeding raise substantial computational difficulties.
265 aculatum, we measured selfing and biparental inbreeding rates in four populations and the spatial gen
266 ure was found in all populations, biparental inbreeding rates were low and only differed between sexe
267  levels of herbivore or pathogen damage, but inbreeding reduced CHT activity in these populations dis
268                                              Inbreeding reduced phenolic expression both qualitativel
269                                              Inbreeding reduced the ability of plants to up-regulate
270 arwin was one of the first to recognize that inbreeding reduces evolutionary fitness.
271                                      Because inbreeding results in elevated homozygosity, greater exp
272 athematical model to determine how degree of inbreeding, sex determination, genomic location, pattern
273 ds aimed at enhancing purging by intentional inbreeding should not be generally advised in captive br
274 ive size, with limited kinship and levels of inbreeding similar to HG populations.
275 rived from interspecific comparisons between inbreeding species and their outcrossing relatives, wher
276                                       In the inbreeding species Arabidopsis thaliana, both paternal a
277 ned the joint influence of maternal care and inbreeding status on fitness-related offspring traits to
278 t this, Hymenoptera with traits that promote inbreeding, such as gregariousness, may evolve one or mo
279 tain gorilla population has led to extensive inbreeding, such that individuals are typically homozygo
280 utcrossed (t(m)=1.02) with little biparental inbreeding (t(m)-t(s)=-0.005) and an average of 5.4 effe
281  but it may also increase the probability of inbreeding that can compromise persistence.
282            We detected significant levels of inbreeding through heterozygote deficiencies at four loc
283 00) and experienced low levels of biparental inbreeding (tm-ts=0.00-0.04).
284 breeding depression, which in turn may favor inbreeding tolerance and influence the evolution of mati
285 notyping can be done in the F1 generation by inbreeding two injected founder fish, significantly redu
286                                              Inbreeding typically reduces fitness.
287        It is more common in association with inbreeding, under male heterogamety, in males, and in th
288 s data set shows that the extent of apparent inbreeding varies across chromosomes and across individu
289 ternative strategies of sexual reproduction (inbreeding vs. outcrossing) have divergent effects on po
290                          However, successful inbreeding was rare, and genetic diversity remained high
291 neage bred endogamously and, despite intense inbreeding, was ecologically successful and showed trans
292 ossible to obtain detailed information about inbreeding when a relatively small set of whole-genome s
293 results accord with a hypothesis that recent inbreeding, which generates long ROH, enables rare delet
294 her these PR proteins are also influenced by inbreeding, which has been suggested to constitute intri
295 ns, they show increased but varied levels of inbreeding, which result in reduced fitness.
296 dentified mating type bias strongly promotes inbreeding, which we consider to be a potential speciati
297 ity, thereby avoiding deleterious effects of inbreeding while maintaining enough variation from which
298  induced responses is negatively affected by inbreeding, with implications for fragmented populations
299 to the distribution of genetic diversity and inbreeding, with northern populations having the highest
300 t to extinction and maintained fitness under inbreeding, with some families continuing to survive aft
301                               There was more inbreeding within pasture trees (outcrossing=0.828+/-0.0

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