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1 c exchanges scattered among regions evolving asexually.
2 oid, free-living, amoeboid cells that divide asexually.
3 r organisms that reproduce both sexually and asexually.
4 parasites and that bdelloid rotifers evolved asexually.
5 ng whether seeds can be produced sexually or asexually.
6 eterozygous diploid organism that reproduces asexually.
7      If, as it seems, bdelloids have evolved asexually, an equality of bdelloid and monogonont substi
8 types is necessary in animals that reproduce asexually and form large clonal populations such as cora
9 l of hybrids, F(1) individuals can reproduce asexually and form long-lived, potentially immortal hybr
10 ine that T.b. gambiense is evolving strictly asexually and is derived from a single progenitor, which
11                           Bacteria reproduce asexually and pass on a single genome copied from the pa
12 ial ascidian Botryllus schlosseri propagates asexually and sexually, presumably from pools of stem ce
13 ae (e.g., Acanthamoeba, Naegleria) reproduce asexually and therefore, according to popular doctrine,
14 ossing, despite being able to reproduce also asexually and/or via selfing.
15 ts: mammals or birds, in which they multiply asexually, and mosquitoes with sexual multiplication.
16 sms capable of reproducing both sexually and asexually are expected to mate more frequently when stre
17 rrhizal (AM) fungi (Glomeromycota) reproduce asexually, are multinucleate, and have high genetic vari
18                             The fungus grows asexually as a budding yeast.
19                                 Agents spawn asexually at rates that depend on their current fitness,
20   Our findings suggest that bdelloids evolve asexually but exchange DNA horizontally both within and
21 tudied model species, both nuclei can divide asexually, but only germline nuclei undergo meiosis and
22                 Toxoplasma gondii replicates asexually by a unique internal budding process character
23              Hieracium praealtum forms seeds asexually by apomixis.
24 small aquatic worms that typically reproduce asexually by fission.
25          Kalanchoe daigremontiana reproduces asexually by generating numerous plantlets on its leaf m
26                        These fungi reproduce asexually by production of conidia and chlamydospores an
27 morphologically indistinguishable from their asexually committed counterparts, defining their charact
28 cycle that begins with invasion by a single, asexually committed merozoite and ends, 48 hours later,
29  colony synchronously dies every week as the asexually derived generation of buds reaches functional
30 cess coincides temporally with the growth of asexually derived primary buds, that harbor a small numb
31 osquitoes requires a developmental switch in asexually dividing blood-stage parasites to sexual repro
32  applied to large and diverse collectives of asexually dividing microbes and discuss how the tools of
33 ly prevent both disease pathology, caused by asexually dividing parasites, as well as transmission wh
34 re important drivers of increased fitness in asexually evolving populations.
35 rescent markers to visualize the dynamics of asexually evolving yeast populations.
36 n regenerate missing body parts or reproduce asexually, generating all cell types in adult stages.
37       However, in animals that can propagate asexually, germline precursors can originate in adults.
38 ompensated by their proficiency to reproduce asexually in a wider range of environmental conditions.
39 , the causative agents of malaria, replicate asexually in red blood cells (RBCs) of their vertebrate
40 maternal effects because they will reproduce asexually in the lab.
41              The malaria parasite replicates asexually in the red blood cells of its vertebrate host
42 ucing species to sometimes produce offspring asexually - is known from a wide range of ordinarily sex
43 aphnia exposed to EMS (F(0) individuals) can asexually produce unique mutant offspring (F(1)) for at
44 ant that has no queens and where workers lay asexually produced eggs that develop into new workers.
45 rile hermaphrodite that may be propagated by asexually produced spores or that may reproduce sexually
46 evere developmental defects were observed in asexually propagating tissues, reflecting a pathologic s
47                                         Many asexually-propagating marine invertebrates can survive e
48 proteins, is essential for the commitment of asexually replicating forms to sexual development in Pla
49               Rodents are a natural host for asexually replicating forms, whereas cats serve as the d
50  the glucose-rich milieu of red blood cells, asexually replicating malarial parasites mainly rely on
51                                 Synchronized asexually replicating parasites are induced for gametocy
52                                              Asexually replicating populations of Plasmodium parasite
53 The Giardia life cycle alternates between an asexually replicating vegetative form and an infectious
54  or time-dependent rates, a common model for asexually reproducing cell populations.
55 sulted in a combination of sterile males and asexually reproducing females.
56 ental evidence that senescence occurs in the asexually reproducing marine oligochaete Paranais litora
57                                          How asexually reproducing organisms maintain genetic diversi
58 , we consider a simple model of evolution in asexually reproducing populations which considers adapta
59 d on the basis of their activity against the asexually reproducing red blood cell stages of the paras
60 ariety of different types of organisms, from asexually reproducing single-cell organisms to chromosom
61 ed by the same pathways that govern aging of asexually reproducing yeast cells.
62 results apply to a general class of haploid, asexually reproducing, spatially structured populations.
63 t to the same core evolutionary processes as asexually reproducing, unicellular organisms.
64 ranscriptomes of the highly regenerative and asexually-reproducing annelid Pristina leidyi.
65 ce a substantial fraction of their offspring asexually, so long as the number of sites under selectio
66 ar and tropical Africa and reproduces mainly asexually through aerial bulbils and underground tubers,
67  frequency with which offspring are produced asexually, through self-fertilization and through sexual
68 ale their adult body size(6,7) and reproduce asexually, via transverse fission, in a size-dependent m
69 colonies produce workers sexually but queens asexually, whereas monogyne colonies produce both castes
70 ce in one of two ways: either they reproduce asexually, with one individual producing a new individua
71  the malaria parasite invades and replicates asexually within circulating erythrocytes.
72 female offspring may be produced sexually or asexually within colonies [8-13].
73 Plasmodium falciparum invades and replicates asexually within human erythrocytes.
74 lasmodium falciparum to invade and replicate asexually within human red blood cells (RBCs) is central
75 mission stages (versus stages that replicate asexually within the host) is synonymous with reproducti
76                  Malaria parasites replicate asexually within their mammalian hosts as haploid cells
77 ude that the ability of females to reproduce asexually without males reduces selection constraints on