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Crop domestication as a step towards reproductive isolation.

Maud I TenaillonE BurbanStella HuynhA WojcikAnne-Céline ThuilletDomenica ManicacciPierre R GérardKarine AlixH BelcramA CornilleMarie L BraultRebecca StevensJ LagnelCatherine DogimontY VigourouxSylvain Glémin
Published in: American journal of botany (2023)
Speciation, Darwin's mystery of mysteries, is a continuous process that results in genomic divergence accompanied by the gradual increment of reproductive barriers between lineages. Since the beginning of research on the genetics of speciation, several questions have emerged such as: What are the genetic bases of incompatibilities? How many loci are necessary to prevent hybridization and how are they distributed along genomes? Can speciation occur despite gene flow and how common is ecological speciation? Early stages of divergence are key to understand the ecology and genetics of speciation, and semi-isolated species where hybrids can still be produced are particularly relevant This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • climate change
  • organic matter
  • gene expression
  • single molecule
  • genome wide association
  • genome wide analysis