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Benoit Pujol

Researcher at University of Perpignan

Publications -  70
Citations -  3329

Benoit Pujol is an academic researcher from University of Perpignan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Antirrhinum majus. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 66 publications receiving 2905 citations. Previous affiliations of Benoit Pujol include PSL Research University & University of Toulouse.

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Beyond DNA: integrating inclusive inheritance into an extended theory of evolution

TL;DR: The evidence for such effects of epigenetic, ecological and cultural inheritance and parental effects, and methods that quantify the relative contributions of genetic and non-genetic heritability to the transmission of phenotypic variation across generations are reviewed.
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Reliable selfing rate estimates from imperfect population genetic data

TL;DR: It is shown here that, in the absence of gametic disequilibrium, the multilocus structure can be used to derive estimates of s independent of FIS and free of technical biases, which opens the way to make use of the ever‐growing number of published population genetic studies, in addition to the more demanding progeny‐array approaches, to investigate selfing rates.
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The evolutionary ecology of clonally propagated domesticated plants.

TL;DR: It is argued that widespread notions about their evolution under domestication are oversimplified, and that clonal propagated crops offer rich material for evolutionary studies, and how their mixed clonal/sexual reproductive systems function is explored.
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Reduced inbreeding depression after species range expansion

TL;DR: These findings expose a remarkable aspect of evolution at range margins, where a history of expansion can reverse the direction of selection on the mating system, providing a parsimonious explanation for the high incidence of selfing in marginal populations.
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Are Q(ST)-F(ST) comparisons for natural populations meaningful?

TL;DR: This article found that approximately half of the comparisons that use only data from wild populations confound phenotypic and genetic variation, and pointed out that an unbiased estimate of Q(ST) can be found using the so-called "animal model of quantitative genetics.