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Tuomas Hämälä

Researcher at University of Minnesota

Publications -  16
Citations -  313

Tuomas Hämälä is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Arabidopsis lyrata & Population. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 13 publications receiving 167 citations. Previous affiliations of Tuomas Hämälä include University of Oulu.

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Genomic patterns of local adaptation under gene flow in Arabidopsis lyrata.

TL;DR: This work uses locally adapted and phenotypically differentiated Arabidopsis lyrata populations from two altitudinal gradients in Norway to detect signatures of selection for local adaptation, and estimates patterns of lineage specific differentiation among these populations.
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Local adaptation and ecological differentiation under selection, migration, and drift in Arabidopsis lyrata.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that flowering time differentiation has contributed to adaptive divergence between these locally adapted populations and selection among these A. lyrata populations has resulted in local adaptation, despite the estimated potential of gene flow and drift to hinder differentiation.
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Genomic structural variants constrain and facilitate adaptation in natural populations of Theobroma cacao, the chocolate tree.

TL;DR: It is found that most SVs are deleterious and thus constrain adaptation in natural populations of Theobroma cacao, and empirical support is provided for a theoretical prediction that SVs, particularly inversions, increase genetic load through the accumulation of deleteriously nucleotide variants as a result of suppressed recombination.
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Role of seed germination in adaptation and reproductive isolation in Arabidopsis lyrata.

TL;DR: It is confirmed that seed germination has adaptive potential beyond the dormancy stage and that hybrid seed inviability can be one of the first reproductive barriers to arise during divergence.
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Pleiotropy facilitates local adaptation to distant optima in common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia)

TL;DR: The results suggest that highly connected genes may be targets of positive selection during environmental change, even though they likely experience strong purifying selection in stable selective environments.