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Evolution and the Genetics of Populations. Vol. 2. The Theory of Gene Frequencies

P. M. Sheppard, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1971 - 
- Vol. 40, Iss: 1, pp 266
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This article is published in Journal of Animal Ecology.The article was published on 1971-02-01. It has received 76 citations till now.

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The Ecology and Evolution of Seed Dispersal: A Theoretical Perspective

TL;DR: In this article, a review of the development of seed dispersal models can be found, and some suggestions for furthest reaching the future are provided, as well as suggestions for how to incorporate these models into models of the implications of dispersal.
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Analysis of Two Genetic Models for the Innate Components of Colony Odor in Social Hymenoptera

TL;DR: Two models for the inheritance of the innate components of colony odor in social Hymenoptera are proposed, including the Gestalt model and the Individualistic model; a general inbreeding test is proposed to estimate the number of loci involved in colony odor.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparison of distances flown by different visitors to flowers of the same species

TL;DR: There is no evidence that flight characteristics depend on anything as straightforward as whether flower visitors have high or low energetic requirements, and all the visitors to a given plant species fly similar, short distances between successively visited flowers and plants.
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Mapping Genes through the Use of Linkage Disequilibrium Generated by Genetic Drift: ‘Drift Mapping’ in Small Populations with No Demographic Expansion

TL;DR: The dynamics of linkage disequilibrium in populations which have not undergone a demographic expansion are described and it is proposed that common disease alleles might be more efficiently identified by drift mapping – linkage diseqilibrium mapping in small, old populations of constant size where the disequ equilibrium is the result of genetic drift, not founder effect.
Journal ArticleDOI

Association studies for quantitative traits in structured populations

TL;DR: This report generalizes genomic control to quantitative traits (QT) and multilocus models, and shows that GC controls spurious associations in reasonable settings of population substructure for QT models, including gene‐gene interaction.
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