Page 2: Research news on Reproductive Isolation

Reproductive isolation is a biological process that prevents gene flow between populations or species, thereby maintaining or promoting genetic divergence and speciation. It operates through prezygotic mechanisms, which inhibit mating or fertilization (e.g., temporal, ecological, behavioral, mechanical, and gametic isolation), and postzygotic mechanisms, which reduce the viability or fertility of hybrid offspring (e.g., hybrid inviability, sterility, or breakdown). These barriers can arise via natural selection, genetic drift, or chromosomal changes and are often reinforced when hybridization is maladaptive, ultimately stabilizing distinct evolutionary lineages.

Pangenome unlocks potential of barley's closest wild relative

Wild plants can contribute valuable genes to their domesticated relatives. Fertility barriers and a lack of genomic resources have hindered the effective use of crop-wild introgressions. An international research team led ...

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