Citations:panmictic

English citations of panmictic

  • 1933 March-April, TH. Dobzhansky, “Geographical vartation in lady-beetles”, in The American Naturalist[1], volume 67, number 709, page 123:
    A segregation of a panmictic population into two groups differing from each other in a complex of genes encounters considerable difficulties on its way.
  • 1999 February 5, Bruce R. Levin et al., “Population Biology, Evolution, and Infectious Disease: Convergence and Synthesis”, in Science[2], volume 283, number 5403, →DOI, pages 806–809:
    The degree of clonality varies among different species: Some, like E. coli and Salmonella, are highly clonal, whereas the populations of other species like Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Bacillus subtilis are effectively panmictic (3 ).
  • 1999 November 5, Henrik Kaessmann et al., “Extensive Nuclear DNA Sequence Diversity Among Chimpanzees”, in Science[3], volume 286, number 5442, →DOI, pages 1159–1162:
    The calculation was performed assuming a global panmictic population of constant population size, the maximum likelihood value of , and a generation time of 20 years for both chimpanzees and humans.
  • 1999 December 24, Philip Awadalla et al., “Linkage Disequilibrium and Recombination in Hominid Mitochondrial DNA”, in Science[4], volume 286, number 5449, →DOI, pages 2524–2525:
    The fact that we obtained significant evidence for recombination in five out of the six hominid data sets we analyzed makes it no longer reasonable to assert that mitochondria do not undergo genetic recombination, particularly because the test we used is not powerful even in a panmictic population (25 ) and patterns of LD with distance can easily be hidden by LD generated by population subdivision (26 ).
  • 2001 January 12, Simon R. Thorrold et al., “Natal Homing in a Marine Fish Metapopulation”, in Science[5], volume 291, number 5502, →DOI, pages 297–299:
    Genetic data from weakfish implied a single, panmictic population from Florida to Maine (12 ).
  • 2001 September 21, Marie L. Hale et al., “Impact of Landscape Management on the Genetic Structure of Red Squirrel Populations”, in Science[6], volume 293, number 5538, →DOI, pages 2246–2248:
    The rapid movement of northern genes through the western population suggests that the original population of S. vulgaris, before human-made fragmentation, would probably have been a single relatively panmictic population.
  • 2001 October 5, Michael E. Grigg et al., “Success and Virulence in Toxoplasma as the Result of Sexual Recombination Between Two Distinct Ancestries”, in Science[7], volume 294, number 5540, →DOI, pages 161–165:
    These latter "rare" strains, isolated primarily from exotic species or geographically remote regions, might collectively represent a panmictic, diverse gene pool on which the species relies for its ability to expand into new niches.