Between a rock and a hard place: evaluating the relative risks of inbreeding and outbreeding for conservation and management
University of Southern California
Abstract
As populations become increasingly fragmented, managers are often faced with the dilemma that intentional hybridization might save a population from inbreeding depression but it might also induce outbreeding depression. While empirical evidence for inbreeding depression is vastly greater than that for outbreeding depression, the available data suggest that risks of outbreeding, particularly in the second generation, are on par with the risks of inbreeding. Predicting the relative risks in any particular situation is complicated by variation among taxa, characters being measured, level of divergence between hybridizing populations, mating history, environmental conditions and the potential for inbreeding and…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 13.64
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 147
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Outbreeding depression
- Inbreeding depression
- Inbreeding
- Biology
- Population
- Ecology
- Evolutionary biology
- Demography
- Life in Land