Authors
Marco Todesco, Mariana A Pascual, Gregory L Owens, Katherine L Ostevik, Brook T Moyers, Sariel Hübner, Sylvia M Heredia, Min A Hahn, Celine Caseys, Dan G Bock, Loren H Rieseberg
Publication date
2016/8
Source
Evolutionary applications
Volume
9
Issue
7
Pages
892-908
Description
Hybridization may drive rare taxa to extinction through genetic swamping, where the rare form is replaced by hybrids, or by demographic swamping, where population growth rates are reduced due to the wasteful production of maladaptive hybrids. Conversely, hybridization may rescue the viability of small, inbred populations. Understanding the factors that contribute to destructive versus constructive outcomes of hybridization is key to managing conservation concerns. Here, we survey the literature for studies of hybridization and extinction to identify the ecological, evolutionary, and genetic factors that critically affect extinction risk through hybridization. We find that while extinction risk is highly situation dependent, genetic swamping is much more frequent than demographic swamping. In addition, human involvement is associated with increased risk and high reproductive isolation with reduced risk. Although climate …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Todesco, MA Pascual, GL Owens, KL Ostevik… - Evolutionary applications, 2016