Leonie Moyle
@speciationlab.bsky.social
Into evolution, genetics, reproduction. Immigrant (actual, and from the bird site). She/her.
I don't have a specific paper off the top of my head, but there might be examples of S-locus alleles repeatedly crossing species boundaries. Possibly also other loci under strong negative freq dependence (immunity alleles, and so forth)--in addition to resistance alleles ;)
November 6, 2025 at 11:14 AM
I don't have a specific paper off the top of my head, but there might be examples of S-locus alleles repeatedly crossing species boundaries. Possibly also other loci under strong negative freq dependence (immunity alleles, and so forth)--in addition to resistance alleles ;)
Reposted by Leonie Moyle
A test blimp that was aloft five miles from one of the Plumbbob nuclear tests in August 1957, deflated from the shock wave.
October 4, 2025 at 3:27 PM
A test blimp that was aloft five miles from one of the Plumbbob nuclear tests in August 1957, deflated from the shock wave.
That RI generally accumulates faster in plants? Definitely. That's why we should all be studying plant speciation 😉
(And, yes -- Berlin continues to generate good memories)
(And, yes -- Berlin continues to generate good memories)
September 24, 2025 at 8:26 AM
That RI generally accumulates faster in plants? Definitely. That's why we should all be studying plant speciation 😉
(And, yes -- Berlin continues to generate good memories)
(And, yes -- Berlin continues to generate good memories)