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Biometrical Genetics The Study of Continuous Variation at Meripustak

Biometrical Genetics The Study of Continuous Variation by Kenneth Mather, John L. Jinks , Chapman and Hall

Books from same Author: Kenneth Mather, John L. Jinks

Books from same Publisher: Chapman and Hall

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  • General Information  
    Author(s)Kenneth Mather, John L. Jinks
    PublisherChapman and Hall
    ISBN9780412228902
    Pages396
    BindingPaperback
    LanguageEnglish
    Publish YearJuly 1982

    Description

    Chapman and Hall Biometrical Genetics The Study of Continuous Variation by Kenneth Mather, John L. Jinks

    The properties of continuous variation are basic to the theory of evolution and to the practice of plant and animal improvement. Yet the genetical study of continuous variation has lagged far behind that of discontinuous variation. The reason for this situation is basically methodological. Mendel gave us not merely his principles of heredity, but also a method of experiment by which these principles could be tested over a wider range ofliving species, and extended into the elaborate genetical theory of today. The power of this tool is well attested by the speed with which genetics has grown. In less than fifty years, it has not only developed a theoretical structure which is unique in the biological sciences, but has established a union with nuclear cytology so close that the two have become virtually a single science offering us a new approach to problems so diverse as those of evolution, development, disease, cellular chemistry and human welfare. Much of this progress would have been impossible and all would have been slower without the Mendelian method of recognizing and using unit differences in the genetic materials. These great achievements should not, however, blind us to the limitations inherent in the method itself. It depends for its success on the ability to assign the individuals to classes whose clear phenotypic distinctions reveal the underlying genetic differences._x000D_ Table of contents :- _x000D_ 1. The Genetical Foundation.- 2. Characters.- 3. Sources of Variation: Scales.- 4. Components of Means: Additive and Dominance Effects.- 5. Components of Means: Interaction and Heterosis.- 6. Components of Variation.- 7. Interaction and Linkage.- 8. Randomly Breeding Populations.- 9. Diallels.- 10. Departures from Simple Disomic Inheritance.- 11. Genes, Effective Factors and Progress under Selection.- 12. Experiments and Concepts.- References._x000D_



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