Other evolutionary theory
- There have been reports that the molecular clock shows elevated rates at very short timescales. We found that this can be explained by the persistence of ancestral polymorphisms, and characterized the relevant timescales for both molecular clock and Ka/Ks data (Peterson & Masel 2009).
- I am interested in the mismatch between the assumed importance of genetic drift in evolution, and the absence of data supporting this role (Masel 2011, Masel in prep).
- I am currently working on the population genetics of “hard” selection, where population sizes can vary, and genotypes specify, at least in part, absolute fitness rather than only relative fitness.
- I have been thinking a lot about mutation load under sexual selection for a costly signalling trait lately, but haven’t started working on it yet.
Publications:
- Masel, J. Teaching Hardy‐Weinberg and genetic drift using just‐in‐time mathematics, in preparation.
- Masel, J. (2011) Genetic drift. Current Biology, 21(20), R837-R838
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- Peterson, G. I., & Masel, J. (2009). Quantitative prediction of molecular clock and Ka/Ks at short timescales. Mol Biol Evol. (PubMed)
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