Evolutionary Applications
© John Wiley & Sons Ltd
All articles accepted from 14 August 2012 are published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. Articles accepted before this date were published under the agreement as stated in the final article.

Edited By: Louis Bernatchez
Impact Factor: 4.916
ISI Journal Citation Reports © Ranking: 2011: 9/45 (Evolutionary Biology)
Online ISSN: 1752-4571
Editors' Choice
Editors' Choice
Riparian ecosystems in human cancers
Khalid O. Alfarouk, Muntaser E. Ibrahim, Robert A. Gatenby and Joel S. Brown
From forest and agro-ecosystems to the microecosystems of the human body: what can landscape ecology tell us about tumor growth, metastasis, and treatment options?
Simon P. Daoust, Lenore Fahrig, Amanda E. Martin and Frédéric Thomas
On-farm dynamic management of genetic diversity: the impact of seed diffusions and seed saving practices on a population-variety of bread wheat
Mathieu Thomas, Elise Demeulenaere, Julie C. Dawson, Abdul Rehman Khan, Nathalie Galic, Sophie Jouanne-Pin, Carine Remoue, Christophe Bonneuil and Isabelle Goldringer
Applying ecological and evolutionary theory to cancer: a long and winding road
Frédéric Thomas et al.
Drugs that target pathogen public goods are robust against evolved drug resistance
John Pepper
Genomic regions in crop–wild hybrids of lettuce are affected differently in different environments: implications for crop breeding
Yorike Hartman, Danny A. P. Hooftman, Brigitte Uwimana, Clemens C. M. van de Wiel, Marinus J. M. Smulders, Richard G. F. Visser and Peter H. van Tienderen
Exposure to an environmental estrogen breaks down sexual isolation between native and invasive species
Jessica L. Ward and Michael J. Blum
Read the press release about this article here >
Select Press coverage for 'Exposure to an environmental estrogen breaks down sexual isolation between native and invasive species':
Mating with the wrong species: plastics make it possible (Scientific American Blog)
Plastic ingredient makes fish court other species (New Scientist)
Evolution of critical day length for diapause induction enables range expansion of Diorhabda carinulata, a biological control agent against tamarisk (Tamarix spp.)
Dan W. Bean, Peter Dalin and Tom L. Dudley
Evolving while invading: rapid adaptive evolution in juvenile development time for a biological control organism colonizing a high-elevation environment Peter B. McEvoy, Kimberley M. Higgs, Eric M. Coombs, Evrim Karaçetin and Leigh Ann Starcevich
The biology of small, introduced populations, with special reference to biological control
Xavier Fauvergue, Elodie Vercken, Thibaut Malausa and Ruth A. Hufbauer
Host specificity in biological control: insights from opportunistic pathogens
Jacques Brodeur
Scanning SNPs from a large set of expressed genes to assess the impact of artificial selection on the undomesticated genetic diversity of white spruce
Marie-Claire Namroud, Jean Bousquet, Trevor Doerksen and Jean Beaulieu
Reproductive performance of alternative male phenotypes of growth hormone transgenic Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
Darek T. R. Moreau, Corinne Conway, Ian A. Fleming
Select press coverage for 'Reproductive performance of alternative male phenotypes of growth hormone transgenic Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)':
GM salmon could breed in wild, study shows (CBC.ca)
Male GM salmon can breed with wild species, researchers fin (Montreal Gazette)
Study: GM salmon could breed in wild (Alaska Dispatch)
Transgenic salmon could infect wild populations: study (FIS)
Genetically modified salmon can breed with wild salmon (California Watch)

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