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Heterosis

 
Heterosis

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Heterosis



 
 
Heterosis is a term used in genetics
Genetics

Genetics , a discipline of biology, is the science of heredity and Genetic variation in living organisms. The fact that living things inherit traits from their parents has been used since prehistoric times to improve crop plants and animals through selective breeding....
 and selective breeding
Selective breeding

Selective breeding in domesticated animals is the process of a Breeder developing a cultivated breed over time, and selecting qualities within individuals of the breed that will be best to pass on to the next generation....
. The term heterosis, also known as hybrid vigour or outbreeding enhancement, describes the increased strength of different characteristics in hybrids; the possibility to obtain a genetically superior individual by combining the virtues of its parents.

Heterosis is the opposite of inbreeding depression
Inbreeding depression

Inbreeding depression is reduced fitness in a given population as a result of breeding of related individuals. Breeding between closely related individuals, called inbreeding, results in more recessive deleterious traits manifesting themselves....
, which occurs with increasing homozygosity
Zygosity

In genetics, zygosity refers to the similarity or dissimilarity of the DNA sequences in specific coding segments, or genes, on the homologous chromosomes chromosomes of a zygote, or fertilisation ovum....
.






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Heterosis is a term used in genetics
Genetics

Genetics , a discipline of biology, is the science of heredity and Genetic variation in living organisms. The fact that living things inherit traits from their parents has been used since prehistoric times to improve crop plants and animals through selective breeding....
 and selective breeding
Selective breeding

Selective breeding in domesticated animals is the process of a Breeder developing a cultivated breed over time, and selecting qualities within individuals of the breed that will be best to pass on to the next generation....
. The term heterosis, also known as hybrid vigour or outbreeding enhancement, describes the increased strength of different characteristics in hybrids; the possibility to obtain a genetically superior individual by combining the virtues of its parents.

Mixedbreedface1 Wb
Heterosis is the opposite of inbreeding depression
Inbreeding depression

Inbreeding depression is reduced fitness in a given population as a result of breeding of related individuals. Breeding between closely related individuals, called inbreeding, results in more recessive deleterious traits manifesting themselves....
, which occurs with increasing homozygosity
Zygosity

In genetics, zygosity refers to the similarity or dissimilarity of the DNA sequences in specific coding segments, or genes, on the homologous chromosomes chromosomes of a zygote, or fertilisation ovum....
. The term often causes controversy, particularly in terms of the selective breeding of domestic animals, because it is sometimes believed that all crossbred plants or animals are genetically superior to their parents; this is true only in certain circumstances : when a hybrid is seen to be superior to its parents, this is known as hybrid vigor. When the opposite happens, and a hybrid inherits traits from their parents that makes them unfit for survival, the result is referred to as outbreeding depression
Outbreeding depression

In evolutionary biology, outbreeding depression refers to cases when offspring from cross-fertilization between individuals from different populations have lower fitness than progeny from crosses between individuals from the same population....
. Typical examples of this are crosses between wild and hatchery fish that have incompatible adaptations.

Genetic basis of heterosis


Two competing hypotheses, not necessarily mutually exclusive, have been developed to explain hybrid vigour:

  • Dominance hypothesis. The dominance hypothesis attributes the superiority of hybrids to the suppression of undesirable recessive alleles from one parent by dominant alleles from the other. It attributes the poor performance of inbred strains to loss of genetic diversity, with the strains becoming purely homozygous at many loci.
  • Overdominance hypothesis. Certain combinations of alleles that can be obtained by crossing two inbred strains are advantageous in the heterozygote
    Heterozygote advantage

    A heterozygote advantage describes the case in which the Zygosity genotype has a higher relative fitness than either the Zygosity dominant gene or homozygote recessive gene genotype....
    . The overdominance hypothesis attributes to heterozygote advantage the survival of many alleles that are recessive and harmful in homozygotes. It attributes the poor performance of inbred strains to a high percentage of these harmful recessives.


Hybrid corn

Nearly all the field corn now grown in the United States and most other developed nations
Developed country

The term developed country is used to describe countries that have a high level of development according to some criteria. Which criteria, and which countries are classified as being developed, is a contentious issue and there is fierce debate about this....
 is hybrid corn. Modern corn hybrids substantially outyield conventional cultivars and respond better to fertilization.

Heterosis in maize
Maize

Maize , known as corn in some countries, is a cereal domesticated in Mesoamerica and subsequently spread throughout the American continents....
 was famously demonstrated in the early 20th century by George H. Shull and Edward M. East after hybrid corn was invented by Dr. William James Beal of Michigan State University
Michigan State University

Michigan State University is a public university research university in East Lansing, Michigan, Michigan United States. Founded in 1855, it was the pioneer land-grant institution and served as a model for future land-grant colleges in the United States under the 1862 Morrill Land-Grant Colleges Act....
 based on work begun in 1879 at the urging of Charles Darwin
Charles Darwin

Charles Robert Darwin Royal Society was an English people natural history who realised and presented compelling evidence that all species of life have evolution over time from common descent, through the process he called natural selection....
. Dr. Beal's work led to the first published account of a field experiment
Field experiment

A field experiment applies the scientific method to experimentally examine an intervention in the real world rather than in the laboratory....
 demonstrating hybrid vigor in corn, by Eugene Davenport and Perry Holden, 1881. These various pioneers of botany and related fields showed that crosses of inbred lines made from a Southern dent and a Northern flint, respectively, showed substantial heterosis and outyielded conventional cultivars of that era. However, at that time such hybrids could not be economically made on a large scale for use by farmers. Donald F. Jones
Donald F. Jones

Donald Forsha Jones was a United States maize geneticist and practical corn breeder at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, New Haven....
 at the Connecticut
Connecticut

Connecticut is a U.S. state located in the New England region of the northeastern United States. The state borders New York to the west and south , Massachusetts to the north, and Rhode Island to the east....
 Agricultural Experiment Station
Agricultural experiment station

An agricultural experiment station is a research center that conducts scientific investigations to solve problems and suggest improvements in the food and agriculture industry....
, New Haven invented the first practical method of producing a high-yielding hybrid maize in 1914-1917. Jones' method produced a double-cross hybrid, which requires two crossing steps working from four distinct original inbred lines. Later work by corn breeders produced inbred lines with sufficient vigor for practical production of a commercial hybrid in a single step, the single-cross hybrids. Single-cross hybrids are made from just two original parent inbreds. They are generally more vigorous and also more uniform than the earlier double-cross hybrids. The process of creating these hybrids often involves detasseling
Detasseling

Detasseling is the act of removing the pollen-producing tassel from a maize plant and placing it on the ground. Detasseling is done to cross-breed, or Hybrid , two different varieties of corn....
.

Hybrid livestock

The concept of heterosis is also applied in the production of commercial livestock
Livestock

Livestock is the term used to refer to a domesticated animal intentionally reared in an agricultural setting to produce things such as food or fibre, or for its labour....
. In cattle, hybrids between Black Angus and Hereford
Hereford (cattle)

Hereford cattle are a widely used breed in temperate areas, mainly for Beef cattle production.Originally from Herefordshire, England , they are found in the temperate parts of Australia....
 produce a hybrid known as a “Black Baldy
Black Baldy

Black Baldy is a term used in Australia, New Zealand and North America for a type of beef cattle produced by crossing Hereford cattle with a solid black breed, usually Aberdeen Angus, often for the purpose of creating hybrid vigor....
.” In swine, “blue butts” are produced by the cross of Hampshire
Hampshire (pig)

The Hampshire pig is a domestic pig breed characterised by erect ears and a black body with a whitish band around the middle, covering the front legs....
 and Yorkshire. Other more exotic hybrids such as “beefalo
Beefalo

]Beefalo are a fertility Hybrid offspring of domestic cattle, Bos taurus, and the American Bison, Bison bison . The breed was created to combine the best characteristics of both animals with a view towards beef production....
” are also used for specialty markets.

Within poultry
Poultry

Poultry is the category of domesticated birds which some people keep for the purpose of collecting their egg , or kill for their meat and/or feathers....
, sex-linked genes have been used to create hybrids in which males and females can be sorted at one day old by color. Specific genes used for this are genes for barring and wing feather growth. Crosses of this sort create what are sold as Black Sex-links, Red Sex-links, and various other crosses that are known by trade names.

Commercial broilers are produced by crossing different strains of White Rocks and White Cornish, the Cornish providing a large frame and the Rocks providing the fast rate of gain. The hybrid vigor produced allows the production of uniform birds with a marketable carcass at 6-9 weeks of age.

Likewise, hybrids between different strains of White Leghorn are used to produce laying flocks that provide the majority white eggs
Egg (biology)

In most birds and reptiles, an egg is the zygote, resulting from fertilization of the ovum. To enable incubation the egg is usually kept within a favourable temperature range as it nourishes and protects the growing embryo....
 for sale in the United States.

See also

  • F1 hybrid
    F1 hybrid

    F1 hybrid is a term used in genetics and selective breeding. F1 stands for Filial 1, the first filial generation seeds/plants or animal offspring resulting from a cross mating of distinctly different parental types....