Marine diatoms Coscinodiscus granii: They live in open waters such as the North Sea. Under the microscope, many single-celled diatoms can be seen, some of which are healthy, while others are infected by an egg fungus. The zoospores that the fungus forms for reproduction can be seen as small dots.

Publications of J. K. Mckay

Journal Article (4)

2003
Journal Article
Mckay, J. K.; Richards, J. H.; Mitchell-Olds, T.: Genetics of drought adaptation in Arabidopsis thaliana: I. Pleiotropy contributes to genetic correlations among ecological traits. Molecular Ecology 12 (5), pp. 1137 - 1151 (2003)
2002
Journal Article
Mckay, J. K.; Latta, R. G.: Adaptive population divergence: markers, QTL and traits. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 17 (6), pp. 285 - 291 (2002)
2001
Journal Article
Mckay, J. K.; Bishop, J. G.; Lin, J. Z.; Richards, J. H.; Sala, A.; Mitchell-Olds, T.: Local adaptation across a climatic gradient despite small effective population size in the rare sapphire rockcress. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 268 (1477), pp. 1715 - 1721 (2001)
1998
Journal Article
Bradshaw, H. D.; Otto, K. G.; Frewen, B. E.; Mckay, J. K.; Schemske, D. W.: Quantitative trait loci affecting differences in floral morphology between two species of monkeyflower (Mimulus). Genetics 149 (1), pp. 367 - 382 (1998)

Thesis - PhD (1)

2002
Thesis - PhD
McKay, J.: Ecological genetics of local adaptation: Climatic races in Arabidopsis thaliana and Arabis fecunda. Dissertation, University of Montana, Missoula (2002)
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