Artificial Selection
When humans purposefully apply selection pressures to populations,
Selective Breeding
humans use animal breeding and plant breeding to selectively develop particular phenotypic traits by choosing which typically animal or plant males and females will sexually reproduce and have offspring together.
Inbreeding
Mating of organisms closely related by ancestry. It goes against the biological aim of mating, which is the shuffling of DNA
Outbreeding
Crossing between different breeds and no common ancestors
Hybridisation
The process of mating organisms of different varieties or species to create a hybrid
Inbreeding depression
reduced biological fitness in a given population as a result of inbreeding, or breeding of related individuals
Biological fitness
an organism’s ability to survive and perpetuate its genetic material. due to increased homozygosity
Hybrid Vigour
improved activity and survival of hybrid offspring
Breeding Cattle with High Milk Yields
Breeding disease-resistant varieties of wheat and rice
Breeding dwarf varieties of crop plants
Inbreeding and hybridisation in maize
Difference between natural and artificial selection