Home

Postzygoticreduce

Postzygoticreduce is not a standard term in genetics or evolutionary biology. When used, it typically serves as informal shorthand for the concept of postzygotic fitness reduction—that is, declines in viability, fertility, or overall fitness that occur after fertilization. It may be encountered as a coined phrase or a keyword in discussions of hybridization, rather than as an established scientific label.

In a broad sense, postzygotic reduction refers to outcomes that arise after a zygote is formed and

Mechanisms underlying postzygotic reduction typically involve incompatibilities between genetic elements that have evolved independently in diverging

The concept is central to speciation research, helping explain why hybrids often suffer reduced viability or

See also: postzygotic isolation, hybrid inviability, hybrid sterility, hybrid breakdown, Dobzhansky–Muller model.

begins
development.
These
outcomes
include
zygote
inviability
or
embryo
lethality,
reduced
fertility
of
hybrids,
and
hybrid
breakdown
in
subsequent
generations.
Together,
these
effects
constitute
postzygotic
isolation,
a
major
mechanism
by
which
species
maintain
distinct
identities
and
limit
gene
flow.
populations.
Dobzhansky–M
Muller
incompatibilities,
chromosomal
rearrangements,
and
dosage
or
epigenetic
mismatches
can
disrupt
development
or
reproduction
when
lineages
hybridize.
Cytoplasmic
or
mitochondrial-nuclear
interactions,
as
well
as
endosymbiont-induced
incompatibilities,
can
also
contribute
to
hybrid
fitness
losses
after
fertilization.
fertility
and
how
reproductive
barriers
strengthen
over
time.
Although
postzygotic
reduction
is
described
under
the
broader
framework
of
postzygotic
isolation,
the
term
“postzygoticreduce”
is
not
widely
adopted
in
formal
literature
and
is
usually
clarified
within
context.