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heterosis

Heterosis, also known as hybrid vigor, is the phenomenon whereby the offspring of genetically diverse parents exhibit superior biological performance for traits such as growth rate, yield, vigor, or fertility compared with their parents or with the average of the parents. It is commonly exploited in plant and animal breeding to improve performance.

The genetic basis of heterosis is complex and involves increased heterozygosity at many loci. Two classic explanations

Heterosis is typically measured by comparing hybrids to mid-parent or best-parent values. Relative heterosis or heterosis

Heterosis is widely observed in plants, with maize being a classic example, and is also detected in

Limitations and considerations include its context-dependence, potential decline in subsequent generations, and the ongoing scientific debate

are
the
dominance
hypothesis,
which
posits
that
hybrids
mask
deleterious
recessive
alleles
from
one
parent
by
dominant
alleles
from
the
other;
and
the
overdominance
hypothesis,
which
posits
that
certain
heterozygous
genotypes
at
specific
loci
confer
higher
fitness
than
either
homozygote.
Pseudo-overdominance,
caused
by
tightly
linked
deleterious
and
favorable
alleles,
can
mimic
true
overdominance
and
contribute
to
observed
heterosis.
percentage
expresses
the
degree
of
improvement
of
the
hybrid
over
the
parents
for
a
given
trait.
The
effect
can
vary
by
trait,
environment,
and
genetic
background.
other
crops
such
as
rice
and
wheat.
It
occurs
in
animals
as
well,
including
cattle
and
sheep.
In
agriculture,
heterosis
is
exploited
through
hybrid
breeding
and
seed
production
to
achieve
higher
yields,
improved
disease
resistance,
and
greater
stress
tolerance.
about
the
balance
of
dominance
and
overdominance
effects.
Advances
in
genomics
and
breeding
are
enhancing
the
practical
use
of
heterosis
in
modern
agriculture.