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Why did outcrossing rates initially rise and then fall in the evolution (static parasite) treatment?

Options
A.a. Early outcrossing allowed recombination to produce resistant genotypes, which spread and eliminated the need for further genetic variation.
B.b. The parasite population became less virulent over time, so nematodes no longer needed to outcross.
C.c. Parasite evolution in this treatment kept breaking down host resistance, favouring repeated cycles of outcrossing and selfing.
D.d. Outcrossing initially suppressed nematode reproduction, leading to population collapse and a return to selfing.
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Question recap: Why did outcrossing rates initially rise and then fall in the evolution (static parasite) treatment? Option a: 'Early outcrossing allowed recombination to produce resistant genotypes, which spread and eliminated the need for further genetic variation.' This is the most coherent explanation. Outcrossing increases genetic recombination, which can generate novel resistant genotypes. If those resistant genotypes spread through the population, the advantage of maintaining high outcrossing diminishes once resistance is widespread, leading to a reduction in outcros......Login to view full explanation

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