The American Breeders Association held its first meeting in 1903 to discuss the "new" science of genetics that arose from
Charles Darwin's theory of evolution and
Gregor Mendel's discoveries of the laws of inheritance. The organization was established "to study the laws of breeding and to promote the improvement of plants and animals by the development of expert methods of breeding." In 1914, the American Breeders Association broadened its scope and became the American Genetic Association. Today, the AGA's interests encompass evolutionary diversity and genomics across taxa and subject areas, including conservation genetics,
phylogenetics,
phylogeography, gene function, and the genetics of
domestication. In 1965 it received a bequest from
Wilhelmine Key to support a lecture series which bears her name. The AGA disseminates progress in these fields through its publication,
Journal of Heredity. It supports research and scholarship through sponsorship of an annual President's Symposium, special events awards, the Stephen J. O'Brien Award, and the Evolutionary, Ecological, or Conservation Genomics Research Awards. The AGA is a 501(c)(3) corporation. == Annual meeting ==