Integrating patterns across multiple genetic markers to infer spatial processes |
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Authors: | Robert G. Latta |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, B2H 4J1, Canada |
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Abstract: | Landscape geneticists can take considerable advantage of differences in the action of evolutionary forces (mutation, migration,
selection, and drift) on different loci within the genome. Appropriate comparisons among loci allow researchers to isolate
and study the effects of these processes. For example, the organelles are typically inherited maternally (but occasionally
paternally), and so will experience migration only when females or seeds disperse (males or pollen in the paternally inherited
organelles). Thus, the comparison with biparentally inherited loci allows inferences about the differential migration rates
of male vs. female animals or of seeds vs. pollen in plants. Conversely, all biparentally inherited nuclear loci should experience
the same levels of migration and drift. Thus, loci that show unusually large levels of variation across the landscape (as
compared with the bulk of loci) may be reflecting the action of spatially varying natural selection (local adaptation). Such
comparisons are conceptually straightforward, but are complicated by the high intrinsic variability of stochastic neutral
processes. Careful statistical analysis is needed to avoid over-interpreting differences among loci. Inferences will be most
robust when both genetic and non-genetic data can be integrated, and the collaboration of landscape ecologists with geneticists
promises to be particularly fruitful. |
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Keywords: | Coalescent
F
st
Migration-Drift Equilibrium Ponderosa Pine
Q
st
Selection |
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