Nucleotide polymorphism, effective population size, and dispersal distances in the yellow baboons (Papio hamadryas cynocephalus) of Mikumi National Park, Tanzania

Author(s):  
Jeffrey Rogers ◽  
Kenneth K. Kidd
2008 ◽  
Vol 90 (1) ◽  
pp. 119-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
STEPHEN I. WRIGHT ◽  
NARDIN NANO ◽  
JOHN PAUL FOXE ◽  
VAQAAR-UN NISA DAR

SummaryCytoplasmic genomes typically lack recombination, implying that genetic hitch-hiking could be a predominant force structuring nucleotide polymorphism in the chloroplast and mitochondria. We test this hypothesis by analysing nucleotide polymorphism data at 28 loci across the chloroplast and mitochondria of the outcrossing plant Arabidopsis lyrata, and compare patterns with multiple nuclear loci, and the highly selfing Arabidopsis thaliana. The maximum likelihood estimate of the ratio of effective population size at cytoplasmic relative to nuclear genes in A. lyrata does not depart from the neutral expectation of 0·5. Similarly, the ratio of effective size in A. thaliana is close to unity, the neutral expectation for a highly selfing species. The results are thus consistent with neutral organelle polymorphism in these species or with comparable effects of hitch-hiking in both cytoplasmic and nuclear genes, in contrast to the results of recent studies on gynodioecious taxa. The four-gamete test and composite likelihood estimation provide evidence for very low levels of recombination in the organelles of A. lyrata, although permutation tests do not suggest that adjacent polymorphic sites are more closely linked than more distant sites across the two genomes, suggesting that mutation hotspots or very low rates of gene conversion could explain the data.


PeerJ ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. e9939
Author(s):  
Jessica F. McLaughlin ◽  
Kevin Winker

Sample size is a critical aspect of study design in population genomics research, yet few empirical studies have examined the impacts of small sample sizes. We used datasets from eight diverging bird lineages to make pairwise comparisons at different levels of taxonomic divergence (populations, subspecies, and species). Our data are from loci linked to ultraconserved elements and our analyses used one single nucleotide polymorphism per locus. All individuals were genotyped at all loci, effectively doubling sample size for coalescent analyses. We estimated population demographic parameters (effective population size, migration rate, and time since divergence) in a coalescent framework using Diffusion Approximation for Demographic Inference, an allele frequency spectrum method. Using divergence-with-gene-flow models optimized with full datasets, we subsampled at sequentially smaller sample sizes from full datasets of 6–8 diploid individuals per population (with both alleles called) down to 1:1, and then we compared estimates and their changes in accuracy. Accuracy was strongly affected by sample size, with considerable differences among estimated parameters and among lineages. Effective population size parameters (ν) tended to be underestimated at low sample sizes (fewer than three diploid individuals per population, or 6:6 haplotypes in coalescent terms). Migration (m) was fairly consistently estimated until <2 individuals per population, and no consistent trend of over-or underestimation was found in either time since divergence (T) or theta (Θ = 4Nrefμ). Lineages that were taxonomically recognized above the population level (subspecies and species pairs; that is, deeper divergences) tended to have lower variation in scaled root mean square error of parameter estimation at smaller sample sizes than population-level divergences, and many parameters were estimated accurately down to three diploid individuals per population. Shallower divergence levels (i.e., populations) often required at least five individuals per population for reliable demographic inferences using this approach. Although divergence levels might be unknown at the outset of study design, our results provide a framework for planning appropriate sampling and for interpreting results if smaller sample sizes must be used.


2017 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victoria Sophia Farrar ◽  
Taylor Edwards ◽  
Kevin Edward Bonine

Population genetic baselines for species perceived to be at-risk are crucial for monitoring population trends and making well-informed management decisions. We characterized the genetic status of a population of Gila monsters (Heloderma suspectum), a large venomous lizard native to deserts of the southwestern United States and northern Mexico, by sampling 100 individuals in Sonoran Desert upland habitat at Saguaro National Park, Arizona, USA. We used 18 microsatellite markers, along with 1195 bp of sequence data from the mitochondrial DNA 12S locus, to examine genetic diversity, estimate effective population size, and assess demographic history. Despite suburban development adjacent to the study area, we observed high genetic diversity with uninhibited gene flow within this protected population. We estimated effective population size (Ne) for the total sample area (80 km2) using the linkage disequilibrium method in NeEstimator to be 94 individuals (95% confidence interval: 80.7-111.2). In 2011, we used capture-recapture methods to estimate that 80 adult Gila monsters (95% CI = 37-225) inhabited the area along the 14-km transect that we surveyed most frequently; probability of detecting resident Gila monsters during surveys was <0.01, highlighting the challenges of studying the species. Despite being considered an elusive and thus potentially rare species, these data reveal that in this protected environment the population appears healthy and robust. The results provide an important genetic baseline for future studies and monitoring, and exemplify the success of protective population measures in National Parks and under Arizona state laws.


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