Geographical patterns of turnover and nestedness-resultant components of allelic diversity among populations

dc.creatorDiniz Filho, Jose Alexandre Felizola
dc.creatorCollevatti, Rosane Garcia
dc.creatorSoares, Thannya Nascimento
dc.creatorTelles, Mariana Pires de Campos
dc.date.accessioned2020-11-23T16:48:19Z
dc.date.available2020-11-23T16:48:19Z
dc.date.issued2012
dc.description.abstractThe analysis of geographical patterns in population divergence has always been a powerful way to infer microevolutionary processes involved in population differentiation, and several approaches have been used to investigate such patterns. Most frequently, multivariate spatial patterns of population differentiation are analyzed by computing pairwise genetic distances or FST (or related statistics, such as /ST from AMOVA), which are then correlated with geographical distances or landscape features. However, when calculating distances, especially based on presence-absence of alleles in local populations, there would be a confounding effect of allelic richness differences in the population differentiation. Moreover, the relative magnitude of these components and their spatial patterns can help identifying microevolutionary processes driving population differentiation. Here we show how recent methodological advances in ecological community analyses that allows partitioning dissimilarity into turnover (turnover) and richness differences, or nestedness-resultant dissimilarity, can be applied to allelic variation data, using an endemic Cerrado tree (Dipteryx alata) as a case study. Individuals from 15 local populations were genotyped for eight microsatellite loci, and pairwise dissimilarities were computed based on presence-absence of alleles. The turnover of alleles among populations represented 69 % of variation in dissimilarity, but only the richness difference component shows a clear spatial structure, appearing as a westward decrease of allelic richness. We show that decoupling richness difference and turnover components of allelic variation reveals more clearly how similarity among populations reflects geographical patterns in allelic diversity that can be interpreted in respect to historical range expansion in the species.pt_BR
dc.identifier.citationDINIZ-FILHO, Jose Alexandre Felizola et al. Geographical patterns of turnover and nestedness-resultant components of allelic diversity among populations. Genetica, Dordrecht, v. 140, p. 189-195, 2012.pt_BR
dc.identifier.doi10.1007/s10709-012-9670-9
dc.identifier.issne- 1573-6857
dc.identifier.issn0016-6707
dc.identifier.urihttp://repositorio.bc.ufg.br/handle/ri/19271
dc.language.isoengpt_BR
dc.publisher.countryHolandapt_BR
dc.publisher.departmentInstituto de Ciências Biológicas - ICB (RG)pt_BR
dc.rightsAcesso Abertopt_BR
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/*
dc.subjectAllelic richnesspt_BR
dc.subjectAutocorrelationpt_BR
dc.subjectCerradopt_BR
dc.subjectSpatial genetic structurept_BR
dc.subjectCorrelogramspt_BR
dc.subjectPopulation divergencept_BR
dc.subjectDipteryx alatapt_BR
dc.subjectMantel testpt_BR
dc.titleGeographical patterns of turnover and nestedness-resultant components of allelic diversity among populationspt_BR
dc.typeArtigopt_BR

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