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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
181

Diversification dans le genre Malus / Diversification the genus Malus

Cornille, Amandine 26 October 2012 (has links)
Malgré son importance économique, culturelle et historique, l’histoire évolutive du pommier cultivé (Malus domestica) ainsi que celle de ses apparentés sauvages supposés, restaient encore très peu connues. En s’appuyant sur les nouvelles approches de génétique des populations (approximate Bayesian computation) avec l’utilisation de marqueurs microsatellites et de séquences nucléaires, cette thèse a eu pour objectif d’étudier, à différentes échelles évolutives (phylogéographie, spéciation, domestication), les mécanismes de diversification naturelle et artificielle dans le genre Malus. Mes travaux ont porté sur quatre espèces de pommiers sauvages distribuées à travers l’Eurasie (Malus orientalis (Caucase), Malus sieversii (Asie Centrale), Malus sylvestris (Europe), et Malus baccata (Sibérie)) et sur la seule espèce domestiquée du genre, Malus domestica. Cette thèse s’est articulée en quatre parties visant respectivement à inférer : (i) l’histoire de la domestication du pommier cultivé depuis son centre d’origine en Asie Centrale, (ii) l’histoire de la recolonisation post-glaciaire du pommier sauvage Européen (M. sylvestris), (iii) les histoires de spéciation entre les cinq espèces de Malus, (iv) les hybridations interspécifiques et les capacités de dispersion des trois principaux contributeurs (M. sylvestris, M. sieversii et M. orientalis) au génome du pommier cultivé. L’étude des mécanismes de diversification artificielle montre que les processus de domestication sont originaux chez cet arbre fruitier, de par l'absence de goulet d’étranglement et l’existence d’introgressions post-domestication fréquentes par une autre espèce sauvage (M. sylvestris) que l’espèce ancestrale (M. sieversii). L’étude des processus de diversification naturelle (phylogéographie, spéciation et structure des populations) révèlent de grandes tailles de populations, de forts flux de gènes et de faibles structures génétiques spatiales chez chacune des espèces. Cette thèse a aussi révélé de forts taux d’hybridations interspécifiques, en particulier de fortes introgressions des espèces de pommiers sauvages par le pommier cultivé en Europe et en Asie Centrale. Cette étude a permis l'amélioration des connaissances de la structuration des populations de pommiers sauvages ayant contribué au génome du pommier cultivé ainsi que de l’étendue des hybridations du pommier cultivé avec les espèces sauvages. Ces travaux revêtent une grande importance autant pour la conservation des pommiers sauvages, pour le maintien de leur intégrité dans des habitats fragmentés que pour l'amélioration variétale du pommier domestiqué. / : Despite its economic, cultural and historical importance, few studies have investigated the evolutionary history of the domesticated apple (Malus domestica) as well as those of its wild relatives. Using new population genetic approaches (approximate Bayesian computation) with microsatellites and nuclear sequences, this thesis aimed at unravelling, at different evolutionary scales (phylogeography, speciation, domestication), the natural and artificial diversification processes at play in the Malus genus. My research focused on the four wild apple species distributed across Eurasia (Malus orientalis (Caucasus), Malus sieversii (Central Asia), Malus sylvestris (Europe), and Malus baccata (Siberia)) and on the single domesticated apple species in the genus, Malus domestica. This thesis was divided into four parts: (i) domestication history of the cultivated apple, from its origin in Central Asia to Europe, (ii) post-glacial recolonization history of the European crabapple (M. sylvestris), (iii) the history of speciation among the five Malus species, (iv) crop-to-wild gene flow and dispersal capacities of the closest wild relative species (M. sylvestris, M. sieversii and M. orientalis). By investigating artificial diversification, we evidenced unique processes of domestication in this fruit tree, with no bottleneck and with extensive post-domestication introgressions by another wild species (M. sylvestris) than the ancestral progenitor (M. sieversii). Natural diversification patterns (phylogeography, speciation and population structure) revealed large effective population sizes, high dispersal capacities and weak spatial genetic structures. This thesis also revealed high levels of interspecific hybridizations, particularly high level of crop-to-wild gene flow in Europe and Central Asia. This study extended our knowledge about population structures for wild species that contributed to the cultivated apple genome, as well as the extent of hybridization rates. This work is essential for the conservation of wild apple populations, the integrity maintenance of wild species facing fragmentation and future breeding programs concerning the domesticated apple.
182

Especiação e biogeografia nos gêneros Glandulocauda Eigenmann e Mimagoniates Regan (Characidae: Stevardiinae: Glandulocaudini) / Speciation and biogeography in the genera Glandulocauda Eigenmann and Mimagoniates Regan (Characiformes: Characidae: Glandulocaudinae).

Cardoso, Priscila Camelier de Assis 01 June 2016 (has links)
A tribo Glandulocaudini inclui os gêneros Lophiobrycon, Glandulocauda e Mimagoniates e dez espécies, distribuídas em ambientes de água doce do leste e sul do Brasil, no Paraguai e nordeste do Uruguai. São peixes neotropicais de pequeno porte, cujo grau de especialização morfológica e comportamental, bem como os padrões de distribuição das espécies, constituem interessante modelo para estudos evolutivos e para o entendimento de padrões biogeográficos de peixes de água doce na América do Sul. Embora os trabalhos sobre sistemática e biogeografia realizados recentemente representem avanço considerável no conhecimento de Glandulocaudini, nenhum foi embasado fundamentalmente em evidências moleculares. Além disso, amostragens recentes revelaram aspectos inéditos relativos à distribuição de populações alopátricas das espécies Glandulocauda melanopleura e Mimagoniates microlepis e estes novos dados indicaram a necessidade de estudos mais aprofundados em nível populacional, envolvendo a análise combinada de dados moleculares e morfológicos. A presente tese aborda estas questões, e para isto está dividida em três capítulos. No primeiro capítulo foi realizada uma análise filogenética com base em sequências gênicas do mtDNA e nuDNA para a tribo Glandulocaudini, que representa a primeira hipótese de relações proposta com base em dados moleculares para o grupo. No segundo e o terceiro capítulos foram realizadas análises filogenéticas, filogeográficas, de demografia histórica, e análises morfológicas das populações alopátricas de Mimagoniates microlepis e Glandulocauda melanopleura, respectivamente. / The tribe Glandulocaudini comprises three genera, Lophiobrycon, Glandulocauda and Mimagoniates, and ten species, distributed in freshwater environments of eastern and southern Brazil, Paraguay, and northeastern Uruguay. Its members include small Neotropical fishes, whose degree of morphological and behavioral specialization, as well as the distributional patterns of the species are of great value for evolutionary studies and understanding of biogeographical patterns of South American freshwater fishes. Although studies on systematics and biogeography carried out recently represent considerable progress on the knowledge of Glandulocaudini, none was grounded in molecular evidence. Furthermore, recent samples revealed unknown aspects concerning the allopatric distributions of populations of Glandulocauda melanopleura and Mimagoniates microlepis, and this new data indicates the need of more deep studies at population levels, combining both molecular and morphological analysis. This thesis addresses such issues and for this purpose it is divided in three chapters. In the first chapter, a phylogenetic analysis of the tribe Glandulocaudini, based on mtDNA and nuDNA data was performed, representing the first hypothesis of relationship for the group based on molecular data. In the second and third chapters, analysis of phylogeny, phylogeography and historical demography were performed, as well as morphological studies on allopatric population of Mimagoniates microlepis and Glandulocauda melanopleura, respectively.
183

Invasions biologiques et maladies émergentes en santé animale : expansion et colonisation du bassin méditerranéen par Culicoides imicola (Diptera Ceratopogonidae), moucheron vecteur d'Orbivirus / Biological invasions and emerging infectious diseases : expansion and colonization of the Mediterranean basin by Culicoides imicola (Diptera Ceratopogonidae), a biting midge vector species of Orbiviruses

Jacquet, Stéphanie 15 December 2015 (has links)
Les invasions biologiques constituent une source de préoccupation majeure du fait des conséquences écologiques, économiques et sanitaires dont elles sont responsables. Déterminer et comprendre les facteurs sous-jacents au succès invasif des espèces envahissantes permet de prédire de nouvelles invasions et de mettre en place des stratégies de contrôle. Culicoides imicola est un vecteur majeur d’Orbivirus d’intérêt vétérinaire incluant le virus de la fièvre catarrhale ovine (FCO). Suite à l’émergence de la FCO dans le bassin méditerranéen, les populations de C. imicola ont été découvertes dans des territoires où elles étaient considérées comme absentes, caractérisant alors cette présence comme la résultante d’une expansion récente de l’espèce. Cette thèse décrit un ensemble de travaux visant à comprendre l’histoire de la colonisation du bassin méditerranéen par C. imicola. L’utilisation d’une approche multi-marqueurs combinant des analyses de génétique de populations, des inférences basées sur la méthode Approximate Bayesian Computation (ABC) et la simulation mathématique de la dispersion atmosphérique de l’espèce, a permis (i) de déterminer l’origine des populations installées au Maghreb et au Moyen Orient et de décrire les routes de colonisation et la chronologie de ces évènements, (ii) de définir les caractéristiques démographiques, évolutives et temporelles de la colonisation du sud de l’Europe et (iii) de caractériser les principaux facteurs expliquant le succès d’expansion géographique des populations installées. Les principaux résultats de cette thèse permettent de proposer des hypothèses pour expliquer le succès de l’installation des populations de C. imicola dans le bassin méditerranéen / Biological invasions are of major concern because of their environmental, economic and health consequences. Determining and understanding the factors underlying the invasion success of species allow predicting potential other biological invasions, and developing vector control strategies. Culicoides imicola is a major vector species of Orbivirus, including the bluetongue virus (BTV) which affects domestic ruminants. Following BT emergence in the Mediterranean basin, C. imicola populations were recorded in territories where the species was considered to be absent, and consequently was described as expanding its range expansion on a short period. This Phd work describes a set of studies aiming at understanding the colonization history of the Mediterranean basin by C. imicola. The use of a multi-loci approach combining population genetics analyses, Approximate Bayesian Computation (ABC) methods and mathematical simulations of the atmospheric dispersion of the species enabled to (i) determine the origin of the established populations in the Maghreb and the Middle-East and describe the routes of colonization and the chronology of such events, (ii) define the demographic, evolutionary and temporal characteristics of south-western Europe colonization and (iii) characterize the main factors explaining the successful range expansion of the established populations. The main results of this thesis allow suggesting hypotheses to explain the successful establishment of C. imicola populations in the Mediterranean basin.
184

Filogeografia e biogeografia da Floresta Atlântica: um estudo de caso com Didelphis aurita / Phylogeography and biogeography of the Atlantic Forst: a study case with Didelphis aurita

Shirai, Leila Teruko 12 December 2008 (has links)
Por que os trópicos sustentam tanta diversidade? Essa é a pergunta principal que motivou este trabalho. Uma das frentes para contribuir ao entendimento deste fenômeno é estudar a origem da diversidade. Diversas hipóteses de diversificação existem, e existe também uma acalorada discussão no campo de estudo que busca testar essas diferentes hipóteses. Uma das hipóteses mais conhecida, se também não a mais polêmica, é a Hipótese de Refúgios. O objetivo deste trabalho foi, portanto, testar a Hipótese de Refúgios na Floresta Atlântica através de um estudo de caso. Para tanto, inicialmente os padrões de distribuição morfológica e genética do marsupial Didelphis aurita Wied, 1826 foram investigados através do método de quadrantes. As medidas cranianas revelaram uma correlação longitudinal para fêmeas, mas ausência de associação geográfica na variação do crânio dos machos. Entretanto, complementarmente, outro critério foi utilizado. Através de uma Análise de Componentes Principais sobre a variação da latitude e longitude resumiu-se a variação geográfica em apenas uma variável. Esta acaba se refletindo em uma diagonal da latitude e longitude, que acompanha a própria distribuição da Floresta Atlântica na costa brasileira. Agora, os grupos são formados se apresentam diferenças significativas ao longo desta diagonal, permitindo que populações biológicas distintas, mas próximas geograficamente, sejam separadas. Assim, verificou-se que a associação longitudinal das fêmeas provém basicamente da diferenciação das populações da Bahia, e mais, isso também afeta os machos. Contudo, o sinal não aparece através do outro critério devido ao fato de machos também apresentarem diferenciações em menor escala dentro da distribuição ao sul da Bahia, possivelmente devido à presença do ecótone entre a Floresta Atlântica e o cerrado latu sensu. Por usa vez, os dados genéticos como explorados através da variação geográfica do marcador mitocondrial citocromo B, revelaram que também existe uma associação com a longitude, e novamente, ela provém principalmente da diferenciação dos extremos da distribuição. Aqui, não só a mesma quebra na Bahia aparece, mas também uma outra quebra mais ao norte, de indivíduos provenientes de Alagoas. Tanto para os dados morfológicos quanto para os moleculares, demonstrou-se que há isolamento por distância no gambá, entretanto, toda a distribuição ao sul da Bahia se comporta como uma grande população panmítica. Essa ausência de estruturação geográfica, também aparente em análises de diferenciação (Fst), unidas aos testes de neutralidade (D de Tajima e F de Fu) negativos e significativos, que dão sinal de expansão demográfica recente mostram, juntos, as assinaturas esperadas pela Hipótese de Refúgios. Contudo, a divergência entre as populações deste sul datam de aproximadamente 140.000≅60.000 anos, o que não pode ser atribuída como sendo reflexo do último interglacial, esperado em cerca de 20.000 anos. Explorando mais a fundo as análises de Fst e os testes de neutralidade, revelou-se que suas estimativas são altamente influenciadas por desbalanço no tamanho de amostras, assim como baixa representatividade e agrupamentos inadequados que unem populações biológicas distintas. Os aparentes sinais de refúgios obtidos foram, portanto, artefato de três população bem amostradas no Rio de Janeiro. Sendo assim, não se pode atribuir esta hipótese como tendo criado diversidade dentro da espécie D. aurita. / How can the tropics present such diversity? This question lies at the very core of this work. While for the origins of diversity, numerous hypotheses have been put forward over time, the pursuit of empirical proofs for them is almost as old as the hypotheses themselves. One of the better known such hypothesis, and at the same time one of the most controversial, is the Refugee Hypothesis. In this context, the main goal of this thesis has been to test the Refugee Hypothesis in the Atlantic Forest by means of a study case. Initially, the morphologic and genetic distribution patterns of Didelphis aurita Wied, 1826 marsupial have been investigated using the grids method. Cranial measurements revealed a longitudinal correlation for the females and, at the same time, the absence of any geographic correlation in the variation of male skulls. By means of a Principal Component Analysis, the latitudinal and longitudinal variations have been reduced to a geographical variation dependent on one variable only _ a diagonal that follows the extension of the Atlantic Forest along the Brazilian coast. Groups have been formed if they presented significant differences along this diagonal, thus allowing distinct, but geographically close populations, to be differentiated. It could hereby be proven that the longitudinal correlation for females reflects mainly the differentiation between populations from Bahia state, and even more, that this differentiation affects the males as well. The signature does not appear in the grid criterium for the males since they also present lower levels of differentiation in the south of Bahia, possibly due to the presence of the ecotone of the Atlantic Forest with the cerrado latu sensu biome. There is, nevertheless, a break in Bahia for both males and females. As for the geographic variation of the molecular mitochondrial marker cytochrome B, it also presented a longitudinal variation, and a clear differentiation between the two extremes of the analyzed distribution. Here, not only a similar break could be seen in Bahia, but another one further north in the specimens from Alagoas state. For both the morphological and the molecular data, while there is isolation by distance effect for the opossum, all the distribution south of Bahia behaves as a large panmitic population. This lack of geographical structuring, also apparent in differentiation analyzes (Fst), together with neutrality tests (Tajima\'s D and Fu\'s F) which point towards recent geographic expansion, show the signatures expected by the Refugee Hypothesis. Since, however, the data indicates that the divergence of southern populations occurred approximately 140,000≅60,000 years ago, the diversification cannot be due to the last inter-glacial period from 20,000 years ago. To understand this seeming contradiction, further in-depth investigations of the Fst analyzes and the neutrality tests revealed that the estimations had been highly influenced by the heterogeneity in the number of samples, as well as by the low representability of some localities and also inadequate grouping of specimens, which mixed distinct biological populations. The apparent refugee signatures have thus been the misleading consequence of three well-sampled populations from Rio de Janeiro state. Therefore, the Refugee Hypothesis cannot be regarded as an explanation for the existing diversity of the species D. aurita.
185

História evolutiva de Drosophila serido (\"cluster\" Drosophila buzzatii) / Evolutionary history of Drosophila serido (\"cluster\" Drosophila buzzatii)

Lavagnini-Pizzo, Taís Carmona 27 February 2015 (has links)
O cluster Drosophila buzzatii é formado por sete espécies endêmicas da América do Sul e que apresentam relação ecológica obrigatória com cactos. Dentre estas espécies, Drosophila serido possui ampla distribuição geográfica, na Caatinga e ao longo da costa Atlântica, e é considerada uma espécie politípica sendo dividida em dois grupos: populações do nordeste e do litoral. Com o objetivo de compreender os processos que moldaram a distribuição atual das populações de D. serido foram realizadas análises com sequências dos genes nucleares period e kl-5, ligados aos cromossomos sexuais X e Y, respectivamente, genes nucleares autossômicos GstD1 e E5, e gene mitocondrial COI. Dentre os resultados obtidos, a homogeneidade genética entre as populações do Nordeste e a divisão norte-sul entre as populações da costa Atlântica foram observadas em todos os marcadores. Três padrões quanto à estruturação populacional na costa Atlântica foram observados para os diferentes marcadores. A hipótese de que a Chapada Diamantina seja o centro de dispersão para a espécie foi confirmada pelo presente trabalho, no entanto, o TMRCA estimado para populações de Santa Catarina sugerem que estas sejam populações ancestrais de D. serido, sendo que o Nordeste teria sido colonizado a partir delas. Eventos de expansão de área e fragmentação alopátrica foram sugeridos como inferências filogeográficas para explicar o isolamento atual de populações de D. serido em Goiás e Minas Gerais. De acordo com as estimativas do TMRCA, é possível que os eventos causais dos processos históricos inferidos estejam relacionados à influencia das flutuações climáticas do Quaternário na distribuição geográfica da vegetação/cactos, afetando indiretamente as populações de moscas cactofílicas. É possível que eventos de seleção, associado aos fatores ecológicos quanto ao uso de cactos, também possam ter contribuído para o processo de diversificação populacional, uma vez que foi encontrada evidência de seleção positiva para os genes autossômicos. / Drosophila buzzatii cluster comprises seven species endemic of South America and that present a mandatory ecological association with cacti. Among these species, Drosophila serido has a wide geographical range, in Caatinga and along Atlantic coast, and is considered as a polytypic species, divided in two groups: northeast and coast populations. The purpose of this study was understand the process that shaped the current distribution of D. serido populations through genetic analysis using sequences of nuclear genes period and kl-5, X- and Y-linked, respectively, autosomal genes GstD1 e E5, and mitochondrial gene COI. The genetic homogeneity among Northeast populations and the north-south division among coast Atlantic populations were observed for all markers. Three patterns related to population structure in coast Atlantic were seen for the different markers. Hypothesis that Diamantina Plateau was the dispersion center for the species were confirmed at this study, although, TMRCA estimated for Santa Catarina populations suggested that these ones were ancestral, and that Northeast would be colonized from them. Expansion range and allopatric fragmentation were historical events suggested as phylogeographic inferences to explain the current isolation of D. serido populations in Goiás and Minas Gerais. According to TMRCA estimations, it is possible that causal events of historical process inferred were related to the influence of climatic fluctuations during Quaternary in the geographic distribution range of vegetation/cacti, indirectly affecting the populations of cactofilic flies. Furthermore, selection events, associated with ecological factors due to cacti use, as well as contributed to diversification process in populations, once it was found evidence of positive selection at autosomal genes.
186

MICROSATELLITE ANALYSIS OF POPULATION STRUCTURE IN THE SANTA ANA SPECKLED DACE (RHINICTHYS OSCULUS)

Nerkowski, Stacey A 01 June 2015 (has links)
Rhinichthys osculus, the Speckled Dace, is one of the most ubiquitous fish in western North America. Within the Southern California region, the local taxon is known as the Santa Ana Speckled Dace. The purpose of this study was to characterize and identify polymorphic microsatellite markers for R. osculus in which twenty-three were identified through Illumina pair-end sequencing. Seven of these loci were then used to examine the patterns of genetic variation and population structure that occurred within and among the watersheds in the Southern California. The study also examined the regional relationships among Southern California, Central California and Owen’s River Valley. Analysis of the microsatellite data revealed highly significant moderate levels of population structure exist within the Southern California region (RST=0.160, p=0.001). This structure is best explained by watershed as well as isolation by distance (R2=.2286, p=0.010). Highly significant geographic structure also exists among the geographic regions of Southern California, Central Coast, and Owen’s River Valley regions (RST= 0.600, p-value=0.001) that are congruent with the regional differentiation elucidated by mtDNA sequence data. In both cases, the degree of population differentiation was correlated with isolation by distance. Utilizing this information we were able gain a better understanding of the evolutionary relationships among the Southern California populations of Santa Ana Speckled Dace. Within the Santa Ana Speckled Dace populations we examined four models to explain the geographic structure: watershed, mountain range, tributary, and isolation by distance. While all were significant, the tributary model exhibited the higher level of population structure (RST= 0.160, p-value=0.001) and a significant correlation was exhibited between geographic distance and population structure, suggesting isolation by distance may be playing a role. The results of the microsatellite analysis are congruent with an earlier broad scale analysis of mtDNA sequence data that suggests the Central California and the Owens Valley populations diverged from each other prior to the divergence of the Santa Ana Speckled Dace populations from the Colorado Basin populations, and that the Central Coast populations were not established as a result of a migration event from the Southern California populations, as was previously hypothesized. Primarily due to human activity, Santa Ana Speckled Dace habitat has become highly fragmented resulting in some populations becoming extirpated. We hope this study will guide the strategies for the conservation of the remaining populations of Santa Ana Speckled Dace and watershed management in Southern California.
187

MOLECULAR EVOLUTION AND PHYLOGEOGRAPHY OF MITOCHONDRIAL DNA CYTOCHROME B GENE IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA SANTA ANA SPECKLED DACE (Rhinichthys osculus)

VanMeter, Pia Marie 01 June 2017 (has links)
In this study, I sequenced the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene to elucidate the extent and pattern of genetic variations among and within populations of Rhinichthys osculus (Santa Ana Speckled Dace) found in the different watersheds in Southern California, Central California Coast and Eastern California Desert. I described and analyzed the structural characteristics and pattern of base sequence substitutions in the cytochrome b gene to understand the molecular evolution of the gene. The Phylogenetic analyses showed that the Southern California Santa Ana Speckled dace is a distinct population from the Central California Coast dace population and Eastern California Desert dace population, and is more closely related to the Colorado River speckled dace population. There is a high degree of genetic variation among all populations including a significant genetic structure associated with watersheds, mountain ranges, and geographic grouping based on locations. The SWISS-Model automated protein structure homology elucidated the conserved and invariant residues within the cytochrome b gene where the amino acid substitutions are located in the trans-membrane of the protein sequence. The implication for conservation and management of the Southern California Santa Ana Speckled dace is high because of habitat lost for this distinct dace population. The data from this study will contribute to preserving the genetic variability of the Santa Ana Speckled Dace as a separate taxa and species, as well as to help maintain intact the population in the different Southern California creeks.
188

GEOGRAPHIC POPULATION STRUCTURE AND TAXONOMIC IDENTITY OF RHINICHTHYS OSCULUS, THE SANTA ANA SPECKLED DACE, AS ELUCIDATED BY NUCLEAR DNA INTRON SEQUENCING

Greaver, Liane Raynette 01 September 2019 (has links)
Rhinichthys osculus (Cyprinidae), the speckled dace, is the most widely distributed freshwater fish in the western United States. The southern California populations of R. osculus are identified as the Santa Ana speckled dace (SASD), though the SASD has not yet been formally recognized as a distinct taxon. Current mtDNA analysis performed in the Metcalf Lab has shown a reciprocally monophyletic relationship among three California regions; southern, central coast, and Owens Valley. Similarly, microsatellite genotyping has shown significant levels of geographic population structure. The purpose of this study was to provide nuclear DNA sequence data to determine the taxonomic status of the SASD to elucidate their evolutionary history and the relationships among the three regions, and to further define their evolutionary trajectory by comparing SASD sequence data to that of speckled dace from the Colorado River of Arizona. To examine this, three EPIC intron markers were sequenced on 54 samples representing all four regions. Based on the mtDNA and microsatellite data alone, there is strong support that the southern California populations of R. osculus are a reproductively isolated taxon at the species level. My study confirms this by showing the SASD to be reciprocally monophyletic for nuclear DNA markers, in conjunction with the mitochondrial DNA marker analyses. Because they are evolutionarily independent and face increased incidence of drought, fire, and flood, endangered species status should be considered.
189

An Efficient Pipeline for Assaying Whole-Genome Plastid Variation for Population Genetics and Phylogeography

Kohrn, Brendan F. 02 June 2017 (has links)
Tracking seed dispersal using traditional, direct measurement approaches is difficult and generally underestimates dispersal distances. Variation in chloroplast haplotypes (cpDNA) offers a way to trace past seed dispersal and to make inferences about factors contributing to present patterns of dispersal. Although cpDNA generally has low levels of intraspecific variation, this can be overcome by assaying the whole chloroplast genome. Whole-genome sequencing is more expensive, but resources can be conserved by pooling samples. Unfortunately, haplotype associations among SNPs are lost in pooled samples and treating SNP frequencies as independent estimates of variation provides biased estimates of genetic distance. I have developed an application, CallHap, that uses a least-squares algorithm to evaluate the fit between observed and predicted SNP frequencies from pooled samples based on network topology, thus enabling pooling for chloroplast sequencing for large-scale studies of chloroplast genomic variation. This method was tested using artificially-constructed test networks and pools, and pooled samples of Lasthenia californica (California goldfields) from Whetstone Prairie, in Southern Oregon, USA. In test networks, CallHap reliably recovered network topologies and haplotype frequencies. Overall, the CallHap pipeline allows for the efficient use of resources for estimation of genetic distance for studies using non-recombining, whole-genome haplotypes, such as intra-specific variation in chloroplast, mitochondrial, bacterial, or viral DNA.
190

Historical Biogeography Of Fishes Of The Fouta Djallon Highlands And Surrounding Areas

January 2014 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to elucidate the historical processes that have impacted the fishes of the Fouta Djallon highlands and surrounding areas. This mountainous region in Guinea, West Africa, lies on the northern edge of the Guinean Range. This geologic formation, of Jurassic origins, has long reported to serve as a barrier to dispersal in the region. These highlands currently separate two ichthyo-provinces in the area. The upper-Guinean province encompasses rivers on the Western slopes of the range that flow directly into the Atlantic Ocean. The Nilo-Sudan province is comprised of the rivers and streams on the Eastern slopes of the Guinean Range. These rivers flow west or north through the Sahel and eventually back to the Atlantic Ocean. While these highlands clearly serve as a barrier to dispersal for most fish taxa, some taxa are reported to occur on both sides of the Fouta Djallon. This study investigates three groups of these “amphi-Guinean†taxa to determine if the same taxa are present within both provinces and what processes would have allowed for this dispersal to take place. In addition to the biogeographical questions addressed within the Fouta Djallon region, specimens from the surrounding areas are included to further understand the historical biogeography of these groups in West Africa. This study revealed the presence of numerous undescribed species within the Amphilius, Chiloglanis, and ‘Barbus’ groups investigated. While some taxa do appear to be amphi-Guinean others are restricted to one ichthyo-province or the other. Numerous headwater capture events within the area have allowed taxa to expand ranges and diversify. This study also provides insights on areas of endemism within the region where additional undiscovered diversity is likely to occur. / acase@tulane.edu

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