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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.
1

Divergência populacional e expansão demográfica de Dendrocolaptes platyrostris (Aves: Dendrocolaptidae) no final do Quaternário / Population divergence and demographic expansion of Dendrocolaptes platyrostris (Aves: Dendrocolaptidae) in the late Quaternary

Campos Junior, Ricardo Fernandes 29 October 2012 (has links)
Dendrocolaptes platyrostris é uma espécie de ave florestal associada às matas de galeria do corredor de vegetação aberta da América do sul (D. p. intermedius) e à Floresta Atlântica (D. p. platyrostris). Em um trabalho anterior, foi observada estrutura genética populacional associada às subespécies, além de dois clados dentro da Floresta Atlântica e evidências de expansão na população do sul, o que é compatível com o modelo Carnaval-Moritz. Utilizando approximate Bayesian computation, o presente trabalho avaliou a diversidade genética de dois marcadores nucleares e um marcador mitocondrial dessa espécie com o objetivo de comparar os resultados obtidos anteriormente com os obtidos utilizando uma estratégia multi-locus e considerando variação coalescente. Os resultados obtidos sugerem uma relação de politomia entre as populações que se separaram durante o último período interglacial, mas expandiram após o último máximo glacial. Este resultado é consistente com o modelo de Carnaval-Moritz, o qual sugere que as populações sofreram alterações demográficas devido às alterações climáticas ocorridas nestes períodos. Trabalhos futuros incluindo outros marcadores e modelos que incluam estabilidade em algumas populações e expansão em outras são necessários para avaliar o presente resultado / Dendrocolaptes platyrostris is a forest specialist bird associated to gallery forests of the open vegetation corridor of South America (D. p. intermedius) and to the Atlantic forest (D. p. platyrostris). A previous study showed a population genetic structure associated with the subspecies, two clades within the Atlantic forest, and evidence of population expansion in the south, which is compatible with Carnaval- Moritz\'s model. The present study evaluated the genetic diversity of two nuclear and one mitochondrial markers of this species using approximate Bayesian computation, in order to compare the results previously obtained with those based on a multi-locus strategy and considering the coalescent variation. The results suggest a polytomic relationship among the populations that split during the last interglacial period and expanded after the last glacial maximum. This result is consistent with the model of Carnaval-Moritz, which suggests that populations have undergone demographic changes due to climatic changes that occurred in these periods. Future studies including other markers and models that include stability in some populations and expansion in others are needed to evaluate the present result
2

Divergência populacional e expansão demográfica de Dendrocolaptes platyrostris (Aves: Dendrocolaptidae) no final do Quaternário / Population divergence and demographic expansion of Dendrocolaptes platyrostris (Aves: Dendrocolaptidae) in the late Quaternary

Ricardo Fernandes Campos Junior 29 October 2012 (has links)
Dendrocolaptes platyrostris é uma espécie de ave florestal associada às matas de galeria do corredor de vegetação aberta da América do sul (D. p. intermedius) e à Floresta Atlântica (D. p. platyrostris). Em um trabalho anterior, foi observada estrutura genética populacional associada às subespécies, além de dois clados dentro da Floresta Atlântica e evidências de expansão na população do sul, o que é compatível com o modelo Carnaval-Moritz. Utilizando approximate Bayesian computation, o presente trabalho avaliou a diversidade genética de dois marcadores nucleares e um marcador mitocondrial dessa espécie com o objetivo de comparar os resultados obtidos anteriormente com os obtidos utilizando uma estratégia multi-locus e considerando variação coalescente. Os resultados obtidos sugerem uma relação de politomia entre as populações que se separaram durante o último período interglacial, mas expandiram após o último máximo glacial. Este resultado é consistente com o modelo de Carnaval-Moritz, o qual sugere que as populações sofreram alterações demográficas devido às alterações climáticas ocorridas nestes períodos. Trabalhos futuros incluindo outros marcadores e modelos que incluam estabilidade em algumas populações e expansão em outras são necessários para avaliar o presente resultado / Dendrocolaptes platyrostris is a forest specialist bird associated to gallery forests of the open vegetation corridor of South America (D. p. intermedius) and to the Atlantic forest (D. p. platyrostris). A previous study showed a population genetic structure associated with the subspecies, two clades within the Atlantic forest, and evidence of population expansion in the south, which is compatible with Carnaval- Moritz\'s model. The present study evaluated the genetic diversity of two nuclear and one mitochondrial markers of this species using approximate Bayesian computation, in order to compare the results previously obtained with those based on a multi-locus strategy and considering the coalescent variation. The results suggest a polytomic relationship among the populations that split during the last interglacial period and expanded after the last glacial maximum. This result is consistent with the model of Carnaval-Moritz, which suggests that populations have undergone demographic changes due to climatic changes that occurred in these periods. Future studies including other markers and models that include stability in some populations and expansion in others are needed to evaluate the present result
3

Population Genetic Structure of Black Grouse (Tetrao tetrix) : From a Large to a Fine Scale Perspective

Corrales Duque, Carolina January 2011 (has links)
Black grouse (Tetrao tetrix) is a bird species with a lek mating system found in the Palearctic boreal taiga. It is assumed that it has a continuous distribution along Scandinavia and Siberia, whereas in Central Europe it has declined during the last decades. The primary objective of this thesis was to obtain a deeper understanding of the history, systematic classification and the genetic structure of black grouse on different geographical scales using microsatellites and control region mtDNA sequences (CR). I determined how much the mating system, habitat fragmentation and historical population processes have influenced the partitioning of genetic diversity in this species. Phylogeographical results are consistent with a demographic population expansion, and the patterns of postglacial dispersal suggest that a glacial refugium was located somewhere in central Asia, and from there black grouse spread out to Europe following the retreat of glacial ice sheets. I suggest that the two European black grouse subspecies, T. t. Tetrix and T. t. britannicus correspond to only one subspecies: T. t. tetrix, and that this lineage has diverged from T.t. viridanus, a subspecies found in Kazakhstan. The British population is significantly divergent from the remaining Eurasian samples for microsatellites but it is not for mtDNA. Therefore, they should regard as a separate Management Unit and not as a subspecies. Furthermore, British black grouse occur in three independent genetic units, corresponding to Wales, northern England/southern Scotland and northern Scotland. There was also genetic structure within Sweden. Habitat fragmentation is the main cause of population genetic structure in southern Swedish black grouse. In contrast, low levels of genetic differentiation and high connectivity were found in northern Sweden due to female-biased dispersal. On a finer geographical scale, I found genetic differences between leks due to a mixture of related and unrelated individuals within leks. However, mean relatedness values hardly differed from zero. Some leks were similar to one another and I interpret this as a result of variation in local reproductive success and philopatry. These factors would cause genetic structuring but this by itself would not reveal that kin selection is operating within black grouse leks.

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