A New Bayesian Method to Identify the Environmental Factors That Influence Recent Migration
Gene Flow
0106 biological sciences
570
rates
[SDV.BID]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biodiversity
Environment
01 natural sciences
Consanguinity
[SDV.EE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology
Humans
Pakistan
[SDV.EE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology, environment
inference
model
Models, Genetic
Genetic-structure
Bayes Theorem
Emigration and Immigration
populations
colonization
Databases as Topic
loci
[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology
environment
DOI:
10.1534/genetics.107.082560
Publication Date:
2008-02-02T02:07:40Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
Abstract
We present a new multilocus genotype method that makes inferences about recent immigration rates and identifies the environmental factors that are more likely to explain observed gene flow patterns. It also estimates population-specific inbreeding coefficients, allele frequencies, and local population FST's and performs individual assignments. We generate synthetic data sets to determine the region of the parameter space where our method is and is not able to provide accurate estimates. Our simulation study indicates that reliable results can be obtained when the global level of genetic differentiation (FST) is >1%, the number of loci is only 10, and sample sizes are of the order of 50 individuals per population. We illustrate our method by applying it to Pakistani human data, considering altitude and geographic distance as explanatory factors. Our results suggest that altitude explains better the genetic data than geographic distance. Additionally, they show that southern low-altitude populations have higher migration rates than northern high-altitude ones.
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