Genetic assignment methods for reconstruction of postmortem corpse relocation In common blow5lies' population structure, patterns of local relatedness occur as carrion 5lies trapped together at a bait are predominantely comprised of related individuals. This in not only true for adults in general, but also for gravid females, which were likely to oviposit on the same corpse. Therefore, this pattern of local relatedness might also be found in the larvae on a body. In consequence, the test of a population's genetic structure may help to con5irm or negate an inferred postmortem relocation of a corpse – due to larvae which fell off a body at the original scene as it is moved. à blow%lies: Lucilia sericata (& Phormia regina -‐ former studies) à Idea: "stray" larvae at ∆ location à evidence: corpse was moved à methods: specimen collections, DNA extractions, AFLP genotyping (249 polymorphic loci), à population genetic analysis (i.a. AMOVA, ΦST) & assignment tests (i.a. MLD) Melanie Egli Picard & Wells, Forensic Science International (2010) AMOVA analysis of molecular variance Relative Relatedness Coefficient (R) 0 Φ statistic (analogous to F-‐statistic) • determination: partitioning of genetic variation 0 majority of variation was within the samples 0 Among samples: 22%, P = 0.001 • are genetically distinct from each other STRUCTURE module-based clustering method 0 detects the underlying genetic population among a set of individuals genotyped at multiple markers 0 computes the proportion of the genome of an individual originating from each Melanie Egli 0 pairwise comparisons among all individuals • determination: degree of overall relatedness within each sample 0 SPAGeDi: based on allele frequency (entire dataset) • relative estimates à R>0: 2 individuals share more alleles than expected by chance 0 Ø (across entire dataset): mean relatedness coef5icient = 0.294 (cf. range above) STRUCTURE Concerns: What about...? modul-based clustering method 0 Simulation: 2-‐12 possible subpopulations (K) • K = 3 (most likely number), made up of: • a) Ohio(US), West Virginia (US), New Brunswick (Ca), 0 ... geographic-‐based structures? ü not detected 0 ... using maggot gut contents? x = corpse DNA: digested < 24h in live larva Ontario (Ca) & New Mexico (US) ü assignment à advantage • b) Alabama (US) • c) Rhode Island (US), New York (US), Washington (US) 0 ... potentially large populations of larvae in a corpse? & California (US) x pot. weakness: larvae numbers vary a lot: 0 Bar plot beneath illustrates the estimated L. sericata a few tens – hundreds of thousands structure when K = 3 à sampling task = complicated 0 Each vertical line represents each individual's membership fraction to a particular color-‐coded subpopulation. Melanie Egli Inbreeding after a founder effect Definition: when a new habitat is colonized only by a few individuals from a source population and therefore only a part of a source population`s gene pool will contribute to the new developing population founder effect the mating of related individuals i.e. because of a lack of non-related individuals due to no migration, isolation inbreeding Example: History and fate of a small isolated population of Weddell seals at White Island, Antactica 20.11.2014 Nora Hungerbühler Gelatt et al. (2010). Conserv. Genet., 11, pp. 721-735 Melina-Lea Wyss 20.11.2014 Inbreeding depression Definition: Inbreeding depression is the reduction in fitness (survival and fertility) of offspring resulting from matings between related individuals. Example: Inbreeding depression in red deer calves (Cervus elaphus) (Walling et al. BMC Evolutionary Biology 2011) Birth- date / birth- weight / first-year-survival Both parents + at least one grandparent: 22% inbred individuals Both parents + all four grandparents: 42% inbred individuals Melina-Lea Wyss 20.11.2014 Inbreeding depression Definition: Inbreeding depression is the reduction in fitness (fertility and survival) of offspring resulting from matings between related individuals. Decreased first year survival with increasing inbreeding coefficient (F) Survival probability F0.25 = 0.15 vs. F0 = 0.62 Bottlenecks drive temporal and spatial genetic changes in alpine caddisfly metapopulations Shama et al. 2011 Heterozygosity excess (D) for one allele: for all: boldsystems.org H = heterozygot frequency k = number of alleles Pudovkin et al. 1996 No heterozygosity excess found after bottleneck! sensitivity of detection method population recovery (expansion and immigration) Evolutionary Genetics 2014 Dominik Vogt Bottlenecks drive temporal and spatial genetic changes in alpine caddisfly metapopulations Shama et al. 2011 M ratio: Bottlenecks detected in all populations. No migration across valleys. k = number of alleles r = range of allele sizes Garza and Williamson 2001 Genetic divergence of valleys. Allelic diversity is more sensitive to bottlenecks than heterozygosity. At least in the short run. Evolutionary Genetics 2014 Dominik Vogt MHCs lose more genetic Diversity than neutral Markers Genetic drift is stronger than selection MHC could be important in conservation biology Cultural inheritance Definition: The part of the phenotypic variation that is inherited socially or learned from others Example: Cultural inheritance drives site fidelity and migratory connectivity in a long-distance migrant (2010, Harrison et al.) Kolja Smailus Evolutionary Genetics 2014 Application of high complexity modelling in population dynamics Population Genetics Models of Local Ancestry (Gravel, 2012) Pool & Nielsen(2009): Simulation and analysis of migration patterns (based on Wright-Fischer) Gravel (2012): Inclusion of recombination in migrants by „markovian chain“ models. Simon Schwarz 20.11.2014 Gaëlle Pauquet Evolutionary Genetics 2014: Population Genetics Effective Population Size (Ne) The effective population size (Ne) is the size of an ‘ideal population’. ‘Ideal’ refers to the hypothetical population, which meets the Hardy-Weinberg assumptions such as equal sex ratio, no selection, random mating and constant population size, that would experience the effects of inbreeding or genetic drift to the same degree as the population of interest (->Ne = Nc). Natural populations mostly do not behave ideal. Thus, the Ne will usually be smaller than the number of individuals in the population (census population size, Nc). The concept of Ne helps to quantify how a population will be affected through inbreeding and genetic drift, which can have severe impacts on small populations. Example: Short-Term Genetic Changes: Evaluating Effective Population Size Estimates in a Comprehensively Described Brown Trout (Salmo trutta) Population - Comparison of several different methods to estimate Ne in a semi-isolated resident brown trout (Salmo trutta) - Data from 5 annual (multi-cohort) and 8 consecutive single cohort samples - Two approaches to estimate Ne: genetic and demographic Serbezov et al. (2012): Genetics, Vol.191, 579-592 Gaëlle Pauquet Evolutionary Genetics: Population Genetics Table 4 Estimated per-generation and seasonal effective sizes of brown trout in Bellbekken by different methods and data All individuals Method Estimates of per-generation Ne Data: consecutive annual (autumn) samples Moments, Fk (Pollak 1983) Moments, Fs (Jorde and Ryman 2007) ML, closed (Wang and Whitlock 2003) ML, open (Wang and Whitlock 2003) Coalescent (Beaumont 2003) Data: single annual (autumn) samples LD (Waples and Do 2008) Data: consecutive cohort samples Moments, Fk (Pollak 1983) Moments, Fs (Jorde and Ryman 2007) ML, closed (Wang and Whitlock 2003) ML, open (Wang and Whitlock 2003) Coalescent (Beaumont 2003) Data: demographic (Serbezov et al. 2010) Lifetime Vk (Hill 1979) Estimates of effective number of breeders Nb Data: single cohort samples LD (Waples and Do 2008) Sibship (Wang and Whitlock 2003) Data: demographic (Serbezov et al. 2010) Seasonal Vk a Correctiona Excluding immigrants Nx 95% C.I. Nx 95% C.I. 1/G 1/G 1/G 1/G 1/G 121 81 127 106 87 89–176 58–143 106–154 89–130 66–111 106 69 NA NA 91 77–153 47–128 None 100 58–142 93 53–132 C/G C/G C/G C/G C/G 105 81 326 221 141 93–117 68–101 305–351 206–237 128–144 103 78 NA NA 143 90–115 65–98 135–144 None 104 44–215 96 45–205 69–117 (modified) None None 53 56 22–84 15–97 52 NA 17–87 None 40 32–49 31 27–35 Consecutive annual samples yield an estimate of drift per year. The tabulated estimates of per-generation effective size (Ne) were calculated by multiplying the annual estimate by 1/G (Hill 1979, Equation 4), where G = 5.73 is the average generation length. For consecutive cohorts the estimate refers to temporal allele frequency shifts among cohorts, and Ne estimates have been corrected by multiplying by the factor C/G or 1.87 (Equation 2). Estimates of per-season effective number of breeders (Nb: LD, sibship, and demographic methods only) were not adjusted. C.I. is the 95% confidence interval for the point estimates, either as given directly by the respective software or as calculated from standard errors for the relevant statistic (F or 1/2Ne), assuming normal distributed statistics, and was corrected with 1/G or C/G as for the corresponding Serbezov et al. (2012): Genetics, Vol.191, 579-592 point estimate. Outbreeding Depression Definition: Outbreeding depression is a reduction in reproductive fitness in the first or later generations following attempted crossing of populations of a species that previously had a continuos distribution Decision tree for determining the probability of outbreeding depressions (OD) between two populations. Frankham et al., 2010 (Predicting the Probability of Outbreeding Depression) Nils Niepagen 20.11.2014
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