| Literature DB >> 27927179 |
Rose L Andrew1, Deane Smith2, Jamieson C Gorrell2, Jasmine K Janes2.
Abstract
The origins of feral cats in Australia may be understood with the help of molecular studies, but it is important that hypotheses be tested with appropriate sampling and methodology. We point out several shortcomings in the analysis by Koch et al. (BMC Evol Biol 15:262, 2015; A voyage to Terra Australis: human-mediated dispersal of cats. Dryad Digital Repository, 2015), present a reanalysis of part of the study and discuss the challenges of elucidating the early history of feral cats.Entities:
Keywords: Feral cat; Microsatellite; Migrate-N; Migration matrix; Structure
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27927179 PMCID: PMC5142327 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-016-0813-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Fig. 1Log-likelihood (a) and ΔK (b) plots for reanalysis of all microsatellite data in Koch et al. [1], with 20 replicate runs of 500 000 burn-in iterations and 1 000 000 further iterations, summarised by Structure Harvester [31]. Below are ancestry coefficients (c) for major and minor modes (K = 4 to K = 7) identified and plotted by CLUMPAK [24, 32]
Fig. 2Log-likelihood (a) and ΔK (b) plots for reanalysis of microsatellite data from populations belonging to the major cluster for K = 5 in Fig. 1 (omitting Malaysia), with 20 replicate runs of 500 000 burn-in iterations and 1 000 000 further iterations, summarised by Structure Harvester [31]. Below are ancestry coefficients (c) for K = 2 and K = 3, averaged across runs and plotted by CLUMPAK [24, 32]