T
Tobias E. Reiners
Researcher at American Museum of Natural History
Publications - 18
Citations - 314
Tobias E. Reiners is an academic researcher from American Museum of Natural History. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Genetic diversity. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 16 publications receiving 221 citations. Previous affiliations of Tobias E. Reiners include Goethe University Frankfurt & University of Giessen.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Applying genomic data in wildlife monitoring: Development guidelines for genotyping degraded samples with reduced single nucleotide polymorphism panels.
Alina von Thaden,Alina von Thaden,Carsten Nowak,Annika Tiesmeyer,Annika Tiesmeyer,Tobias E. Reiners,Tobias E. Reiners,Paulo C. Alves,Paulo C. Alves,Leslie A. Lyons,Federica Mattucci,Ettore Randi,Ettore Randi,Margherita Cragnolini,José Galián,Zsolt Hegyeli,Andrew C. Kitchener,Andrew C. Kitchener,Clotilde Lambinet,José Miguel Lucas,Thomas Mölich,Luana Ramos,Vinciane Schockert,Berardino Cocchiararo +23 more
TL;DR: Practical guidelines for the standardized development of reduced single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) panels applicable for microfluidic genotyping of degraded DNA samples, such as faeces or hairs are provided.
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Noninvasive genetic assessment of brown bear population structure in Bulgarian mountain regions
Christiane Frosch,Christiane Frosch,Aleksandar Dutsov,Diana Zlatanova,Kostadin Valchev,Tobias E. Reiners,Katharina Steyer,Markus Pfenninger,Carsten Nowak +8 more
TL;DR: An assessment of genetic population structure of brown bears in Bulgaria is provided by analysing tissue samples as well as samples collected with noninvasive genetic methods, including hair and faecal samples, to reveal the presence of weak genetic substructure in the study area with considerable degrees of genetic admixture.
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Large-scale genetic census of an elusive carnivore, the European wildcat (Felis s. silvestris)
Katharina Steyer,Katharina Steyer,Robert H. S. Kraus,Robert H. S. Kraus,Robert H. S. Kraus,Thomas Mölich,Ole Anders,Berardino Cocchiararo,Christiane Frosch,Alexander Geib,Malte Götz,Mathias Herrmann,Karsten Hupe,Annette Kohnen,Matthias Krüger,Franz Müller,Jacques B. Pir,Tobias E. Reiners,Susan Roch,Ulrike Schade,Philipp Schiefenhövel,Mascha Siemund,Olaf Simon,Sandra Steeb,Sabrina Streif,Bruno Streit,Jürgen Thein,Annika Tiesmeyer,Manfred Trinzen,Burkhard Vogel,Carsten Nowak +30 more
TL;DR: The analyses confirm a relatively continuous spatial presence of wildcats across large parts of the study area in contrast to previous analyses indicating a highly fragmented distribution, and suggest that wildcat conservation and management should take advantage of the higher than previously assumed dispersal potential of wild Cats may use wildlife corridors very efficiently.
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Preservation of genetic diversity in a wild and captive population of a rapidly declining mammal, the Common hamster of the French Alsace region
TL;DR: The results show that genetic diversity has been effectively maintained in a relict population of French Common hamsters despite of massive range loss, and recommend the maintenance of intense in situ conservation effort, along with regular monitoring of genetic diversity and effective population size.
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Genetic monitoring to evaluate reintroduction attempts of a highly endangered rodent
TL;DR: How genetic monitoring was useful and informative in a reintroduction project for the highly endangered Common hamster (Cricetus cricetus) in the Netherlands and Belgium is shown.