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BIOSYS-1: a FORTRAN program for the comprehensive analysis of electrophoretic data in population genetics and systematics

David L. Swofford, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1981 - 
- Vol. 72, Iss: 4, pp 281-283
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This article is published in Journal of Heredity.The article was published on 1981-07-01. It has received 2356 citations till now.

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Distribution of genetic diversity within and between Western Mediterranean island populations of the black rat Rattus rattus (L. 1758)

TL;DR: These island populations of black rat illustrate how genetic diversity may be efficiently maintained in a series of interconnected spatially fragmented populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic structure of insular Mediterranean populations of the house mouse

TL;DR: Estimates of genetic distance and gene flow indicate that the level of genie differentiation is greater between island and mainland populations that between the latter due to geographic isolation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Population genetic structure of the butterfly Melitaea didyma (Nymphalidae) along a northern distribution range border

TL;DR: The population genetic structure of the butterfly Melitaea didyma was studied along the northern distribution range border in Central Germany by means of allozyme electrophoresis, indicating that the hierarchical structure, at the provincial level, may be breaking down due to isolation of regional populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Allozyme evidence for crane systematics and polymorphisms within populations of Sandhill, Sarus, Siberian, and whooping cranes.

TL;DR: Phylogenetic analysis, using both character state and distance algorithms, yielded highly concordant trees for the 15 species of cranes, and the African crowned cranes (Balearica) were widely divergent from all other cranes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic affinities of an introduced predator: Nile perch in Lake Victoria, East Africa

TL;DR: Allozyme data indicated that the introduced Nile perch of Lake Victoria were mainly L. niloticus from Lake Albert, although maximum likelihood estimates of stock contributions (GSI) suggested the presence of L. macrophthalmus.
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