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Journal ArticleDOI

Detecting selection along environmental gradients: analysis of eight methods and their effectiveness for outbreeding and selfing populations

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors provide guidelines for the use of popular or recently developed statistical methods to detect footprints of selection, and investigate the power and robustness of eight methods to identify loci potentially under selection.
Abstract
Thanks to genome-scale diversity data, present-day studies can provide a detailed view of how natural and cultivated species adapt to their environment and particularly to environmental gradients. However, due to their sensitivity, up-to-date studies might be more sensitive to undocumented demographic effects such as the pattern of migration and the reproduction regime. In this study, we provide guidelines for the use of popular or recently developed statistical methods to detect footprints of selection. We simulated 100 populations along a selective gradient and explored different migration models, sampling schemes and rates of self-fertilization. We investigated the power and robustness of eight methods to detect loci potentially under selection: three designed to detect genotype–environment correlations and five designed to detect adaptive differentiation (based on FST or similar measures). We show that genotype– environment correlation methods have substantially more power to detect selection than differentiation-based methods but that they generally suffer from high rates of false positives. This effect is exacerbated whenever allele frequencies are correlated, either between populations or within populations. Our results suggest that, when the underlying genetic structure of the data is unknown, a number of robust methods are preferable. Moreover, in the simulated scenario we used, sampling many populations led to better results than sampling many individuals per population. Finally, care should be taken when using methods to identify genotype–environment correlations without correcting for allele frequency autocorrelation because of the risk of spurious signals due to allele frequency correlations between populations.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of transcriptome and development of novel EST-SSR makers based on next-generation sequencing technology in Neolitsea sericea (Lauraceae) endemic to East Asian land-bridge islands

TL;DR: The EST-SSR markers developed in this research will be an information resource for future studies on ecological, evolutionary, and conservation genomics in N. sericea.
Book ChapterDOI

Population Genomics Provides Key Insights in Ecology and Evolution

TL;DR: This chapter provides perspectives on a few key issues confronting researchers seeking to use population genomic tools in non-model systems and focuses on several published case studies to illustrate how the research questions were addressed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climatic adaptation and ecological divergence between two closely related pine species in Southeast China.

TL;DR: Analysis using the isolation‐with‐migration model indicated that gene flow between the species has been more restricted for climate‐related candidate genes than the reference loci, in both directions, and suggest that species‐specific and divergent climatic selection at the candidate genes might have counteracted interspecific gene flow.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent landscape genomics studies in forest trees—what can we believe?

TL;DR: It is argued that landscape genomics research in forest trees is in its infancy and currently reported that results should be viewed with caution, and improvements in study design and analyses of replicated studies will be needed before this very promising approach can be brought to application for managing forests under changing climate.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Controlling the false discovery rate: a practical and powerful approach to multiple testing

TL;DR: In this paper, a different approach to problems of multiple significance testing is presented, which calls for controlling the expected proportion of falsely rejected hypotheses -the false discovery rate, which is equivalent to the FWER when all hypotheses are true but is smaller otherwise.
Book

Generalized Linear Models

TL;DR: In this paper, a generalization of the analysis of variance is given for these models using log- likelihoods, illustrated by examples relating to four distributions; the Normal, Binomial (probit analysis, etc.), Poisson (contingency tables), and gamma (variance components).
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimating F-statistics for the analysis of population structure.

TL;DR: The purpose of this discussion is to offer some unity to various estimation formulae and to point out that correlations of genes in structured populations, with which F-statistics are concerned, are expressed very conveniently with a set of parameters treated by Cockerham (1 969, 1973).
Journal ArticleDOI

APE: Analyses of Phylogenetics and Evolution in R language

TL;DR: UNLABELLED Analysis of Phylogenetics and Evolution (APE) is a package written in the R language for use in molecular evolution and phylogenetics that provides both utility functions for reading and writing data and manipulating phylogenetic trees.
Book

Natural selection in the wild

TL;DR: It is argued that the common assumption that selection is usually weak in natural populations is no longer tenable, but that natural selection is only one component of the process of evolution; natural selection can explain the change of frequencies of variants, but not their origins.
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