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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Estimating F-statistics for the analysis of population structure.

Bruce S. Weir, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1984 - 
- Vol. 38, Iss: 6, pp 1358-1370
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TLDR
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).
Abstract
This journal frequently contains papers that report values of F-statistics estimated from genetic data collected from several populations. These parameters, FST, FIT, and FIS, were introduced by Wright (1951), and offer a convenient means of summarizing population structure. While there is some disagreement about the interpretation of the quantities, there is considerably more disagreement on the method of evaluating them. Different authors make different assumptions about sample sizes or numbers of populations and handle the difficulties of multiple alleles and unequal sample sizes in different ways. Wright himself, for example, did not consider the effects of finite sample size. 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). We start with the parameters and construct appropriate estimators for them, rather than beginning the discussion with various data functions. The extension of Cockerham's work to multiple alleles and loci will be made explicit, and the use of jackknife procedures for estimating variances will be advocated. All of this may be regarded as an extension of a recent treatment of estimating the coancestry coefficient to serve as a mea-

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Citations
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Hierarchical Analysis of Genetic Structure in Native Fire Ant Populations: Results From Three Classes of Molecular Markers

TL;DR: Phylogeographic analyses of the mtDNA suggest that recent limitations on gene flow rather than longstanding barriers to dispersal are responsible for this large-scale structure of fire ant populations.
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Genetic structure of North American wolverine (Gulo gulo) populations.

TL;DR: It is suggested that reductions in this species’ range may have led to population fragmentation in the extreme reaches of its southern distribution and the continued reduction of suitable habitat for this species may lead to more populations becoming isolated remnants of a larger distribution of northern wolverines, as documented in other North American carnivore species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Population genetic structure of the African elephant in Uganda based on variation at mitochondrial and nuclear loci: evidence for male-biased gene flow.

TL;DR: Incongruent patterns of genetic variation within and between populations were revealed by the two genetic systems, and these were explained in terms of the differences in the effective population sizes of the two genomes and male‐biased gene flow between populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative genomic and population genetic analyses indicate highly porous genomes and high levels of gene flow between divergent helianthus species

TL;DR: At many loci, the allopatric sister species are more genetically divergent than the more distantly related sympatric species, which have exchanged genes across much of the genome while remaining morphologically and ecologically distinct.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of Gene Diversity in Subdivided Populations

TL;DR: A method is presented by which the gene diversity (heterozygosity) of a subdivided population can be analyzed into its components, i.e., the gene diversities within and between subpopulations.
Book

The jackknife, the bootstrap, and other resampling plans

Bradley Efron
TL;DR: The Delta Method and the Influence Function Cross-Validation, Jackknife and Bootstrap Balanced Repeated Replication (half-sampling) Random Subsampling Nonparametric Confidence Intervals as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Isolation by Distance.

Journal ArticleDOI

The interpretation of population structure by F-statistics with special regard to systems of mating

TL;DR: It was found that there is no equilibrium in either case short of complete fixation locally, in spite of the linear increase in number of different ancestors with increasing number of ancestral generations, in contrast to systems (half first cousin or second cousin) in which this increase is more than linear and a steady state is rapidly attained with respect to heterozygosis.
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