Comparative phylogeography and postglacial colonization routes in Europe.
by
P Taberlet,
L Fumagalli,
A G Wust-Saucy,
J F Cosson
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O I S Cosson in Molecular Ecology (1998)The Quaternary cold periods in Europe are thought to have heavily influenced the amount and distribution of intraspecific genetic variation in both animals and plants. The phylogeographies of 10 taxa, including mammals (Ursus arctos, Sorex spp.,…Save reference to library · Related research 121 readers
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Forest Protection in Molecular Ecology (1999)Ips typographus populations were analysed by enzyme electrophoresis and by sequence analysis in order to quantify the degree of population differentiation. Enzyme electrophoresis showed a high gene flow among all European populations. Analysis of…Save reference to library · Related research 13 readers
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C Stauffer, F Lakatos, G M Hewitt in Molecular Ecology (1999)Ips typographus populations were analysed by enzyme electrophoresis and by sequence analysis in order to quantify the degree of population differentiation. Enzyme electrophoresis showed a high gene flow among all European populations. Analysis of…Save reference to library · Related research 11 readers
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Lukas Krebes, Miriam Blank, Ralf Bastrop in Systematics and Biodiversity (2011)To evaluate the influence of the ice ages on patterns of genetic diversity and to test generally accepted perspectives related to glacial refugia and proposed post-glacial colonization pathways in the North Atlantic area, we sequenced a portion of…Save reference to library · Related research 6 readers
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D Grivet, R J Petit in Conservation Genetics (2003)The hornbeam, a shade tolerant tree species, has recolonised Europe very late during the Holocene. In order to investigate whether this postglacial recolonisation had led to a loss of chloroplast (cp) DNA diversity, as already described for other…Save PDF to library · Related research 36 readers
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A G F Teacher, T W J Garner, R A Nichols in Heredity (2009)We use phylogenetic techniques to investigate the postglacial re-population of Europe by the common frog and, in particular, the colonization of Ireland. Three main hypotheses have been proposed for the re-establishment of the Irish fauna after the…Save PDF to library · Related research 36 readers
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J Nilsson, R Gross, T Asplund, O Dove, H Jansson, J Kelloniemi, et al. in Molecular Ecology (2001)Sixty-four samples from 46 salmon populations totalling 2369 specimens were used for polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) analysis of the mitochondrial ND1 region. The final analyses included 3095 specimens…Save reference to library · Related research 29 readers
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J M Seddon, F Santucci, N Reeve, G M Hewitt in Journal of Evolutionary Biology (2002)For many European species, the mountains of the Alps and the Pyrenees have acted as significant barriers to northwards colonization from southern glacial refugia. To the east, the Caucasus Mountains would seem to have been a similar barrier to the…Save reference to library · Related research 25 readers
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J D Durand, H Persat, Y Bouvet in Molecular Ecology (1999)A phylogeographic analysis of mitochondrial DNA variation was performed in order to test the hypothesis of a postglacial recolonization of mid- and north-European rivers from a Danubian refuge. Over 345 chub specimens from European rivers covering…Save reference to library · Related research 29 readers
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Charles Snell, John Tetteh, Ivor H Evans in Biological Journal of the Linnean Society (2005)The pool frog, Rana lessonae, has historically been considered an introduction into Britain, with Italy the most likely source. Recently, the possibility of native status for a Norfolk pool frog population was raised. We used random amplified DNA…Save reference to library · Related research 33 readers
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