First evidence of higher female recombination in a species with temperature-dependent sex determination: The saltwater crocodile

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Abstract

The first evidence of genetic linkage and sex-specific recombination in the order Crocodylia is reported. This study was conducted using a resource pedigree of saltwater crocodiles consisting of 16 known-breeding pairs (32 adults) and 101 juveniles. A total of 21 microsatellite loci were available for analysis. Ten of the 21 loci showed linkage with 4 linkage groups: 3 pairwise (Cj131/Cj127, CUD68/Cj101, and Cj107/Cp10) and 1 four-locus (Cj122, CUD78, Cj16, and Cj104) being found. Linkage analysis on the 21 loci revealed evidence of sex-specific differences in recombination rates. All 5 nonzero interlocus intervals were longer in females than in males, with the 4-loci linkage group 3-fold longer in females than in males (41.63 cM and 14.1 cM, respectively). This is the first report of sex-specific recombination rates in a species that exhibits temperature-dependent sex determination. © The American Genetic Association. 2006. All rights reserved.

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Isberg, S. R., Johnston, S. M., Chen, Y., & Moran, C. (2006). First evidence of higher female recombination in a species with temperature-dependent sex determination: The saltwater crocodile. Journal of Heredity, 97(6), 599–602. https://doi.org/10.1093/jhered/esl035

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