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1 April 2004 ESTIMATING SEX-SPECIFIC DISPERSAL RATES WITH AUTOSOMAL MARKERS IN HIERARCHICALLY STRUCTURED POPULATIONS
Pierre Fontanillas, Eric Petit, Nicolas Perrin
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Abstract

A recent study suggests that sex-specific dispersal rates can be quantitatively estimated on the basis of sex- and state-specific (pre- vs. postdispersal) F-statistics. In the present paper, we extend this approach to account for the hierarchical structure of natural populations, and we validate it through individual-based simulations. The model is applied to an empirical data set consisting of 536 individuals (males, females, and predispersal juveniles) of greater white-toothed shrews (Crocidura russula), sampled according to a hierarchical design and typed for seven autosomal microsatellite loci. From this dataset, dispersal is significantly female biased at the local scale (breeding- group level), but not at the larger scale (among local populations). We argue that selective pressures on dispersal are likely to depend on the spatial scale considered, and that short-distance dispersal should mainly respond to kin interactions (inbreeding or kin competition avoidance), which exert differential pressure on males and females.

Pierre Fontanillas, Eric Petit, and Nicolas Perrin "ESTIMATING SEX-SPECIFIC DISPERSAL RATES WITH AUTOSOMAL MARKERS IN HIERARCHICALLY STRUCTURED POPULATIONS," Evolution 58(4), 886-894, (1 April 2004). https://doi.org/10.1554/03-432
Received: 21 July 2003; Accepted: 7 December 2003; Published: 1 April 2004
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KEYWORDS
coancestry
Crocidura russula
F-statistics
individual-based models
local competition
variance analysis
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