Published on 24 June 2011 |
Data from: Bayesian inference of a historical bottleneck in a heavily exploited marine mammal
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Emerging Bayesian analytical approaches offer increasingly sophisticated means of reconstructing historical population dynamics from genetic data, but have been little applied to scenarios involving demographic bottlenecks. Consequently, we analysed a large mitochondrial and microsatellite dataset from the Antarctic fur seal Arctocephalus gazella, a species subjected to one of the most extreme examples of uncontrolled exploitation in history when it was reduced to the brink of extinction by the sealing industry during the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Classical bottleneck tests, which exploit the fact that rare alleles are rapidly lost during demographic reduction, yielded ambiguous results. In contrast, a strong signal of recent demographic decline was detected using both Bayesian skyline plots and approximate Bayesian computing, the latter also allowing derivation of posterior parameter estimates that were remarkably consistent with historical observations. This was achieved using only contemporary samples, further emphasizing the potential of Bayesian approaches to address important outstanding problems in conservation and evolutionary biology.
Citations (1)
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-294x.2011.05248.xDataCite MDC
Cited on 01 October 2011
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Publication Details
Subfield
Statistics and Probability
Field
Mathematics
Domain
Physical Sciences
Confidence Score
51%
Source
Scholar Data Model