Hi everyone,
I have a question on how to interpret my data when investigating the presence of cryptic taxa or (sub)species in my dataset. I have collected samples from 4 different habitats and based on morphology they should all be the same species. However, I want to see if there are cryptic species or reproductively isolated populations present due to environmental differences between sites (all 4 sampling sites are within 500m apart).
My PCoA shows some clusters and most of my pairwise Fst values between habitats are >0.25 with the highest 0.746. I then ran an admixture analysis using the snmf function in the LEA package, which indicates the presence of 3 clusters in my dataset. To add to this, I looked at fixed differences between the populations using the Technical Note on the dartR website. I have 6 individuals per site (and 5 for the inner reef since one sample failed dartseq). In my case I grouped inner mangrove and outer mangrove together and inner reef and outer reef since fixed differences were 0 and to enhance sample size. After this, there are only two fixed differences between mangrove (n=12) and reef (n=11). I tested for significance and the distinction between these two OTUs did not significantly exceed the false positive rate (p = 1). Hence, there is insufficient evidence to reject the null hypothesis of the two populations belonging to the one species, i.e. there is insufficient evidence to assume cryptic taxa or subspecies.
So, this analysis suggests that despite the presence of private alleles and some fixed differences, I cannot conclude the presence of cryptic taxa or subspecies in my populations (potentially due to the small sample size?). I’m not entirely sure how to interpret this result as the Fst values for example indicate quite some genetic differentiation between some of my populations and admixture reveals 3 clusters. Would anyone have any suggestions or possibilities why these results don't completely seem to match up, e.g. is it perhaps due to my sample size?
Many thanks in advance!
Kind regards,
Chiara
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Hi Chiara,
For the private alleles study I would not use the impute step (as it may simply introduce some private/[fixed=unlikely] allele to your data set. Here I would argue to leave the NAs (there are not many in your data set after your filter for callrate I assume anyway and check per hand how many NAs there are in the private allele loci afterwards).
To identify the private alleles, there would be some additional code needed as currently gl.report.pa does only give a summary stastistics. It should not be too difficult to do so (you may want to look at the gl.report.pa function.
Let me know if you struggle I wanted to have this implemented (to get the actual loci) for a while but did not come around and that might be a good reason to do so.
Cheers, Bernd
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Thanks Luis. I remembered we talked about it, but I was not aware that you have already done it.
@Chiara: So then you simple can use the gl.keep.loc with the locnames returned by the function.
Cheers, Bernd
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Dr Bernd Gruber )/_
_.--..---"-,--c_
Professor Ecological Modelling \|..' ._O__)_
Tel: (02) 6206 3804 ,=. _.+ _ \..--( /
Fax: (02) 6201 2328 \\.-''_.-' \ ( \_
Institute for Applied Ecology `''' `\__ /\
Faculty of Science and Technology ')
University of Canberra ACT 2601 AUSTRALIA
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WWW: bernd-gruber
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From: da...@googlegroups.com <da...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Jose Luis Mijangos
Sent: Friday, 12 May 2023 10:02
To: dartR <da...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [dartR] gl.fixed.diff compared to Fst, admixture and PCoA analysis
Hi Bernd and Chiara,
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