Dear Jonathan et al.,
Thanks very much for your replies, and I apologize for not writing
back sooner.
My nuclear data, under the delta K method, give nearly equivocal
results for K = 2 and K = 3, but when I include the plastid data, K is
unequivocally = 3. I have 3 a priori populations, so the K = 3
scenario makes the most biological sense to me, and argues for
including the plastid haploid data. My explanation is that my plastid
data show that there are three exclusive clades representing each of
these populations (i.e. reciprocal monophyly for each), and that my
nuclear data show either gene flow or lingering ancestral
polymorphism. This situation seems to be quite common at the
infraspecific level, and my guess is that it mostly has to do with the
difference in coalescence times for nuclear vs. plastid DNA. Thus it
is not surprising to me to see such results.
Can one specify different ploidy levels for different loci (i.e.
haploid, diploid) in a Structure analysis? How would this work in an
admixture analysis? I am hesitant to do what 'student' has suggested,
to simply code both alleles the same for haploid data (if I interpret
his or her meaning correctly). This is where I thought one would be
unjustifiably weighting the analysis (by doubling the influence of
haploid data, essentially treating them as a a completely homozygous
diploid locus), but I guess if one codes the other allele as missing,
the program will have to optimize that 'other' copy anyway, and the
same problem might still occur. For now I will stick with the latter.
Thanks again,
CB
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