Data from: A method for detecting recent changes in contemporary effective population size from linkage disequilibrium at linked and unlinked loci

Estimation of contemporary effective population size (Ne) from linkage disequilibrium (LD) between unlinked pairs of genetic markers has become an important tool in the field of population and conservation genetics. If data pertaining to physical linkage or genomic position are available for genetic...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hollenbeck, Christopher M., Portnoy, David S., Gold, John R.
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.73s46
Description
Summary:Estimation of contemporary effective population size (Ne) from linkage disequilibrium (LD) between unlinked pairs of genetic markers has become an important tool in the field of population and conservation genetics. If data pertaining to physical linkage or genomic position are available for genetic markers, estimates of recombination rate between loci can be combined with LD data to estimate contemporary Ne at various times in the past. We extend the well-known, LD-based method of estimating contemporary Ne to include linkage information and show via simulation that even relatively small, recent changes in Ne can be detected reliably with a modest number of SNP loci. We explore several issues important to interpretation of the results and quantify the bias in estimates of contemporary Ne associated with the assumption that all loci in a large SNP dataset are unlinked. The approach is applied to an empirical dataset of SNP genotypes from a population of a marine fish where a recent, temporary decline in Ne is known to have occurred. Raw Data FilesGenepop files for simulated and empirical datasetsraw_data.tar.gz