Use of fragment–sharing estimates from DNA fingerprinting to determine relatedness in a tropical wren |
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Authors: | W. H. PIPER P. PARKER RABENOLD |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA |
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Abstract: | We assessed the usefulness of DNA fragment–sharing scores from DNA fingerprints for assigning relatedness to unknown pairs of individuals in a population of stripe–backed wrens (Campylorhynchus nuchalis). Preliminary investigation of scoring biases revealed consistency both within and between scorers in relative band–sharing scores, but a tendency for scores to be inflated and for inter–scorer agreement to decline as distance between lanes on an autoradiograph increased. Distributions of band–sharing values matched expected distributions well, which suggests that variability in scores is mostly inherent and not a result of errors in scoring. Confidence intervals based on band–sharing scores or means of scores across enzymes, probes and scorers revealed that unrelated (r= 0) and first–order dyads (r=Vi) could be distinguished on the basis of single band–sharing scores from the best combination of enzyme and probe (HaeIII/33.15) and that first– and second–order dyads could be distinguished when confidence intervals were based on means of band–sharing scores across two enzymes, two probes and two scorers. |
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Keywords: | multilocus fingerprinting band–sharing Campylorhynchus nuchalis relatedness interobserver reliability |
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