Can Genetic Estimators Provide Robust Estimates of the Effective Number of Breeders in Small Populations?
Published 2012 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Can Genetic Estimators Provide Robust Estimates of the Effective Number of Breeders in Small Populations?
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
PLoS One
Volume 7, Issue 11, Pages e48464
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Online
2012-11-07
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0048464
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Monitoring the effective population size of a brown bear (Ursus arctos) population using new single-sample approaches
- (2012) TOMAŽ SKRBINŠEK et al. MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
- Understanding and Estimating Effective Population Size for Practical Application in Marine Species Management
- (2011) MATTHEW P. HARE et al. CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
- CalculatingNeandNe/Nin age-structured populations: a hybrid Felsenstein-Hill approach
- (2011) Robin S. Waples et al. ECOLOGY
- COMPARATIVE ANALYSES OF EFFECTIVE POPULATION SIZE WITHIN AND AMONG SPECIES: RANID FROGS AS A CASE STUDY
- (2011) Ivan C. Phillipsen et al. EVOLUTION
- Effective population size of natural populations of Drosophila buzzatii, with a comparative evaluation of nine methods of estimation
- (2011) J. S. F. BARKER MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
- Inbreeding effective population size and parentage analysis without parents
- (2011) ROBIN S. WAPLES et al. Molecular Ecology Resources
- Estimation of census and effective population sizes: the increasing usefulness of DNA-based approaches
- (2010) Gordon Luikart et al. CONSERVATION GENETICS
- ESTIMATION OF PARAMETERS OF INBREEDING AND GENETIC DRIFT IN POPULATIONS WITH OVERLAPPING GENERATIONS
- (2010) Jinliang Wang et al. EVOLUTION
- Estimating the ratio of effective to actual size of an age-structured population from individual demographic data
- (2010) S. Engen et al. JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
- When are genetic methods useful for estimating contemporary abundance and detecting population trends?
- (2010) DAVID A. TALLMON et al. Molecular Ecology Resources
- Spatial-temporal stratifications in natural populations and how they affect understanding and estimation of effective population size
- (2010) ROBIN S. WAPLES Molecular Ecology Resources
- Compromising genetic diversity in the wild: unmonitored large-scale release of plants and animals
- (2010) Linda Laikre et al. TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION
- Polygyny, census and effective population size in the threatened frog, Rana latastei
- (2009) G. F. Ficetola et al. ANIMAL CONSERVATION
- Linkage disequilibrium estimates of contemporaryNeusing highly variable genetic markers: a largely untapped resource for applied conservation and evolution
- (2009) Robin S. Waples et al. Evolutionary Applications
- A new method for estimating effective population sizes from a single sample of multilocus genotypes
- (2009) JINLIANG WANG MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
- A comparison of single-sample effective size estimators using empirical toad (Bufo calamita) population data: genetic compensation and population size-genetic diversity correlations
- (2009) T. J. C. BEEBEE MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
- Effective population size and patterns of molecular evolution and variation
- (2009) Brian Charlesworth NATURE REVIEWS GENETICS
- Polygyny and female breeding failure reduce effective population size in the lekking Gunnison sage-grouse
- (2008) Julie R. Stiver et al. BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
- Can we measure the benefits of help in cooperatively breeding birds: the case of superb fairy-wrens Malurus cyaneus?
- (2008) Andrew Cockburn et al. JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
- Nb_HetEx: A Program to Estimate the Effective Number of Breeders
- (2008) O. L. Zhdanova et al. JOURNAL OF HEREDITY
- ldne: a program for estimating effective population size from data on linkage disequilibrium
- (2008) ROBIN S. WAPLES et al. Molecular Ecology Resources
- COMPUTER PROGRAMS: onesamp: a program to estimate effective population size using approximate Bayesian computation
- (2007) DAVID A. TALLMON et al. Molecular Ecology Resources
Discover Peeref hubs
Discuss science. Find collaborators. Network.
Join a conversationFind the ideal target journal for your manuscript
Explore over 38,000 international journals covering a vast array of academic fields.
Search