“…Alternatively, single‐nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) might be more adequate for Q ST ‐ F ST comparisons because of their presumably lower mutation rates (Leinonen et al., ). Studies using both microsatellites and SNPs for genotyping the same set of populations have shown lower heterozygosity and higher population differentiation for SNPs (e.g., DeFaveri, Viitaniemi, Leder, & Merilä, ; Hauser, Baird, Hilborn, Seeb, & Seeb, ; Narum et al., ; Rajora, Eckert, & Zinck, ; Rodríguez‐Quilón et al., ), although the opposite has been also true (e.g., Fischer et al., ; Gärke et al., ; Sork et al., ). In other words, we did not find a general pattern regarding the F ST obtained from microsatellites vs. SNPs in the literature but, in any case, the population differentiation obtained from one or another type of marker tends to be similar.…”