Evolutionary Biology 2016
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-41324-2_20
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Inference Methods for Multiple Merger Coalescents

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Multiple‐merger coalescent processes predict patterns of population genetic data that are different from predictions of the classical Wright‐Fisher model and similar models (Birkner, Blath, & Eldon, 2013b; Blath et al, 2016). To identify random sweepstakes in natural populations, one can therefore apply coalescent‐based inference to population genetic data (Birkner et al, 2011; Birkner & Blath, 2008; Birkner, Blath, & Steinrücken, 2013; Eldon, 2011, 2016; Eldon et al, 2015; Freund & Siri‐Jégousse, 2021; Koskela, 2018; Koskela & Berenguer, 2019). In contrast to multiple merger coalescents, the gene genealogy of a sample from a population evolving according to the Wright‐Fisher model, or similar model (where ‘similar’ refers to certain conditions on the offspring number distribution; Möhle & Sagitov, 2001; Sagitov, 1999) is described by the Kingman‐coalescent, in which no more than two ancestral lineages merge each time (Berestycki, 2009; Kingman, 1982a, 1982b, 1982c; Tajima, 1983).…”
Section: Modelling Random Sweepstakesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Multiple‐merger coalescent processes predict patterns of population genetic data that are different from predictions of the classical Wright‐Fisher model and similar models (Birkner, Blath, & Eldon, 2013b; Blath et al, 2016). To identify random sweepstakes in natural populations, one can therefore apply coalescent‐based inference to population genetic data (Birkner et al, 2011; Birkner & Blath, 2008; Birkner, Blath, & Steinrücken, 2013; Eldon, 2011, 2016; Eldon et al, 2015; Freund & Siri‐Jégousse, 2021; Koskela, 2018; Koskela & Berenguer, 2019). In contrast to multiple merger coalescents, the gene genealogy of a sample from a population evolving according to the Wright‐Fisher model, or similar model (where ‘similar’ refers to certain conditions on the offspring number distribution; Möhle & Sagitov, 2001; Sagitov, 1999) is described by the Kingman‐coalescent, in which no more than two ancestral lineages merge each time (Berestycki, 2009; Kingman, 1982a, 1982b, 1982c; Tajima, 1983).…”
Section: Modelling Random Sweepstakesmentioning
confidence: 99%