“…As cervus was developed 12 years before colony , it is not surprising that the majority of the studies used the program cervus (17 of 28) to assign parentage, while three used colony , and one study used both. Several studies (seven) did not use either parentage assignment program but instead relied on methods such as comparing the genotypes of females and offspring and assigning maternity based on the occurrence of mismatches (often only at one or two loci) relative to that expected given allele frequencies, expected mutation rates, genotyping error, null alleles or allele drop‐out (e.g., Hervey et al, 2019; Šťovíček et al, 2013; Tiedemann et al, 2011). The choice to use exclusion by mismatch instead of parentage assignment may reflect a discomfort with available programs, including the limitations that we have tried to address in the present study (Anderholm et al, 2009); however, despite the appeal of simplicity, exclusion is somewhat arbitrary (Flanagan & Jones, 2019).…”