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Effective population size of Anopheles funestus chromosomal forms in Burkina Faso
Besansky, N. J; Costantini, C; Grushko, O; Guelbeogo, W. M; Michel, A. P; Sagnon, N.
  • Besansky, N. J; s.af
  • Costantini, C; s.af
  • Grushko, O; s.af
  • Guelbeogo, W. M; s.af
  • Michel, A. P; s.af
  • Sagnon, N; s.af
Malaria journal ; 5(1): 5-2006.
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1265187
RESUMO

Background:

As Anopheles funestus is one of the principal Afro-tropical malaria vectors; a more complete understanding of its population structure is desirable. In West and Central Africa; An. funestus population structure is complicated by the coexistence of two assortatively mating chromosomal forms. Effective population size (Ne) is a key parameter in understanding patterns and levels of intraspecific variation; as it reflects the role of genetic drift. Here; Ne was estimated from both chromosomal forms; Kiribina and Folonzo; in Burkina Faso.

Methods:

Short-term Ne was estimated by evaluating variation at 16 microsatellite loci across temporal samples collected annually from 2000-2002. Estimates were based on standardized variance in allele frequencies or a maximum likelihood method. Long-term Ne was estimated from genetic diversity estimates using mtDNA sequences and microsatellites.

Results:

For both forms; short-term and long-term Ne estimates were on the order of 103 and 105; respectively. Long-term Ne estimates were larger when based on loci from chromosome 3R (both inside and outside of inversions) than loci outside of this arm.

Conclusion:

Ne values indicate that An. funestus is not subject to seasonal bottlenecks. Though not statistically different because of large and overlapping confidence intervals; short-term Ne estimates were consistently smaller for Kiribina than Folonzo; possibly due to exploitation of different breeding sites permanent for Folonzo and intermittent for Kiribina. The higher long-term Ne estimates on 3R; the arm carrying the two inversions mainly responsible for defining the chromosomal forms; give natural selection broader scope and merit further study
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Full text: Available Index: AIM (Africa) Main subject: Malaria / Anopheles Language: English Journal: Malaria journal Year: 2006 Type: Article

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Full text: Available Index: AIM (Africa) Main subject: Malaria / Anopheles Language: English Journal: Malaria journal Year: 2006 Type: Article