Journal article

Sex-linked and autosomal microsatellites provide new insights into island populations of the tammar wallaby

AJ MacDonald, NN Fitzsimmons, B Chambers, MB Renfree, SD Sarre

Heredity | Published : 2014

Abstract

The emerging availability of microsatellite markers from mammalian sex chromosomes provides opportunities to investigate both male- and female-mediated gene flow in wild populations, identifying patterns not apparent from the analysis of autosomal markers alone. Tammar wallabies (Macropus eugenii), once spread over the southern mainland, have been isolated on several islands off the Western Australian and South Australian coastlines for between 10 000 and 13 000 years. Here, we combine analyses of autosomal, Y-linked and X-linked microsatellite loci to investigate genetic variation in populations of this species on two islands (Kangaroo Island, South Australia and Garden Island, Western Aust..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was supported by an Australian Research Council Discovery Grant (DP0211687) awarded to SDS and NNF. Professor Geoff Shaw, Dr Danielle Hickford and Dr Terry Fletcher assisted with sample collection and Rachel Walsh assisted with DNA extractions. We thank three anonymous reviewers, Niccy Aitken, William Sherwin, Marion Hohn, Dennis McNevin and participants in an Institute for Applied Ecology Science Writers' Workshops for helpful comments on earlier versions of this manuscript.