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Document Description
Title
A
molecular
genetic
analysis
of
hybridization
between
two
species
of
deer
(Odocoileus)
in
western
Canada
Author
Hughes
,
Glenys
Anne
,
1962-
Description
Thesis
(M.Sc.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1992.
Biology
Date
1990
Pagination
ix, 93 leaves : ill., map.
Subject
White-tailed
deer--Genetics;
Mule
deer--Genetics;
Hybridization
Degree
M.Sc.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Biology
Discipline
Biology
Language
Eng
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
75-93.
Abstract
Hybridization
between
two
species
of
deer
(Odocoileus)
in
western
Canada
has been
postulated
for
many
years.
Mitochondrial
and
nuclear
components
of the
genomes
of
deer
from this and
other
regions
in
North
America
were
analyzed
to
test
whether
these
deer
constitute
reproductively
isolated
species
or
whether
interspecies
genetic
exchange
has
occurred
by
hybridization.
--
The
polymerase
chain
reaction
(PCR)
was
used
to
amplify
a
359
base
pair
fragment
of the
mitochondrial
cytochrome
b
gene
from
81
white-tailed
deer
(O.
virginianus)
,
mule
deer
(O.
hemionus
hemionus)
, and
Sitka
black-tailed
deer
(O.
hemionus
sitkensis).
Direct
DNA
sequencing
of a
302
base
pair
block
of the
PCR-amplified
products
revealed
34
variable
nucleotide
positions.
These
variants
define
13
distinct
mitochondrial
DNA
(mtDNA)
sequence
genotypes.
Twelve
of these are
confined
to
one
or the
other
species:
five
genotypes
were
found
only
in
white-tailed
deer
and
seven
only
in
mule
deer
or
black-tailed
deer.
In
only
one
instance
is
a
genotype
shared
between
species:
a
single
deer
that had been
identified
as a
mule
deer
possessed
a
white-tailed
deer-type
mtDNA.
--
Allelic
variants
at the
albumin
locus
also
distinguish
the
two
species.
Of
53
animals
sampled
from
British
Columbia
,
Alberta
, and
Saskatchewan
,
25
white-tailed
deer
and
27
mule
deer
were
homozygous
for
slow
and
fast
albumin
alleles
,
respectively.
Only
one
animal
showed
the
heterozygote
albumin
pattern
characteristic
of
hybrid
deer.
This
individual
is
the
same
mule
deer
that
possessed
an
mtDNA
genotype
found
otherwise
only
in
white-tailed
deer.
--
These
data
suggest
there
is
little
genetic
introgression
between
mule
deer
and
white-tailed
deer
in
western
Canada.
Similar
findings
have been
reported
for
Odocoileus
in
Montana
, but
high
levels
of
hybridization
have been
documented
between
the
same
species
in
west
Texas.
Habitat
disturbance
and
mating
behaviour
are
factors
that
may
affect
the
frequency
and
direction
of
hybridization
in
different
localities.
--
Phenetic
and
cladistic
analyses
of
sequence
differences
among
white-tailed
deer
,
mule
deer
, and
black-tailed
deer
reveal
a
discordance
between
mtDNA
genotype
and
species
affinity.
Interspecies
hybridization
,
random
phylogenetic
sorting
of
mtDNA
lineages
, and
differential
rate
of
mtDNA
evolution
are
considered
as
hypotheses
to
explain
the
relationships
among
mtDNA
genotypes
of these
species.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
76118619
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(11.63
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Hughes_GlenysAnne.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
98912.cpd