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da Gonçalves Silva, A., Williams, K. E., Kirk, S. L., Bishop, C. A., Hodges, K. E., & Russello, M. A. (2010). Isolation and characterization of microsatellite loci in two species-at-risk in british columbia: great basin spadefoot (spea intermontana) and western painted turtle (chrysemys picta bellii). Conservation Genetics Resources, (accepted). 
Added by: Admin (09 May 2010 16:30:59 UTC)   Last edited by: Beate Pfau (29 Aug 2010 07:22:13 UTC)
Resource type: Journal Article
BibTeX citation key: daGoncalvesSilva2010
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Categories: General
Keywords: Chrysemys, Chrysemys picta, Emydidae, Genetik = genetics, Schildkröten = turtles + tortoises
Creators: Bishop, da Gonçalves Silva, Hodges, Kirk, Russello, Williams
Collection: Conservation Genetics Resources
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Abstract     
Abstract Seventeen polymorphic microsatellite loci were characterized in two Canadian species-at-risk, Great Basin spadefoot (Spea intermontana, N = 9) and the Western painted turtle (Chrysemys picta bellii, N = 8), from GT n enriched genomic libraries and cross-taxa amplification. Number of alleles per locus ranged from 2 to 9, with an average of 3.9 and 4.3 alleles/locus in Great Basin spadefoot and Western painted turtle, respectively. Mean expected heterozygosities were comparatively high (0.43–0.52), as was the power to distinguish between individuals relative to the number of loci characterized per species (multilocus P ID = 9.2 × 10−5–1.6 × 10−5). These loci will be fundamental in generating historical population information in support of conservation efforts for these two imperiled species.
Added by: Admin  Last edited by: Beate Pfau
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