4.8 Article

Population size does not influence mitochondrial genetic diversity in animals

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 312, Issue 5773, Pages 570-572

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1122033

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Within-species genetic diversity is thought to reflect population size, history, ecology, and ability to adapt. Using a comprehensive collection of polymorphism data sets covering 3000 animal species, we show that the widely used mitochondria) DNA (mtDNA) marker does not reflect species abundance or ecology: mtDNA diversity is not higher in invertebrates than in vertebrates, in marine than in terrestrial species, or in small than in large organisms. Nuclear loci, in contrast, fit these intuitive expectations. The unexpected mitochondria( diversity distribution is explained by recurrent adaptive evolution, challenging the neutral theory of molecular evolution and questioning the relevance of mtDNA in biodiversity and conservation studies.

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