4.4 Article

Testing for Spatially Divergent Selection: Comparing QST to FST

Journal

GENETICS
Volume 183, Issue 3, Pages 1055-1063

Publisher

GENETICS SOCIETY AMERICA
DOI: 10.1534/genetics.108.099812

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Funding

  1. Natural Science and Engineering Research Council (Canada)
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [PA00A3-115383]

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Q(ST) is a standardized measure of the genetic differentiation of a quantitative trait among Populations. The distribution of Q(ST)'s for neutral traits can be predicted from the F-ST, for neutral marker loci. To test for the neutral differentiation of a quantitative trait among populations, it is necessary to ask whether the Q(ST) of that trait is in the tail of the probability distribution of neutral traits. This neutral distribution can be estimated using the Lewontin-Krakauer distribution and the from a relatively small number of marker loci. We develop a simulation method to test whether the Q(ST) of a given trait is consistent With the null hypothesis of selective neutrality over space. The method is most powerful with small mean F-ST, strong selection, and a large number (>10) of measured Populations. The power and type I error rate of the new method are far superior to the traditional method of comparing Q(ST) and F-ST.

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