R. M.Jr. Ball’s research while affiliated with University of Georgia and other places

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Publications (2)


Phylogeographic population structure of Red-winged Blackbirds assessed by mitochondrial DNA
  • Article
  • Full-text available

April 1988

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132 Reads

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208 Citations

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

R. M. Jr Ball

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A continent-wide survey of restriction-site variation in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) of the Red-winged Blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus) was conducted to assess the magnitude of phylogeographic population structure in an avian species. A total of 34 mtDNA genotypes was observed among the 127 specimens assayed by 18 restriction endonucleases. Nonetheless, population differentiation was minor, as indicated by (i) small genetic distances in terms of base substitutions per nucleotide site between mtDNA genotypes (maximum P approximately 0.008) and by (ii) the widespread geographic distributions of particular mtDNA clones and phylogenetic arrays of clones. Extensive morphological differentiation among redwing populations apparently has occurred in the context of relatively little phylogenetic separation. A comparison between mtDNA data sets for Red-winged Blackbirds and deermice (Peromyscus maniculatus) also sampled from across North America shows that intraspecific population structures of these two species differ dramatically. The lower phylogeographic differentiation in redwings is probably due to historically higher levels of gene flow.

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Citations (2)


... According to the theory of retrogenesis in phylogeography, haplotypes located at the center of a haplotype network are considered ancient (Avise et al. 1987;Hu et al. 2019). Notably, populations with high genetic diversity (haplotype diversity and nucleotide diversity) and those possessing unique haplotypes may represent the center of origin or glacial refugia for the species during the Quaternary ice ages (Hewitt 1996). ...

Reference:

Unraveling the Genetic Diversity and Phylogeography of the “King of Vitamin C” Fruit (Rosa roxburghii Trattinnick) in Chinese Southwest
Intraspecific Phylogeography: The Mitochondrial DNA Bridge Between Population Genetics and Systematics

Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics

... Slatkin (1987) reported that even sporadic long-distance migration may be sufficient to prevent substantial genetic differentiation via genetic drift. Presence of morphological differentiation in the absence of phylogenetic structure may be attributed to morphological differences being ecophenotypic and not based entirely on genetic differences (James 1983) or may be an outcome of rapid evolution of genes responsible for morphological differences over a timescale that is too short for mtDNA to detect geographic differentiation (Ball et al. 1988). ...

Phylogeographic population structure of Red-winged Blackbirds assessed by mitochondrial DNA

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences