Detecting the existence of gene flow between Spanish and North African goats through a coalescent approach

Martínez, Amparo
Manunza, Arianna
Delgado, Juan Vicente
Landi, Vincenzo
Adebambo, Ayotunde
Ismaila, Muritala
Capote, Juan
El Ouni, Mabrouk
Elbeltagy, Ahmed
Abushady, Asmaa M.
Gala, Salah
Ferrando, Ainhoa
Gómez, Mariano
Pons, Agueda
Badaoui, Bouabid
Jordana, Jordi
Vidal i Fàbrega, Oriol
Amills, Marcel
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Human-driven migrations are one of the main processes shaping the genetic diversity and population structure of domestic species. However, their magnitude and direction have been rarely analysed in a statistical framework. We aimed to estimate the impact of migration on the population structure of Spanish and African goats. To achieve this goal, we analysed a dataset of 1,472 individuals typed with 23 microsatellites. Population structure of African and Spanish goats was moderate (mean FST = 0.07), with the exception of the Canarian and South African breeds that displayed a significant differentiation when compared to goats from North Africa and Nigeria. Measurement of gene flow with Migrate-n and IMa coalescent genealogy samplers supported the existence of a bidirectional gene flow between African and Spanish goats. Moreover, IMa estimates of the effective number of migrants were remarkably lower than those calculated with Migrate-n and classical approaches. Such discrepancies suggest that recent divergence, rather than extensive gene flow, is the main cause of the weak population structure observed in caprine breeds ​
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