Authors
AC Frantz, J Tigel Pourtois, Myriam Heuertz, L Schley, Marie-Christine Flamand, A Krier, S Bertouille, François Chaumont, T Burke
Publication date
2006/10
Journal
Molecular Ecology
Volume
15
Issue
11
Pages
3191-3203
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Molecular forensic methods are being increasingly used to help enforce wildlife conservation laws. Using multilocus genotyping, illegal translocation of an animal can be demonstrated by excluding all potential source populations as an individual's population of origin. Here, we illustrate how this approach can be applied to a large continuous population by defining the population genetic structure and excluding suspect animals from each identified cluster. We aimed to test the hypothesis that recreational hunters had illegally introduced a group of red deer into a hunting area in Luxembourg. Reference samples were collected over a large area in order to test the possibility that the suspect individuals might be recent immigrants. Due to isolation‐by‐distance relationships in the data set, inferring the number of genetic clusters using Bayesian methods was not straightforward. Biologically meaningful clusters were …
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