SLÁMOVÁ, Petra, Jan HANEL, Jana SVOBODOVÁ, Dana RYMEŠOVÁ, Alena HÝLOVÁ and Karel ŠŤASTNÝ. Structure of kinship in population of Tengmalm’s Owl Aegolius funerus. In 2nd European Congress of Conservation Biology. 2009. ISBN 978-80-213-1961-5.
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Basic information
Original name Structure of kinship in population of Tengmalm’s Owl Aegolius funerus
Authors SLÁMOVÁ, Petra, Jan HANEL, Jana SVOBODOVÁ, Dana RYMEŠOVÁ, Alena HÝLOVÁ and Karel ŠŤASTNÝ.
Edition 2nd European Congress of Conservation Biology, 2009.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Conference abstract
Field of Study 10600 1.6 Biological sciences
Country of publisher Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
Organization unit Faculty of Science
ISBN 978-80-213-1961-5
Keywords (in Czech) sýc rousný, příbuznost, mikrosatelity, paternita, sovy, Aegolius funereus
Keywords in English Tengmalm's owl, boreal owl, kinship, microsatellites, paternity, owls, Aegolius funereus
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Dana Rymešová, Ph.D., učo 106431. Changed: 8/6/2010 15:33.
Abstract
The dispersion and mating system significantly affect the genetic structure of the population. Boreal owl (Aegolius funereus) nesting biology has been studied since 1999 in the Krušné Hory Mts where the birds nest in nesting boxes. To investigate the mating system and the population genetic structure of the boreal owl population, blood samples have been collected there since 2006. We collected 241 samples from family members in 3 years period from 3 different areas - Krušné hory Mts, Jizerské Hory Mts and Žďárské Vrchy Mts. These samples were genotyped at 7 microsatellite loci. We found no evidence of EPF in any of them; only two nestlings had genotypes that were incompatible with those of their parents. In both cases, however, the genotypes of the chicks were inconsistent at only one locus. The results indicate decrease in the genetic diversity of population from the Krušné Hory Mts, which is probably the effect of relatively high rate of resident individuals in the area of study, including females. The FST values and the output of the Structure program indicate genetic differentiation among all three localities. That could be caused by the limited gene flow between the mountain range or by the number of samples.
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