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Wiley InterScience | |||||||||
![]() Molecular EcologyVolume 13 Issue 11, Pages 3425 - 3435 Published Online: 17 Sep 2004 © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 294K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Rivers influence the population genetic structure of bonobos (Pan paniscus) Copyright © 2004 Blackwell Publishing Ltd KEYWORDS bonobo • chimpanzee • Democratic Republic of Congo • HV1 • mitochondrial DNA • phylogeography • population structure Abstract
Bonobos are large, highly mobile primates living in the relatively undisturbed, contiguous forest south of the Congo River. Accordingly, gene flow among populations is assumed to be extensive, but may be impeded by large, impassable rivers. We examined mitochondrial DNA control region sequence variation in individuals from five distinct localities separated by rivers in order to estimate relative levels of genetic diversity and assess the extent and pattern of population genetic structure in the bonobo. Diversity estimates for the bonobo exceed those for humans, but are less than those found for the chimpanzee. All regions sampled are significantly differentiated from one another, according to genetic distances estimated as pairwise F Received 11 June 2004; revision received 23 July 2004; accepted 23 July 2004 |