Ancient female philopatry, asymmetric male gene flow, and synchronous population expansion support the influence of climatic oscillations on the evolution of South American sea lion (Otaria flavescens) - Fig 2
posted on 2017-06-27, 17:29authored byLarissa Rosa de Oliveira, Marcelo C. M. Gehara, Lúcia D. Fraga, Fernando Lopes, Juan Ignacio Túnez, Marcelo H. Cassini, Patricia Majluf, Susana Cárdenas-Alayza, Héctor J. Pavés, Enrique Alberto Crespo, Nestor García, Rocío Loizaga de Castro, A. Rus Hoelzel, Maritza Sepúlveda, Carlos Olavarría, Victor Hugo Valiati, Renato Quiñones, Maria Jose Pérez-Alvarez, Paulo Henrique Ott, Sandro L. Bonatto
Median-joining network of South American sea lion haplotypes based on the (A) control region sequences; (B) control region plus cyt b concatenated sequences; and (C) only cyt b sequences. Each circle represents a unique haplotype, with size being proportional to the number of samples carrying it and cross lines the number of differences between then.