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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/22492
Title: Molecular Genetic Analysis of a Brown-Headed Cowbird (Molothrus Ater) Population
Authors: Miller, Paul Christopher
Advisor: Gibbs, H. Lisle
Department: Biology
Keywords: molecular genetic, brown-headed, cowbird, population, molothrus ater, mtDNA
Publication Date: 1993
Abstract: <p> The mtDNA control region of the Brown-headed Cowbird (Molothrus ater) was sequenced and comparisons made at the inter- and intraspecific level. Comparison of the control region with that of another Passerine, Darwin's Finch (Geospiza scandens), revealed a high degree of both gross and fine scale structural similarity. At the nucleotide level, this comparison confirmed the presence of a hypervariable domain which evolves at rate approximately 5 times faster than coding mtDNA as well as a relatively conserved central domain which evolves at rate comparable to coding mtDNA. Both species displayed the typical avian mtDNA gene organisation previously described by Desjardins and Morais (1990, 1991) and Quinn and Wilson (in press). However, the most notable structural feature in common was the apparent deletion of the entire left hypervariable domain (CR1). At a finer scale, Conserved Sequence Block (CSB1) was perfectly conserved between cowbird and finch and Conserved Sequence Block 2 (CSB2) was 78% similar. The hypervariable right domain showed the largest degree of sequence divergence between species, 22.7%, while the central domain and phe-tRNA showed much less divergence, 6.47 and 4.41% respectively. At an intraspecific level, in 524 bases of sequence from 31 nestling cowbirds from a population at Delta, Manitoba, only 3 variable sites were detected which defined a total of 4 haplotypes. The average percent sequence divergence for this population was 0.27%. This level of variation within the cowbird population is low compared to other vertebrate populations. This relative lack of variation is largely attributable to the loss of the left hypervariable domain (CR1). The loss of CR1 will limit the control region's usefulness for high resolution population level studies but may make it a useful marker for phylogenetic studies within the class Aves.</p>
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/22492
Appears in Collections:Digitized Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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