Title: Figure 5.1 Giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca)
1Figure 5.1 Giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca)
2Figure 5.2 A coalescence tree with six leaf
nodes representing six DNA sequences
3Figure 5.3 A histogram showing the distribution
of values of p in 100,000 coalescence simulations
under the standard coalescence model with
infinite sites mutation and q 2.6
4Figure 5.4 A tree and a set of binary sequences,
which together are not compatible with the
infinite sites model
5Figure 5.5 Reciprocal monophyly (A) and
incomplete lineage sorting (B)
6Figure 5.5 (A) Reciprocal monophyly
7Figure 5.5 (B) Incomplete lineage sorting
8Figure 5.6 The coalescence tree may (red) or may
not (blue) match the structure of the species
tree (black)
9Figure 5.7 Human mtDNA tree
10Figure 5.8 Coalescence trees produced by
different demographic and historical processes
11Figure 5.8 Coalescence trees produced by
different demographic and historical processes
(Part 1)
12Figure 5.8 Coalescence trees produced by
different demographic and historical processes
(Part 2)
13Figure 5.8 Coalescence trees produced by
different demographic and historical processes
(Part 3)
14Figure 5.9 The likelihood function for q under
the standard coalescence model with infinite
sites mutation when n 2 and the two sequences
differ by six nucleotide sites
15Figure 5.10 Likelihood surfaces for the
migration rate parameter M ( 2Nm) for two
populations of sticklebacks from the Western and
Eastern Pacific Ocean
16Figure 5.11 Distribution of chimpanzee
subspecies and the posterior distribution of the
migration rates between Eastern, Central, and
Western chimpanzees estimated using MCMC method
17Figure 5.11 Distribution of chimpanzee
subspecies and posterior distribution of the
migration rates between Eastern, Central, and
Western chimpanzees estimated using MCMC method
(Part 1)
18Figure 5.11 Distribution of chimpanzee
subspecies and posterior distribution of the
migration rates between Eastern, Central, and
Western chimpanzees estimated using MCMC method
(Part 2)
19Figure 5.12 A star phylogeny the expected
average tree when many loci from a randomly
mating population are analyzed simultaneously
20Figure 5.13 The site frequency spectrum (SFS)
for a sample of African Americans for 5982 SNPs
21Figure 5.14 The joint site frequency spectrum
(SFS) for a Tibetan and a Han Chinese population
estimated for a genome-wide data set of all
protein-coding genes
22Figure 5.15 Admixture analysis of 1056
individuals from 52 populations for 377
microsatellite loci
23Figure 5.16 A PCA analysis of 3000 European
individuals, using 500,000 SNPs for each
individual
24Figure 5.16 A PCA analysis of 3000 European
individuals, using 500,000 SNPs for each
individual (Part 1)
25Figure 5.16 A PCA analysis of 3000 European
individuals, using 500,000 SNPs for each
individual (Part 2)
26Equations 5.15.3
27Exercise 5.1, Table 1
28Exercise 5.2, Figure 1