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Data from: De novo characterization of the Timema cristinae transcriptome facilitates marker discovery and inference of genetic divergence.

Cite this dataset

Comeault, Aaron A. et al. (2012). Data from: De novo characterization of the Timema cristinae transcriptome facilitates marker discovery and inference of genetic divergence. [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.70mv450r

Abstract

Adaptation to different ecological environments can promote speciation. Although numerous examples of such ‘ecological speciation’ exist, the genomic basis of the process, and the role of gene flow in it, remains less understood. This is, at least in part, because systems that are well characterized in terms of their ecology often lack genomic resources. In this study we characterize the transcriptome of Timema cristinae stick insects, a system that has been researched intensively in terms of ecological speciation, but for which genomic resources have not been previously developed. Specifically, we obtained >1 million 454 sequencing reads that assembled into 84,937 contigs representing approximately 18,282 unique genes and tens of thousands of potential molecular markers. Second, as an illustration of their utility, we used these genomic resources to assess multi-locus genetic divergence within both an ecotype pair and a species pair of Timema stick insects. The results suggest variable levels of genetic divergence and gene flow among taxon pairs and genes and illustrate a first step towards future genomic work in Timema.

Usage notes

Location

Coastal California