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| Grants2006 Traditional S6 GrantMolecular Diversity among Massasauga Rattlesnakes: Nuclear Intron Analyses
Missouri
Project Title: Molecular Diversity among Massasauga Rattlesnakes: Nuclear Intron Analyses
Molecular Diversity among Massasauga Rattlesnakes: Nuclear Intron Analyses 1 May 2006 - 31 May 2007
I. NEED
According to its mtDNA, the Missouri specimen would be erroneously classified as the western subspecies, given its mother. Because of this problem (and others), there is a growing realization that to verify management and/or taxonomic decisions, mtDNA must be complemented with a second, independent molecular marker. A reasonable choice in this regard would be one from the nuclear genome. Introns, which are non-coding segments of DNA that interrupt coding exons, are a likely choice. These markers can now be successfully amplified across divergent taxa, and they are being extensively used to corroborate or refute taxonomic decisions and to clarify questions of hybridity. By reanalyzing genetic samples using introns, information on hybridization between lineages will further address the taxonomic issues of the Massasauga Rattlesnake complex in North America, especially Missouri.
The complete 8-page grant proposal is available as a PDF.
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Last updated:
October 24, 2012
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