2018
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.4255
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A genetic analysis of dragonfly population structure

Abstract: Dragonflies reside in both aquatic and terrestrial environments, depending on their life stage, necessitating the conservation of drastically different habitats; however, little is understood about how nymph and adult dragonflies function as metapopulations within connected habitat. We used genetic techniques to examine nymphs and adults within a single metapopulation both spatially and temporally to better understand metapopulation structure and the processes that might influence said structure. We sampled 97… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
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“…represented in winter by nymphs, on the one hand, and eggs, on the other) effectively represent independent populations, with no apparent opportunity for gene flow between them. There is some evidence for this in odonates with semivoltine life cycles (Phillips and Swanson 2018). This has implications for interpreting surveys of the species.…”
Section: Implications Of the Results To The Conservation Of P Vicentaementioning
confidence: 98%
“…represented in winter by nymphs, on the one hand, and eggs, on the other) effectively represent independent populations, with no apparent opportunity for gene flow between them. There is some evidence for this in odonates with semivoltine life cycles (Phillips and Swanson 2018). This has implications for interpreting surveys of the species.…”
Section: Implications Of the Results To The Conservation Of P Vicentaementioning
confidence: 98%