2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2014.09.024
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Verification of AFLP kinship methods of entomological evidence by sequencing

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
(24 reference statements)
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“…Such a finding would support the potential use of genetic tests to infer post-mortem relocation of a cadaver: for example, a larva found in one location might belong to a larval population growing on a cadaver in a second location. Faulds, Wells & Picard (2014) confirmed the validity of the AFLP method, finding that kinship testing based on AFLP data yielded adequate kinship estimates with limited error. As noted by those authors, this type of analysis can be performed on any life stage of the insect and on any species.…”
Section: Contribution Of Molecular Analysessupporting
confidence: 59%
“…Such a finding would support the potential use of genetic tests to infer post-mortem relocation of a cadaver: for example, a larva found in one location might belong to a larval population growing on a cadaver in a second location. Faulds, Wells & Picard (2014) confirmed the validity of the AFLP method, finding that kinship testing based on AFLP data yielded adequate kinship estimates with limited error. As noted by those authors, this type of analysis can be performed on any life stage of the insect and on any species.…”
Section: Contribution Of Molecular Analysessupporting
confidence: 59%
“…If so, this result might support the use of genetic tests to infer post-mortem relocation of a cadaver by connecting a larva found in one location to the larval population growing on a cadaver in a second location. Faulds et al confirmed the validity of this AFLP method: kinship testing based on AFLP data yields adequate kinship estimates with limited error (55). As noted by the authors, this type of analysis can be performed on any life stage of the insect and on any species.…”
Section: E 2 Genetics Of Insect Populationsmentioning
confidence: 83%