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. 2013 Jun 26;8(6):e67492. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0067492

Table 3. Summary statistics for genetic variability within sample sites.

Sample location H S a A r F IS P-value N loci excess N loci deficiency
GU 0.563 8.3±3.7 5.3±2.3 −0.0047 0.230 7 2
OS 0.576 8.1±3.9 5.0±2.0 −0.0074 0.087 3 6
KR 0.597 8.1±3.4 5.4±2.0 0.0561 0.001 2 7SMD112, SMC8, SMA103
EG 0.574 7.5±4.5 5.3±2.5 0.0056 0.940 6 3
AR 0.839 20.6±15.3 11.5±5.4 0.0279 0.001 3SMA107 6SMA103
SL 0.808 16.6±10.8 10.6±5.1 0.0267 0.001 3 6
BE 0.817 11.2±5.0 10.6±4.7 0.0779 0.051 4 5SMB11, SMA11
PL 0.827 17.8±10.0 11.0±5.1 0.0041 0.420 2 7
RO 0.833 12.4±5.8 11.0±4.9 0.0021 0.380 4 5
GA 0.830 20.7±13.7 11.2±5.1 0.0063 0.001 4SMA107 5SMB11, SMA103
LI 0.816 20.3±13.5 11.0±5.2 0.0039 0.001 5SMD110, SMD131 4SMD121
AL 0.828 19.7±12.3 11.1±5.0 0.0315 0.001 5SMA107 4
Average 0.742 15.3.±2.84 9.1±4.9 0.0110 0.001 4 5

H S is the estimated average gene diversity [28]; a is the average number of alleles per locus, and Ar is the average allele richness ±1X standard deviation. F IS refer to average deviations from Hardy-Weinberg genotype proportions, with number of loci deviating in either direction given. P-values refer to the overall two sided test over all loci (Fisher’s summation procedure over nine single-locus tests), and locus names identify the tests that came out significant (no adjustments made for multiple tests). Bold values of F IS denote significant values in either direction.