birding-aus

Interpretation please

To: "Greg Little" <>
Subject: Interpretation please
From: Carl Clifford <>
Date: Sun, 31 Oct 2010 22:40:08 +1100
Greg et al,

Looks like I may be wrong in my interpretation of multi-locus analysis. I have been doing a bit of thinking on the phrase and I think it probably refers to a type of DNA analysis. Any gene jocks out there who can elucidate ?

Cheers,

Carl Clifford


On 31/10/2010, at 9:31 PM, Greg Little wrote:

Carl

I'd go with your interpretation but would add that the multilocus might mean
several smaller studies combined or the one study over several areas.

Greg Little

-----Original Message-----
From: 
 On Behalf Of Carl Clifford
Sent: Sunday, 31 October 2010 8:49 PM
To: Angus Innes
Cc: Birding Aus
Subject: Interpretation please

Angus,

I will take a stab at it. " A study of honeyeaters of the family
Meliphagidae highlights the influence of geographic barriers which
effect their distribution geographically and over time in the monsoon
areas of Oz" or words to that effect". But then being an uneducated
oik, I am probably wrong.

Cheers,

Carl Clifford

On 31/10/2010, at 7:09 PM, Angus Innes wrote:


The beauty of Birding Aus is its egalitarianism and the little peep we
get into the lives and knowledge of others involved in birds.  In the
following case the insight is obscured by my ignorance. Every
speciality evolves its' own language and terminology, but I am a bit
bluffed by the the title of the paper referred to in the second last
(penultimate) paragraph of Bruce's (Wedderburn Birding) post on White-
naped Honeyeaters, i.e.

"Toon, A., J.M. Hughes, and L. Joseph (2010), Multilocus analysis of
honeyeaters (Aves: Meliphagidae) highlights spatio-temporal
heterogeneity in
the influence of biogeographic barriers in the Australian monsoonal
zone,
Mol. Ecol. 19, 2980-2994. See
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-294X.2010.04730.x/abstract

"

I think I can have a good stab at the first and last underlined term
(my underlining), but the second has me bluffed - their interplay is
consequently a little baffling. Not surprisingly the terms do not
appear in standard dictionaries.

Could someone please have a stab at a translation (or elucidation) of
the title - or what, in essence, the article is about.

I did look at the abstract, but that raises even more problems with my
ignorance.

Grateful for any enlightenment.

Angus Innes.
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