hiphop:Parentage Assignment using Bi-Allelic Genetic Markers
Can be used for paternity and maternity assignment and outperforms conventional methods where closely related
individuals occur in the pool of possible parents. The method
compares the genotypes of offspring with any combination of
potentials parents and scores the number of mismatches of these
individuals at bi-allelic genetic markers (e.g. Single
Nucleotide Polymorphisms). It elaborates on a prior exclusion
method based on the Homozygous Opposite Test (HOT; Huisman 2017
<doi:10.1111/1755-0998.12665>) by introducing the additional
exclusion criterion HIPHOP (Homozygous Identical Parents,
Heterozygous Offspring are Precluded; Cockburn et al., in
revision). Potential parents are excluded if they have more
mismatches than can be expected due to genotyping error and
mutation, and thereby one can identify the true genetic parents
and detect situations where one (or both) of the true parents
is not sampled. Package 'hiphop' can deal with (a) the case
where there is contextual information about parentage of the
mother (i.e. a female has been seen to be involved in
reproductive tasks such as nest building), but paternity is
unknown (e.g. due to promiscuity), (b) where both parents need
to be assigned, because there is no contextual information on
which female laid eggs and which male fertilized them (e.g.
polygynandrous mating system where multiple females and males
deposit young in a common nest, or organisms with external
fertilisation that breed in aggregations). For details:
Cockburn, A., Penalba, J.V.,Jaccoud, D.,Kilian, A., Brouwer,
L., Double, M.C., Margraf, N., Osmond, H.L., van de Pol, M. and
Kruuk, L.E.B. (in revision). HIPHOP: improved paternity
assignment among close relatives using a simple exclusion
method for bi-allelic markers. Molecular Ecology Resources, DOI
to be added upon acceptance.