DnaSP, DNA sequence polymorphism: an interactive program for estimating population genetics parameters from DNA sequence data (original) (raw)

Journal Article

,

Departament de Genètica. Facultat de Biologia, Universitat de Barcelona

Diagonal 645, 08071 Barcelona, Spain

Search for other works by this author on:

Departament de Genètica. Facultat de Biologia, Universitat de Barcelona

Diagonal 645, 08071 Barcelona, Spain

Search for other works by this author on:

Accepted:

07 September 1995

Published:

01 December 1995

Navbar Search Filter Mobile Enter search term Search

Abstract

DnaSP, DNA sequence polymorphism, is an interactive computer program for the analysis of DNA polymorphism from nucleotide sequence data. The program, addressed to molecular population geneticists, calculates several measures of DNA sequence variation within and between populations, linkage disequilibrium parameters and Tajima's D statistic. The program, which is written in Visual Basic v. 3.0 and runs on an IBM-compatible PC under Windows, can handle a large number of sequences of up to thousands of nucleotides each.

This content is only available as a PDF.

© Oxford University Press

Citations

Views

Altmetric

Metrics

Total Views 484

27 Pageviews

457 PDF Downloads

Since 12/1/2016

Month: Total Views:
December 2016 2
January 2017 3
February 2017 2
March 2017 4
May 2017 1
June 2017 2
August 2017 3
September 2017 6
October 2017 3
November 2017 1
December 2017 5
January 2018 3
February 2018 2
March 2018 3
April 2018 2
October 2018 2
November 2018 1
January 2019 1
February 2019 2
March 2019 1
June 2019 1
July 2019 3
August 2019 1
September 2019 1
October 2019 1
November 2019 2
December 2019 2
February 2020 1
March 2020 1
May 2020 2
June 2020 2
July 2020 1
August 2020 3
September 2020 3
October 2020 4
November 2020 1
December 2020 2
January 2021 3
February 2021 2
March 2021 3
April 2021 1
May 2021 1
June 2021 2
July 2021 4
September 2021 1
October 2021 1
November 2021 1
December 2021 1
January 2022 2
February 2022 2
April 2022 2
June 2022 4
July 2022 2
August 2022 1
September 2022 2
October 2022 1
November 2022 1
January 2023 14
February 2023 13
March 2023 17
April 2023 18
May 2023 11
June 2023 12
July 2023 13
August 2023 3
September 2023 5
October 2023 9
November 2023 21
December 2023 29
January 2024 27
February 2024 21
March 2024 23
April 2024 22
May 2024 32
June 2024 16
July 2024 13
August 2024 25
September 2024 6
October 2024 17

×

Email alerts

Citing articles via

More from Oxford Academic