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Table 2 Numbers and proportions of individuals, and numbers of haplotypes and unique haplotypes representing the phylogenetic Clades A, B, C, and D in each of the regions.

From: Origin of mitochondrial DNA diversity of domestic yaks

Region

N

Nh (U)

Hd

Clade A

Clade B

Clade C

Clade D

Clade E

Clade F

    

N (P)

Nh (U)

N (P)

Nh (U)

N (P)

Nh (U)

N (P)

Nh (U)

N (P)

Nh (U)

N (P)

Nh (U)

Qinghai

125

46 (32)

0.93 ± 0.01

74 (59.2)

22 (16)

24 (19.2)

13 (10)

13 (10.4)

6 (4)

8 (6.4)

3 (1)

6 (4.8)

2 (1)

0

0

Tibet

80

30 (16)

0.91 ± 0.02

39 (48.8)

12 (7)

13 (16.3)

6 (3)

13 (16.3)

5 (3)

11 (13.8)

5 (3)

4 (5.0)

2 (1)

0

0

Gansu

23

13 (6)

0.93 ± 0.03

15 (65.2)

7 (4)

5 (21.7)

3 (1)

1 (4.4)

1 (0)

1 (4.4)

1 (0)

1 (4.4)

1 (0)

0

0

Sichuan

12

8 (2)

0.91 ± 0.06

6 (50.0)

4 (0)

0

0

4 (33.3)

2 (1)

1 (8.3)

1 (1)

1 (8.3)

1 (0)

0

0

Xinjiang

35

10 (7)

0.84 ± 0.03

21 (60.0)

6 (4)

12 (34.3)

2 (1)

0

0

0

0

0

0

2 (5.7)

2(2)

Domestic yaks

275

78 (77)

0.92 ± 0.01

155 (56.4)

37

54 (19.6)

18

31 (11.3)

10

21 (7.6)

7

12 (4.4)

4

2(0.7)

2(2)

WYP

8

8 (7)

1.0 ± 0.06

2

1 (0)

1

1 (1)

2

2 (2)

0

0

0

0

0

0

Wild yaks

13

10 (9)

0.96 ± 0.04

4

2 (1)

2

2 (2)

2

2 (2)

0

0

0

0

0

0

  1. N, number of individuals; Nh (U), Number of haplotypes (unique types), Hd, haplotype diversity (Mean ± S.D); N (P), Number of individuals (%) and WYP, a single wild yak population in west Qinghai.