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Hi Hannes,
I would like to ask for your advice regarding a problem that I have with the k-mer histogram of sturgeon species probably allotetraploid (Acipenser naccarii).
The problem is that the histogram is a bit strange, it does not look like a usual allotetraploid histogram and the Tetmer model does not adjust correctly, so the values of theta, T, nucleotide divergence, etc. are unexpected (I tried to fix the fit of the model manually but it did not change anything). Although I have good coverage (89x, that is, ~22x per haploid), the first peak of the histogram does not separate from the contamination peak (figure 1 attached). I thought there was a coverage problem so I artificially increased the coverage by combining the reads of two individuals to get up to 142x but the problem keeps popping up. I was wondering if what tetmer marks as the first peak is actually the second peak and the first is what I put inside the red circle of figure 2 that I am attaching to this issue. Do you think this is a coverage problem? Or is there something else that I am missing?
Another thing to consider is the evolutionary history of this species which could create a bias in the analysis. It is hypothesized that this species had reached a level of octaploidy before undergoing a process of diploidization, therefore it is currently considered to be tetraploid even if some loci could still be octaploid or even diploid (because the process of diploidization occurs at different speeds within the genome).
I can send you the histograms that I used on tetmer if you want to have a look. Waiting for your answer, thank you!
Víctor Muñoz

