Allelic diversity among 12 commonest spoligotype of bTB in GB
Summary
Allelic diversity among 5387 isolates of 12 commonest spoligotype of bovine tuberculosis (bTB) in GB. The allelic diversity is a measure of genotype diversity within each spoligotype. In short, the allelic diversity measures the probability of seeing the same VNTR variant of a spoligotype (that is, genotype) if one randomly picks two isolates from a large, randomly collected, population of isolates with the same spoligitype. Only one isolate from each breakdown was used in this analysis [hence 'freq (unique)]
Categories
Keywords
N/A
Use limitation statement
There are no public access constraints to this data. Use of this data is subject to the licence identified.
Licence
Open Government LicenceAttribution statement
©Crown Copyright, APHA 2016
Technical information
Update frequency
notPlanned
Lineage
Allelic diversity among 5387 isolates of 12 commonest spoligotype of bovine tuberculosis (bTB) in GB. The allelic diversity is a measure of genotype diversity within each spoligotype. In short, the allelic diversity measures the probability of seeing the same VNTR variant of a spoligotype (that is, genotype) if one randomly picks two isolates from a large, randomly collected, population of isolates with the same spoligitype. Only one isolate from each breakdown was used in this analysis [hence 'freq (unique)]
Spatial information
Coordinate reference system
http://www.opengis.net/def/crs/EPSG/0/27700Geographic extent
- Latitude from: 49.86 to 60.86
- Longitude from: -8.45 to 1.78
Metadata information
Language
English
Metadata identifier
a297a285-6d69-4ad7-a468-bd499a4e6573
Published by
Animal & Plant Health Agency
Contact publisher
aphaopendata@apha.gov.ukDataset reference dates
Creation date
14 June 2016
Revision date
N/A
Publication date
14 June 2016
Period
- From: 01 January 2000
- To: 31 December 2003
Search
Data and Supporting Information
Data services and download by area of interest | Link | Action |
---|---|---|
Allelic diversity among 12 commonest spoligotype of bTB in GB | Open link |