Extended Data Fig. 2: Correlated fluctuations between barcoded clones, from Venkataram et al. data. | Nature Ecology & Evolution

Extended Data Fig. 2: Correlated fluctuations between barcoded clones, from Venkataram et al. data.

From: Asynchronous abundance fluctuations can drive giant genotype frequency fluctuations

Extended Data Fig. 2

Using the previously analyzed barcoded S. cerevisiae data45, we computed the pairwise correlation in log-displacement between every pair of high-frequency clones over every time point, replicate, and batch, that is corr \((\Delta \log {f}_{i,t},\Delta \log {f}_{j,t})\). Points represent correlation coefficients for every pair of clones, and bars represent the average (n = 3321, 190, 1640; left to right). Error bars represent 95% CIs. We see that, on average, pairs of haploid clones have highly correlated displacements, followed by pairs of diploid clones, and then pairs consisting of one haploid and one diploid clone.

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