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LATITUDINAL VARIATION FOR TWO ENZYME LOCI AND AN INVERSION POLYMORPHISM IN DROSOPHILA MELANOGASTER FROM CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA

Authors :
W. F. Van Putten
J. van 't Land
A. Kamping
W. van Delden
H. Villarroel
Centre for Terrestrial Ecology (NIOO / CTE)
Population Genetics
Source :
Evolution, 54(1), 201-209. Wiley Online Library, Evolution, 54(1), 201-209. Wiley
Publication Year :
2000
Publisher :
The Society for the Study of Evolution, 2000.

Abstract

Many organisms show latitudinal variation for various genetically determined traits. Such dines may involve neutral variation and originate from historical events or their maintenance may be explained by selection. For Drosophila melanogaster, latitudinal variation for allozymes, inversions, and quantitative traits has been found on several continents. We sampled D. melanogaster populations in Panama and along a transect of 40 latitudinal degrees on the west coast of South America. Negative correlations with latitude were found for Adh(S) and alpha Gpdh(F) allele frequencies and for the frequency of the cosmopolitan inversion In(2L)t in Adh(S) alpha Gpdh(F) chromosomes. A positive correlation existed between wing length and latitude. Significant correlations were found between these traits and climatic variables like temperature and rainfall. The observed dines show considerable resemblance to those found on other continents. Gametic disequilibrium between Adh(S) and alpha Gpdh(F) occurred predominantly at higher latitudes and was caused by the presence of In(2L)t. The reasons for the clinaI. distributions are discussed and it is argued that selection is the most likely explanation. However, the exact nature of the selective force and the interactions of allozymes with each other and with In(2L)t are complex and not fully understood. In tropical regions In(2L)t-containing genotypes have higher fitness than ST/ST and Adh and alpha Gpdh hitchhike with the inversion, but there is also evidence for balancing selection at the Adh locus.

Details

ISSN :
00143820
Volume :
54
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Evolution
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e4ad74baf486a86b46d5605601fdf33b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1554/0014-3820(2000)054[0201:lvftel]2.0.co;2