INVESTIGADORES
HASSON Esteban Ruben
artículos
Título:
Genetic variance for body size in a natural population.of Drosophila buzzatii
Autor/es:
RUIZ, A.; M. SANTOS; A. BARBADILLA; J. QUEZADA DIAZ; E. HASSON; A. FONTDEVILA
Revista:
GENETICS
Editorial:
GENETICS SOC AM
Referencias:
Año: 1991 vol. 128 p. 739 - 750
ISSN:
0016-6731
Resumen:
Previous work has shown thorax length to be under directional selection in the Drosophila buzzatii population of Carboneras. In order to predict the genetic consequences of natural selection, genetic variation for this trait was investigated in two ways. First, narrow sense heritability was estimated in the laboratory Fn generation of a sample of wild flies by means of the offspring-parent regression. A relatively high value, 0.59, was obtained. Because the phenotypic variance of wild flies was 7-9 times that of the flies raised in the laboratory, natural heritability may be estimated as one-seventh to one ninth that value, Second, the contribution of the second and fourth chromosomes, which are polymorphic for paracentric inversions, to the genetic variance of thorax length was estimated in the field and in the laboratory. This was done with the assistance of a simple genetic model which shows that the variance among chromosome arrangements and the variance among karyotypes provide minimum estimates of the chromosomes contribution to the additive and genetic variances of the trait, respectively. In males raised under optimal conditions in the laboratory, the variance among second-chromosome karyotypes accounted for 11.43% of the total phenotypic variance and most of this variance was additive; by contrast, the contribution of the fourth chromosome was nonsignificant. The variance among second-chromosome karyotypes accounted for 1.56-1.78% of the total phenotypic variance in wild males and was nonsignificant in wild females. The variance among fourth chromosome karyotypes accounted for 0.14-3.48% of the total phenotypic variance in wild flies. At both chromosomes, the proportion of additive variance was higher in mating flies than in nonmating flies.