IEGEBA   24053
INSTITUTO DE ECOLOGIA, GENETICA Y EVOLUCION DE BUENOS AIRES
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Morphometric differentiation in the semiaquatic grasshopper Cornops aquaticum: Associations with sex, chromosome and geographic conditions
Autor/es:
ROMERO LUCIANA; COLOMBO PABLO; REMIS MARIA ISABEL
Revista:
JOURNAL OF INSECT SCIENCE
Editorial:
UNIV ARIZONA
Referencias:
Lugar: Arizona; Año: 2014 vol. 14 p. 1 - 8
ISSN:
1536-2442
Resumen:
The water-hyacinth grasshopper Cornops aquaticum (Orthoptera: Acrididae) is native to South America and inhabits lowlands from southern Mexico to Central Argentina and Uruguay. This grasshopper feeds and lays eggs on species from the genera Eichhornia and Pontederia. Particularly, Eichhornia crassipes is considered the world´s worst water weed and the release of C. aquaticum was proposed as a form of biological control. Morphometric variation on the chromosomally differentiated populations from Middle and Lower Paraná River and its possible association with geographic, sex and chromosomal conditions was analyzed. Significant phenotype variation in C. aquaticum population was detected. C. aquaticum presents body-size sexual dimorphism, females being bigger than males. Female biased SSD for all five analyzed traits was detected. The assessment of variation in sexual size dimorphism for Tegmen length showed that this trait scaled allometrically, indicating that males and females did not vary in a similar fashion. The detected allometry was consistent with Rensch´s rule demonstrating greater evolutionary divergence in male size than in female size and suggests that males are more sensitive to environmental condition. The analysis of morphometric variation in the context of chromosome constitution showed that the presence of fusion 1/6 was related to body size variation. Fusion carriers displayed bigger body size than standard homozygotes. Besides, a positive relationship between tegmen length and the number of fused chromosomes was detected, showing a chromosome dose effect. Because the highest frequency of fusions has been found in the Lower Paraná River, a marginal environment for this species, the results found would support the hypothesis that some supergenes located in the fusions may be favored in the southern populations, thus contributing to the establishment and maintenance of the polymorphism.