scholarly journals COLD TEMPERATURE RESISTANCE, CHROMOSOMAL POLYMORPHISM AND INTERPOPULATION HETEROSIS IN DROSOPHILA PSEUDOOBSCURA

Genetics ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 76 (4) ◽  
pp. 807-822
Author(s):  
Margaret C Jefferson ◽  
David W Crumpacker ◽  
James S Williams

ABSTRACT Descendants of two Colorado, U.S.A., populations of D. pseudoobscura, Boulder and La Foret, were exposed to +2° and -2°. In third instar larvae from Boulder AR and PP third chromosome gene arrangements survived better than TL and others, while the reverse situation occurred for La Foret. Deleterious dominant effects were observed for AR from La Foret. In adults from Boulder there was a trend towards greater survival for AR and PP than for other gene arrangements, while AR from La Foret showed relatively poor cold resistance. Survival of Boulder and La Foret flies, and their interpopulation hybrid, was determined after exposure to -2° at two humidities. Order of survival of developmental stages was: adults >> third instar larvae > mixture of first and second instar larvae. Adults survived better at low humidity, while larvae survived better at high humidity. Boulder adults and larvae survived better than those from La Foret. Advantage in survival of hybrids over the midparent ranged from 23% to 138%. Hybrid advantage over the higher parent ranged from 5% to 111%. Order of expression of heterosis was: mixture of first and second instar larvae > third instar larvae > adults. Relation of all results to the chromosomal polymorphisms at Boulder (seasonally constant) and La Foret (seasonally cyclic) is discussed.

1969 ◽  
Vol 103 (931) ◽  
pp. 235-246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dragoslav Marinkovic ◽  
David W. Crumpacker ◽  
Victor M. Salceda

e-Polymers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 346-354
Author(s):  
Guoquan Qi ◽  
Hongxia Yan ◽  
Dongtao Qi ◽  
Houbu Li ◽  
Lushi Kong ◽  
...  

Abstract The chapter deals with the performance evaluation of the polyethylene of raised temperature resistance (PE-RT) and polyethylene (PE) using autoclave test under sour oil and gas medium conditions. The analyses of performance changes showed that PE-RT has good media resistance at 60°C. As the temperature increases, its mechanical properties decrease, accompanied by an increase in weight. Comparative analyses showed that no matter what temperature conditions are, PE-RT media resistance is better than PE80. The better media resistance of PE-RT depends on its higher degree of branching. Short branches are distributed between the crystals to form a connection between the crystals, thereby improving its heat resistance and stress under high-temperature conditions. PE-RT forms an excellent three-dimensional network structure through copolymerization, ensuring that it has better media resistance than PE80. However, the mechanical performance will be attenuated due to the high service temperature.


Genetika ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 343-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Víctor Salceda ◽  
Judith Guzmán ◽  
Olga Olvera

Samples of D. pseudoobscura were taken in seventeen localities in Central Mexico inside the parallels 18o - 20o N, with the purpose of determine the chromosomal polymorphism in the third of the different populations of this species. From each captured female a single larva of its offspring was taken, its salivary glands extracted and stained with a solution of aceto orcein to observe the polytene chromosomes. From these smears the corresponding karyotype of each larva was determined, keeping a record of them. With the information gathered the relative frequency of each one of the fourteen different inversions found was calculated. A grand total of 1894 third chromosomes were analyzed. The fourteen different inversions found are equivalent to a 34.1 % of the total chromosomal variation of the species. The most abundant inversions found were: TL 50.6 %, CU 27.2 5, SC 9.1 % and EP 5.5 %; the remaining ten inversions detected are in general grounds rare ones with variable relative frequencies depending on the locality. Analysis of the predominant inversions for each population was done. The presence of West-East gradients is reported, even if in cases not so well defined, since as one moves in a particular direction the ups and downs in relative frequency for the alternating pairs TL-CU; TL-SC in the western populations and TL-CU in the eastern ones were observed. The assignment of each population to a particular race was also done, and such a way we were able to recognize three different races coexisting in the area of study.


Genetika ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 97-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Víctor Salceda ◽  
José Espinoza-Velazquez

Chromosomal polymorphism for the third chromosome in Drosophila pseudoobscura has been widely studied for genetic variation in different environments or locations far apart. However, there is less information regarding sites geographically near one another. Targeting on possible micro-geographic variation in the species, a serial study was done on 12 Mexican populations grouped in four regions, including locations in Durango (DU), the border area of Guanajuato-San Luis Potosi states (GP), Chiapas (CH) and Saldilo (SA). Flies were trapped in their natural habitats using fermenting bananas as bait. They were individually cultivated in the laboratory for larvae production. In a given population sample several flies were cultivated together but only one larva per culture provided salivary tissue to observe polytene chromosomes. Gene arrangements or inversions were identified and frequencies were calculated. A total of 767 third chromosomes were studied and 11 different inversions detected. The type and relative frequencies of the arrangements varied among regions. From the 11 inversions observed, 10 were found in Durango, five in Guanajuato-San Luis Potosi and Chiapas, and eight in Saltillo. The inversion frequencies in the Durango locations varied in four cases, but only one in Chiapas, three cases in Guanajuato-San Luis Potosi, and five in Saltillo. It was also observed that there were geographical gradients for inversions within regions as follows: four arrangements in Saltillo and Durango, three in Guanajuato-San Luis Potos? and one in Chiapas. Moreover, all four regions studied showed evidences for micro-geographical variation. Nevertheless, more studies are needed to elucidate the relevance of the inversion frequencies changes in neighboring populations and also any seasonal-annual frequencies observed in the locations studied here.


2019 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 1089-1102 ◽  
Author(s):  
George D Yocum ◽  
Joseph P Rinehart ◽  
Arun Rajamohan ◽  
Julia H Bowsher ◽  
Kathleen M Yeater ◽  
...  

Abstract Insects exposed to low temperature stress can experience chill injury, but incorporating fluctuating thermoprofiles increases survival and blocks the development of sub-lethal effects. The specific parameters required for a protective thermoprofile are poorly understood, because most studies test a limited range of thermoprofiles. For example, thermoprofiles with a wave profile may perform better than a square profile, but these two profiles are rarely compared. In this study, two developmental stages of the alfalfa leafcutting bee, Megachile rotundata, eye-pigmented pupae, and emergence-ready adults, were exposed to one of eight thermoprofiles for up to 8 weeks. All the thermoprofiles had a base of 6°C and a peak temperature of either 12°C or 18°C. The duration at peak temperature varied depending on the shape of the thermoprofile, either square or wave form. Two other treatments acted as controls, a constant 6°C and a fluctuating thermal regime (FTR) with a base temperature of 6°C that was interrupted daily by a single, 1-h pulse at 20°C. Compared with constant 6°C, all the test thermoprofiles significantly improved survival. Compared with the FTR control, the thermoprofiles with a peak temperature of 18°C outperformed the 12°C profiles. Bees in the eye-pigmented stage exposed to the 18°C profiles separated into two groups based on the shape of the profile, with higher survival in the square profiles compared with the wave profiles. Bees in the emergence-ready stage exposed to 18°C profiles all had significantly higher survival than bees in the FTR controls. Counter to expectations, the least ecologically relevant thermoprofiles (square) had the highest survival rates and blocked the development of sub-lethal effects (delayed emergence).


1980 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mirjana Toŝić ◽  
Francisco J. Ayala

SUMMARYThe experiments reported in this paper are primarily addressed to test the hypothesis of overcompensation; i.e. whether polymorphic populations exploit limiting environmental resources better than populations uniform for a single genotype. Overcomposition is an ecological consequence of some models of frequency-dependent selection. Secondarily, the experiments investigate whether overdominance exists at the Mdh-2 locus in Drosophila pseudoobscura.Two types of experimental populations are established: ‘low-variability’ populations, in which all flies in a culture are offspring from only two laboratory strains; ‘high-variability’ populations, in which the flies in a culture are derived from 20 different strains. However, the overall degree of individual heterozygosity is the same in both types of populations. Three kinds of populations with respect to the Mdh-2 locus are established within each type; two are homozygous for either the 100 or the 112 allele, the third is heterozygous. A fourth kind of population exists among the high-variability populations; namely, populations in which all three Mdh-2 genotypes are present. The experiments are done at two densities; one quasi-optimal, the other highly competitive.Populations with high overall levels of genetic variation consistently produce more flies than low-variability populations. The differences are significant at the low, but not at the high, density. Moreover, populations polymorphic for the Mdh-2 locus generally produce more flies than populations having only one Mdh-2 genotype. At high density, the Mdh-2 polymorphic populations have greater productivity than populations with anyone of the three genotypes, and the differences are statistically significant when the polymorphic populations are compared with either one of the two homozygotes or with the average of all three genotypes. In brief, overcompensatory effects – which may account for frequency-dependent selection – are observed in the experiment and may be a common phenomenon in nature.Populations in which all individuals are heterozygous at the Mdh-2 locus produce in every case more flies than populations with only homozygotes for one or the other allele. The superiority of the heterozygotes is statistically significant for all comparisons at low density, but at high density it is statistically significant for the comparison with the homozygote rarer in nature and only in low variability populations.


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