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Chromosomal structure of populations of drosophila flavopilosa studied in larvae collected in their natural breeding sites

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Summary

D. flavopilosa Frey, is a neotropical species of Drosophila living in Chile that, together with 13 other species, has been included by Wheeler, Takada und Brncic (1962) in the flavopilosa species group. Despite the fact that it has not been possible to breed this species in the laboratory, the circumstance that its habitat is well known, has allowed the study of the chromosomal structure of some natural populations of this species, analyzing larvae directly taken to the laboratory from their natural breeding sites: the flowers of the solanacean Cestrum parqui L'Héritier.

The present paper describes the mitetic and salivary gland chromosomes of D. flavopilosa, and gives a composite map of the Standard gene arrangement. In central Chile, natural populations of this species are polymorphic with respect to the gene orders in their chromosomes, due to the presence of four independent inversions, all located in one of the six chromosomes (the right arm of the V-chromosome). Quantitative data on the distribution of the inversions shows that there is an altitudinal gradient in the frequencies of two of the four inversions. Heterozygotes for Inversion A, are more frequent at high altitudes than at sea level. On the contrary, heterozygotes for inversion B, are abundant at sea level, but practically disappear at high altitudes. These altitudinal clines have been observed in two valleys near Santiago, Chile, which run from the Andes mountains to the Pacific coast.

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The work reported in this article has been carried out under Contract AT (30-1) 2465 US Atomic Energy Commission, and partially supported by Grants from the University of Chile, Faculty of Medicine and the Rockefeller Foundation under a joint program.

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Brncic, D. Chromosomal structure of populations of drosophila flavopilosa studied in larvae collected in their natural breeding sites. Chromosoma 13, 183–195 (1962). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00326570

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00326570

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