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Palabras contadas: drift: 18, genetic: 353
Fernández Iriarte, P.J. - Levy, E. - Devincenzi, D. - Rodríguez, C. - Fanara, J.J. - Hasson, E.
Hereditas 1999;131(2):93-99
1999

Descripción: The inversion polymorphism of the cactophilic fly Drosophila buzzatii was studied in two natural populations. We assessed the temporal changes and microspatial population structure. We observed a significant increase in the frequency of arrangement 2J at the expense of 2ST in both populations. These gene arrangements appear to affect the life-history of flies differently. Environmental heterogeneity explains the karyotype coexistence in nature. The analysis of population structure showed that differentiation of inversion frequencies among individual breeding sites, the rotting clacodes of Opuntia vulgaris, was highly significant. The karyotypic frequencies did not depart significantly from Hardy-Weinberg expectations, neither in individual rots nor in the total population. These results suggest that the observed population structure can be easily accounted by random genetic drift.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Rosetti, N. - Remis, M.I.
PLoS ONE 2012;7(7)
2012

Descripción: Many grasshopper species are considered of agronomical importance because they cause damage to pastures and crops. Comprehension of pest population dynamics requires a clear understanding of the genetic diversity and spatial structure of populations. In this study we report on patterns of genetic variation in the South American grasshopper Dichroplus elongatus which is an agricultural pest of crops and forage grasses of great economic significance in Argentina. We use Direct Amplification of Minisatellite Regions (DAMD) and partial sequences of the cytochrome oxydase 1 (COI) mitochondrial gene to investigate intraspecific structure, demographic history and gene flow patterns in twenty Argentinean populations of this species belonging to different geographic and biogeographic regions. DAMD data suggest that, although genetic drift and migration occur within and between populations, measurable relatedness among neighbouring populations declines with distance and dispersal over distances greater than 200 km is not typical, whereas effective gene flow may occur for populations separated by less than 100 km. Landscape analysis was useful to detect genetic discontinuities associated with environmental heterogeneity reflecting the changing agroecosystem. The COI results indicate the existence of strong genetic differentiation between two groups of populations located at both margins of the Paraná River which became separated during climate oscillations of the Middle Pleistocene, suggesting a significant restriction in effective dispersion mediated by females and large scale geographic differentiation. The number of migrants between populations estimated through mitochondrial and DAMD markers suggest that gene flow is low prompting a non-homogeneous spatial structure and justifying the variation through space. Moreover, the genetic analysis of both markers allows us to conclude that males appear to disperse more than females, reducing the chance of the genetic loss associated with recent anthropogenic fragmentation of the D. elongatus studied range. © 2012 Rosetti, Remis.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Remis, M.I. - Clemente, M. - Pensel, S. - Vilardi, J.C.
Hereditas 1998;129(3):207-213
1998

Descripción: Dichroplus elongatus is a grasshopper, which exhibits parallel polymorphisms for B chromosomes and supernumerary segments in chromosomes S10 (SS10), S9 (SS9) and M6 (SS6) in natural populations of Argentina. The patterns of simultaneous variation of different forms of supernumerary heterochromatin from 7 populations of two biogeographic provinces located at Northwest and East regions of this country were analysed. Spatial chromosome differentiation for all heterochromatic variants was observed. Different degree of differentiation among populations for supernumerary segments, evaluated through F(ST), was observed. This suggests that genetic drift and migration may not be the only factors involved in the maintenance of the detected chromosome patterns. The differentiation for SS9 and SS10 may be explained mainly by heterogeneity within the Northwest Region. On the contrary, the differences for SS6 and B chromosomes explained through isolation by distance. However, the absence or the low frequency of both chromosome mutations in some populations may not be explained by historical factors. A principal component analysis showed that the patterns of chromosome variation do not agree with the geographical distribution of the populations. The relationship between frequencies of each supernumerary segment and B chromosome depends on the segment. An analysis of partial correlation showed that the frequencies of B chromosomes were positively correlated with the frequency of SS6 and negatively with the frequency of the SS10. In agreement with this, a multiple regression analysis of B chromosome frequency on supernumerary segment frequencies depends on the incidence of SS6 and SS10. The covariation of the heterochromatic forms may act as another factor that establish limits to stochastic factors, may also affect the probable negative selection on B, and could be involved in the non random pattern detected in D. elongatus.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Gomez Cendra, P. - Calcagno, G. - Belluscio, L. - Vilardi, J.C.
J. Insect Sci. 2011;11
2011

Descripción: The South American fruit fly Anastrepha fraterculus (Wiedemann) (Diptera: Tephritidae) is a pest of fruit species of warm regions of the Americas, including Argentina. Some authors claim that this taxon includes a group of cryptic species. In order to evaluate possible targets of sexual selection, it is necessary to analyze ethological aspects of male courtship and identify particular steps that strongly influence mating success. A mating test designed to evaluate behavioral differences between insects that achieve copulation (successful males) and those that did not mate (unsuccessful males) could also be relevant for the possible implementation of control programs based on sterile insect technique. Reared insects need to be evaluated periodically, since genetic drift and artificial selection associated with rearing conditions could have a detrimental effect on their ability to compete for matings in nature. In this study, courtship behavior of A. fraterculus males from a laboratory strain was analyzed for the first time through video recordings. Three components for the activities were identified: calling, wing positions, and movements. Also, the time that males spent on each step of the courtship was registered, including the last activities before attempting copulation. Data showed that mating achievement occurs relatively quickly; 65% of the successful males reached copulation within the first ten minutes after the male and female were placed together. Behavioral differences were detected between successful and unsuccessful males. The former group tended to invest more time in activities directly related with mating (Spin, Arrowhead, Attempt); however, as courtship progressed, unsuccessful males increased the time dedicated to activities not directly associated to mating (Call 0, Relax,Stationary). There was not a single sequence of activities leading to success, but the analysis of the last activities performed before mating attempts indicated that the most frequent position before successful attempts was Arrowhead, occurring in 68% of cases, whereas in unsuccessful males this position was observed only 18% of the time before mounting. Although the behavior of the strain analyzed here should be compared with that of natural populations, one would not expect to observe significant differences as compatibility and competitiveness with wild collected flies was previously shown under field cage conditions. Behavioral tests such as those applied here might be important to assess quality of mass reared strains for sterile insect technique implementation programs. © This is an open access paper. We use the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license that permits unrestricted use, provided that the paper is properly attributed.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo