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Reproductive characteristics of Drosophila hibisci in the Northern Territory, Australia
Authors:LARRY L WOLF  MICHAL POLAK  J S F BARKER  J BOWLES  W T STARMER
Institution:Department of Biology, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244-1270, U.S.A.;Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH 45221-0006, U.S.A.;Department of Animal Science, University of New England, Armidale, N.S.W. 2351, Australia;Department of Plant Sciences, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario N6A 5B7, Canada
Abstract:Reproductive traits of Drosophila hibisci collected at 18 sites in the Northern Territory (NT) of Australia in May, 1998, as well as at two sites in north Queensland, in June, 1998, were compared to those from earlier work on a cline in ovariole number in D. hibisci along the east coast of Australia. The flies in the NT were considerably smaller, but had more ovarioles than comparably-sized flies on the east coast. Although the flies on the east coast showed an increasing number of ovarioles in populations at increasing distances from the equator, these new populations, both on the east coast and in the NT, reversed this trend, producing a generally U-shaped pattern of ovariole number with latitude among all populations. The northernmost and southernmost populations allocate more to ovariole numbers than populations in intermediate latitudes. Ovariole number is closely related to body size of females in all populations, but the regression coefficient is small at intermediate latitudes and increases at the northern and southern ends of the distribution. Egg volumes primarily varied with body size of the female (positive) and number of ovarioles per female (negatively), producing a generally inverted U-shaped pattern of egg volumes with latitude. Reproductive allocation patterns, but not thorax size or ovariole number, varied significantly in two samples taken 10 days apart at one NT site. This variation probably results from environmental differences across generations of developing larvae and is consistent with our earlier suggestion of substantial effects of the environment, primarily rainfall and temperature, on reproductive allocation in D. hibisci.
Keywords:body size  clinal variation  egg size  flower size  Hibiscus  life history traits  ovariole number  reproductive allocation
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