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The relationship between genome size, development rate, and body size in copepods
Authors:Grace A. Wyngaard  Ellen M. Rasch  Nicole M. Manning  Kathryn Gasser  Rickie Domangue
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biology, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, VA 22807, USA;(2) Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, James H. Quillen College of Medicine, East Tennessee State University, Johnson City, TN 37614, USA;(3) Department of Mathematics, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, VA 22807>, USA
Abstract:Freshwater cyclopoid copepods exhibit at least a fivefold range in somatic genome size and a mechanism, chromatin diminution, which could account for much of this interspecific variation. These attributes suggest that copepods are well suited to studies of genome size evolution. We tested the nucleotypic hypothesis of genome size evolution, which poses that variation in genome size is adaptive due to the lsquobulkrsquo effects of both coding and noncoding DNA on cell size and division rates, and their correlates. We found a significant inverse correlation between genome size and developmental (growth) rate in five freshwater cyclopoid species at three temperatures. That is, species with smaller genomes developed faster. Species with smaller genomes had significantly smaller bodies at 22 °C, but not at cooler and warmer temperatures. Species with smaller genomes developed faster at all three temperatures, but had smaller bodies only at 22 °C. We propose a model of life history evolution that adds genome size and cell cycle dynamics to the suite of characters on which selection may act to mold life histories and to influence the distribution of traits among different habitats.
Keywords:genome size evolution  nucleotype  developmental rate  body size  copepod
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