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Effects of different base populations on selection response in Drosophila
Authors:Violet P. E. Phang  A. L. Rae
Affiliation:1. Sheep Husbandry Department , Massey University , Palmerston North, New Zealand;2. Zoology Department , University of Singapore , Singapore 10;3. Sheep Husbandry Department , Massey University , Palmerston North, New Zealand
Abstract:

Oregon‐R, +3, and crossbred strains of Drosophila melanogaster were tested for their response to selection for abdominal bristle number. Various subsidiary tests, consisting of heritability estimations, testing for lethal second and third chromosomes, and chromosome assays were conducted on the selection replicates, which had undergone 14 generations of selection. Evidence showed that a plateau which occurred very early in the +3 high selection replicates was due to fixation of a few additive genes with large effects, thus accounting for the low phenotypic and additive genetic variance, the slight regression in abdominal bristle number on relaxation of selection, the absence of directional dominance, and the low frequency of recessive lethals.

High frequencies of second and third chromosome lethals were found in the Oregon‐R high and low replicates and in the +3 low replicates. That these lethals were not selected for heterozygote superiority for extreme bristle effect was indicated by the slight regression of these replicates on relaxation of selection, and by the absence of high, fluctuating phenotypic variances.

From chromosome assays it appears that the two parental strains had different arrays of genes affecting high bristle number, with these genes located mostly in chromosome II in the Oregon‐R high line but in chromosome III in the +3 high line. In the Crossbred high line, high bristle factors were located in both the second and third chromosomes. The low bristle factors were located mainly in the second chromosome in all three low selection lines.

It appears that the original cross had combined different genes favouring high bristle number, thus allowing greater response in the Crossbred high selection line. The same did not occur for low selection; the response from the Crossbred low line was similar to that of the parental low lines, suggesting that the gene arrays affecting low bristle number in the two original populations were comparable.
Keywords:dehydration  rehydration  water uptake  water balance response  nitrogen excretion  frogs  tadpoles  Litoria raniformis  Litoria ewingi
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