North America and South America have recently been colonized by the Palearctic species Drosophila subobscura. This double colonization offers a rare opportunity for evolutionary studies. Correlations between chromosomal arrangement frequencies and latitude were calculated for the colonizing populations. Signs of these correlations are highly coincident with those found in the Old World. These results provide experimental support for the adaptive value of the chromosomal-inversion polymorphism; historical and other nonadaptive explanations are thus excluded or relegated to a secondary role.
Abstract.-Drosophila subobscura is a Palearctic species that was first detected in the New World in Puerto Montt (Chile) in February 1978. Since that time, it has spread over a broad area and increased in population density. The South American populations exhibit a high level of chromosomal polymorphism: 20 different arrangements exist, distributed among five chromosomes. Chromosomal arrangement heterozygosity varies from 0.55 to 0.61 in the nine populations examined. Incipient clines in the frequencies of the arrangements are appearing; these clines follow the same latitudinal direction as in the Old World. Wing length significantly decreases with latitude, as it does in Europe. The colonization of South America by D. subobscura appears to be a major natural experiment with outcomes that duplicate the distributional patterns-in chromosomal polymorphism and in wing lengthobserved in the Old World, thereby strongly supporting the adaptive significance of these patterns. The data show a very rapid effect of natural selection promoting genetic differentiation among natural populations.
Drosophila subobscura is a Palearctic species that was first detected in the New World in Puerto Montt (Chile) in February 1978. Since that time, it has spread over a broad area and increased in population density. The South American populations exhibit a high level of chromosomal polymorphism: 20 different arrangements exist, distributed among five chromosomes. Chromosomal arrangement heterozygosity varies from 0.55 to 0.61 in the nine populations examined. Incipient clines in the frequencies of the arrangements are appearing; these clines follow the same latitudinal direction as in the Old World. Wing length significantly decreases with latitude, as it does in Europe. The colonization of South America by D. subobscura appears to be a major natural experiment with outcomes that duplicate the distributional patterns-in chromosomal polymorphism and in wing length-observed in the Old World, thereby strongly supporting the adaptive significance of these patterns. The data show a very rapid effect of natural selection promoting genetic differentiation among natural populations.
Thirty P1 clones from the X chromosome (Muller's A element) of Drosophila melanogaster were cross-hybridized in situ to Drosophila subobscura and Drosophila pseudoobscura polytene chromosomes. An additional recombinant phage lambda Dsuby was also used as a marker. Twenty-three (77%) of the P1 clones gave positive hybridization on D. pseudoobscura chromosomes but only 16 (53%) did so with those of D. subobscura. Eight P1 clones gave more than one hybridization signal on D. pseudoobscura and/or D. subobscura chromosomes. All P1 clones and lambda Dsuby hybridized on Muller's A element (X chromosome) of D. subobscura. In contrast, only 18 P1 clones and lambda Dsuby hybridized on Muller's A element (XL chromosomal arm) of D. pseudoobscura; 4 additional P1 clones hybridized on Muller's D element (XR chromosomal arm) of this species and the remaining P1 clone gave one hybridization signal on each arm of the X chromosome. This latter clone may contain one breakpoint of a pericentric inversion that may account for the interchange of genetic material between Muller's A and D elements in D. pseudoobscura. In contrast to the rare interchange of genetic material between chromosomal elements, profound differences in the order and spacing of markers were detected between D. melanogaster, D. pseudoobscura and D. subobscura. In fact, the number of chromosomal segments delimited by identical markers and conserved between pairwise comparisons is small. Therefore, extensive reorganization within Muller's A element has been produced during the divergence of the three species. Rough estimates of the number of cytologically detectable inversions contributing to differentiation of Muller's A element were obtained. The most reliable of these estimates is that obtained from the D. pseudoobscura and D. melanogaster comparison since a greater number of markers have been mapped in both species. Tentatively, one inversion breakpoint about every 200 kb has been produced and fixed during the divergence of D. pseudoobscura and D. melanogaster.
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