Author:
R'KHA SAMIA,MORETEAU BRIGITTE,COYNE JERRY A.,DAVID JEAN R.
Abstract
In the evolutionary process during which Drosophila sechellia
became specialized on a toxic fruit
(morinda), a spectacular decrease in female reproductive capacity took place
when compared with
the species' generalist relatives D. mauritiana and D.
simulans. Comparisons of species and
interspecific crosses showed that two different traits were modified: number
of ovarioles and rate
of egg production. During the conservation of a D. sechellia strain on
usual food, adaptation to
laboratory conditions led to an increase in the rate of oogenesis but not in
ovariole number.
Comparison of F1 and backcross progeny also suggests that the two
traits are determined by
different genes (ovariole number has already been shown to be polygenic). When
morinda is
available as a resource, the low rate of egg production in D. sechellia
is partly compensated by a
stimulating effect, while an inhibition occurs in D. simulans. It is
assumed that D. sechellia
progressively adapted itself from rotten, non-toxic morinda to a fresher and
more toxic resource.
During this process the rate of oogenesis evolved from an inhibition to a
stimulation by morinda.
Simultaneously a spectacular decrease in ovariole number took place, either as
a consequence of
stochastic events related to the small population size of D. sechellia
and a metapopulation
dynamics, or as an adaptive process favouring dispersal capacities of the
female.
Subject
Genetics,General Medicine
Cited by
67 articles.
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