Affiliation:
1. Departamento de Biología, Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Nucleares, Carretera México-Toluca, La Marquesa, Ocoyoacac, México
Abstract
Most species show an equal proportion of individuals of both sexes. In
diploid species sex ratio is determined by a genic balance between sex
chromosomes. In Drosophila sex is determined by the ratio of X- chromosomes
versus autosomes and in some species of the genus it is related to the
presence of an inversion in the sex chromosome. The present work analyses the
sex ratio in 27 natural populations of Drosophila pseudoobscura that inhabit
Mexico. Female flies captured in nature were counted and their sex ratio
calculated and been called generation P, then cultured individualy, allowed
to leave adult offspring which was quantified in order to get its sex ratio
and designated generation F1. sex ratio was calculated using the expression:
number of males times 100 divided by the number of females proposed by Darwin
(1871). The sex ratio of each population was taken using the average of all
the individual counts from each sample. The values found varied among
different generations and populations, so for generation P their values
varieded 37.4 to 190.4 and in generation F1 from 31.3 up to 96.4 males for
each 100 females. According to their geographical distribution four North to
South transects were arranged and in them means varied from 60.8 to 81.7
males for each 100 females. All this means that in Mexican population are
more females than males, exceptionally more males than females.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Cited by
1 articles.
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