Abstract
Numerous F1 hybrids between the races of Moraba scurra Rehn with 2nB = 15
and 2nB = 17 were reared in the laboratory and in artificial colonies established in
nature. Most F1 males have almost completely regular meiosis, their chiasma frequency
being essentially normal. These individuals show a trivalent, composed of
an "A" and a "B" chromosome of the 17-chromosome race paired with the corresponding
limbs of an "AB" chromosome derived from the 15-chromosome race.
Disjunction of the trivalent is usually extremely regular. Occasionally either the A
or the B chromosome fails to pair with the AB.
In hybrid individuals which happen to have their CD chromosome pair
heterozygous for the Blundell rearrangement (i.e. Standard/Blundell) the proximal
end of the A chromosome is occasionally paired with the Blundell-carrying CD
chromosome. This suggests that the evolutionary "dissociation" of the AB into
separate A and B chromosomes, which is present in the 17-chromosome race, was
not a simple fragmentation but a translocation involving a Blundell chromosome,
and that the A chromosome received its centromere from the Blundell element.
Various types of abnormal synapsis occur in hybrids between individuals
from populations situated several hundred miles apart, even when both belong to
the 15-chromosome race.
Chiasma-formation in CD bivalents homozygous and heterozygous for the
three known sequences of the CD chromosome (Standard, Blundell, Molonglo)
suggests that Blundell and Molonglo are both related to Standard as pericentric
inversions.
The bearing of these data on the history of the species is discussed.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
41 articles.
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