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THE POPULATION GENETICS OF PARTHENOGENETIC STRAINS OF DROSOPHILA MERCATORUM. II. THE CAPACITY FOR PARTHENOGENESIS IN A NATURAL, BISEXUAL POPULATION
Author(s) -
Alan R. Templeton,
Hampton L. Carson,
Charles F. Sing
Publication year - 1976
Publication title -
genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.792
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1943-2631
pISSN - 0016-6731
DOI - 10.1093/genetics/82.3.527
Subject(s) - parthenogenesis , biology , genetics , population genetics , population , natural population growth , drosophila (subgenus) , evolutionary biology , gene , demography , embryo , sociology
Drosophila mercatorum is a bisexual species, but certain strains are capable of parthenogenetic reproduction in the laboratory. We investigated the parthenogenetic capacity of the virgin daughters of females captured from a natural, bisexual population in Hawaii. An isozyme survey indicated the natural population is polymorphic at about 50% of its loci, and its individuals heterozygous at 18% of their loci. The predominant mode of parthenogenesis in D. mercatorum causes homozygosity for all loci in a single generation. Despite this radical change in genetic state, 23% of the virgin female lines produced adult parthenogenetic progeny, and 16% produced parthenogenetic progeny themselves capable of parthenogenetic reproduction. The parthenogenetic rate as measured by the number of parthenogenetic progeny themselves capable of parthenogenesis divided by the number of eggs laid is around 10-5 for the virgin female lines. We argue that one of the major reasons for this low rate is that very few of the impaternate zygotes have a genotype that can survive and reproduce under the genetic conditions imposed by parthenogenetic reproduction. This intense selective bottleneck can be passed in a single generation if enough unfertilized eggs are laid, and once passed is accompanied by a large (perhaps a thousandfold) increase in the rate of parthenogenesis and by modifications in many phenotypic traits such as morphology and behavior.

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