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Stress resistance and environmental dependency of inbreeding depression in Drosophila melanogaster |
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Author: Dahlgaard, J.; Hoffmann, A. A.
Year: 2000
Title: Stress resistance and environmental dependency
of inbreeding depression in Drosophila
melanogaster
Journal: Conservation Biology
Volume: 14
Pages: 1187-1192
Date: Aug
Abstract: Both inbreeding and environmental stress
can have adverse effects on fitness that affect the conservation of endangered
species. Two important issues are whether stress and inbreeding effects are
independent as opposed to synergistic, and whether inbreeding effects are
general across stresses as opposed to stress-specific. We found that inbreeding
reduced resistance to acetone and desiccation in adult Drosophila melanogaster,
whereas resistance to knockdown heat stress was not affected. Inbred flies,
however, experienced a greater proportional decrease in productivity than
outbreds following heat stress. Correlations using line means indicated that
all resistance traits were uncorrelated in the inbred as well as in the outbred
flies. Recessive, deleterious alleles therefore did not appear to have any
general deleterious effects on stress resistance. Inbreeding within a specific
environment and selection for resistant genotypes may therefore purge a
population of deleterious genes specific to only one environmental stress.
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