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Clinal variation in Drosophila serrata for stress resistance and body size |
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Author: Hallas, R.; Schiffer, M.; Hoffmann, A. A.
Year: 2002
Title: Clinal variation in Drosophila serrata for
stress resistance and body size
Journal: Genetical Research
Volume: 79
Pages: 141-148
Date: Apr
Abstract: Clines for size and stress resistance
traits have been described for several Drosophila
species and replicable clines across different species may indicate climatic
selection. Here we consider clines in stress resistance traits in an Australian
endemic species, D. serrata, by
comparing levels of variation within and among isofemale lines initiated with
flies collected from the eastern coast of Australia. We also consider clinal
variation in chill coma recovery, a trait that has recently been shown to
exhibit high levels of variation among Drosophila
species. Patterns were compared with those in the cosmopolitan species D. melanogaster from the same area. Both
desiccation and starvation resistance showed no clinal pattern despite
heritable variation among isofemale lines. In contrast chill coma resistance
exhibited a linear cline in the anticipated direction, resistance increasing
with latitude. Body size was measured as wing length and body weight. Both
traits showed geographic variation and strong non-linear clines with a sharp
reduction in size in the tropics. These results are discussed in the context of
climatic selection and evolutionary processes limiting species borders.
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