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Relative importance of plastic vs genetic factors in adaptive differentiation: geographical variation for stress resistance in Drosophila melanogaster from eastern Australia |
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Author: Hoffmann, A. A.; Shirriffs, J.; Scott, M.
Year: 2005
Title: Relative importance of plastic vs genetic
factors in adaptive differentiation: geographical variation for stress
resistance in Drosophila melanogaster from eastern Australia
Journal: Functional Ecology
Volume: 19
Pages: 222-227
Date: Apr
Abstract: 1. Heritable clinal patterns for stress
resistance traits have been described in a number of invertebrate species but
patterns are usually characterized on populations reared under constant
conditions. Here we examined the impact of simulated seasonal variation in
temperature/photoperiod as well as constant conditions on stress resistance in
eight Drosophila melanogaster populations from eastern Australia across a latitude range
of 27 degrees. 2. Desiccation resistance was relatively higher under summer
compared with winter/constant conditions, but this trait and starvation
resistance did not exhibit clinal variation. Winter conditions increased cold
resistance as measured by chill coma recovery time, and decreased heat
resistance as measured by time to knock down in a vial. 3. Clinal patterns were
evident for the thermal resistance traits regardless of conditions, and
involved increased heat resistance and decreased cold resistance in tropical
populations. Latitudinal patterns were steeper for cold resistance than for
heat resistance. 4. To compare the relative impact of plastic vs genetic
changes along the cline, differences in trait means were expressed relative to
differences between populations from cline ends. For cold and heat resistance,
differences between environmental conditions were approximately 1.5x greater
than the heritable differences. 1
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