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The latitudinal cline in the In(3R)Payne inversion polymorphism has shifted in the last 20 years in Australian Drosophila melanogaster populations |
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Author: Anderson, A. R.; Hoffmann, A. A.; McKechnie,
S. W.; Umina, P. A.; Weeks, A. R.
Year: 2005
Title: The latitudinal cline in the In(3R)Payne
inversion polymorphism has shifted in the last 20 years in Australian Drosophila melanogaster populations
Journal: Molecular Ecology
Volume: 14
Pages: 851-858
Date: Mar
Abstract: Clinal variation has been described in a
number of inversions in Drosophila
but these clines are often characterized by cytological techniques using small
sample sizes, and associations with specific genes are rarely considered. Here
we have developed a molecular assay for In(3R)Payne in Drosophila melanogaster
from eastern Australia
populations. It shows in repeated samples that the inversion cline is very
tightly associated with latitude and is almost fixed in tropical populations
while relatively rare in temperate populations. This steep cline has shifted in
position in the last 20 years. The heat shock gene, hsr-omega, located
centrally inside the inversion sequence, shows a different clinal pattern to
In(3R)Payne. These results suggest strong ongoing selection on In(3R)Payne over
the last 100 years since the colonization of Australia that is partly
independent of hsr-omega.
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