Thermal phenotypic plasticity of body size in Drosophila melanogaster: sexual dimorphism and genetic correlations

被引:0
作者
JEAN R. DAVID
AMIR YASSIN
JEAN-CLAUDE MORETEAU
HELENE LEGOUT
BRIGITTE MORETEAU
机构
[1] France and Université Paris Sud,Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Laboratoire Evolution, Génomes et Spéciation, 91198 Gif sur Yvette
[2] Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle,undefined
[3] Département Systématique et Evolution,undefined
来源
Journal of Genetics | 2011年 / 90卷
关键词
wing length; thorax length; wing loading; reaction norm; growth temperature; natural population;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Thirty isofemale lines collected in three different years from the same wild French population were grown at seven different temperatures (12–31°C). Two linear measures, wing and thorax length, were taken on 10 females and 10 males of each line at each temperature, also enabling the calculation of the wing/thorax (W/T) ratio, a shape index related to wing loading. Genetic correlations were calculated using family means. The W–T correlation was independent of temperature and on average, 0.75. For each line, characteristic values of the temperature reaction norm were calculated, i.e. maximum value, temperature of maximum value and curvature. Significant negative correlations were found between curvature and maximum value or temperature of maximum value. Sexual dimorphism was analysed by considering either the correlation between sexes or the female/male ratio. Female–male correlation was on average 0.75 at the within line, within temperature level but increased up to 0.90 when all temperatures were averaged for each line. The female/male ratio was genetically variable among lines but without any temperature effect. For the female/male ratio, heritability (intraclass correlation) was about 0.20 and evolvability (genetic coefficient of variation) close to 1. Although significant, these values are much less than for the traits themselves. Phenotypic plasticity of sexual dimorphism revealed very similar reaction norms for wing and thorax length, i.e. a monotonically increasing sigmoid curve from about 1.11 up to 1.17. This shows that the males are more sensitive to a thermal increase than females. In contrast, the W/T ratio was almost identical in both sexes, with only a very slight temperature effect.
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页码:295 / 302
页数:7
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