Publication | Open Access
Genetic latitudinal adaptation of<i>Drosophila melanogaster</i>: new discriminative biometrical traits between European and equatorial African populations
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Citations
22
References
1977
Year
Equatorial African PopulationsPhenotypic VariationFitnessGeneticsSelective PressureBiological EvolutionGenetic DiversityMolecular EcologyHuman VariationBiostatisticsMolecular AdaptationPublic HealthEvolutionary GeneticsStatistical GeneticsGenetic VariationThorax LengthPopulation GeneticsBiologyBody SizeEvolutionary BiologyGenetic AdmixtureMedicineEquatorial African StrainsGenetic Latitudinal Adaptation
SUMMARY Five biometrical traits (thorax length, wing length and width, sternopleural and abdominal chaetae numbers) were measured on 13 equatorial African strains and 30 French strains. In all cases highly significant differences were observed between the two geographic groups. These results are added to previously known variations concerning adult weight and ovariole number. In each place, the genetic particularities of the wild populations seem to be maintained by the selective pressure from environmental conditions, resulting in a homeostatic focusing of the best fitted average genotype. Analysis within each group showed that variations between strains were in most cases poorly or not correlated, so that partial or total genetic independence between the various traits measured seems likely.
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