Artículos de revistas
Male killing in three species of the tripunctata radiation of Drosophila (Diptera : Drosophilidae)
Registro en:
Journal Of Zoological Systematics And Evolutionary Research. Blackwell Publishing, v. 44, n. 2, n. 130, n. 135, 2006.
0947-5745
WOS:000236942700003
10.1111/j.1439-0469.2006.00353.x
Autor
Montenegro, H
Hatadani, LM
Medeiros, HF
Klaczko, LB
Institución
Resumen
An excess of females in progenies is commonly referred to as sex-ratio (SR). In this report, we describe three new occurrences of SR in species of the tripunctata radiation, Drosophila neocardini, Drosophila ornatifrons and Drosophila paraguayensis. Repeated backcrosses with males from normal strains were used to maintain the SR strains in the laboratory, always with all-female broods. The egg-larva viability of the SR strains was approximately half that of a normal strain, and antibiotic treatment restored the production of males in SR strains. PCR screening with Spiroplasma-specific primers showed that only SR strains tested positive for Spiroplasma. The results showed that in the three species, SR was maternally inherited and involved early male-killing bacteria, most likely spiroplasmas. These new occurrences increase the number of cytoplasmic male killers described in Drosophila from 11 to 14. In this particular collection of flies, one quarter (3 out of 12) of the species from the tripunctata radiation of Drosophila was infected with a male killer, suggesting that this group may be a hot spot for the presence of male-killing organisms. 44 2 130 135