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ASSOCIATION OF CHROMOSOME AND ENZYME POLYMORPHISMS IN NATURAL AND CAGE POPULATIONS OF DROSOPHILA MELANOGASTER
Yutaka Inoue 1, Yoshiko N. Tobari 1, Kendo Tsuno 1, and Takao K. Watanabe 1
1 National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, 411 Japan
The frequencies of a polymorphic inversion, In(2L)t,
and of Adh and
Gpdh alleles were analyzed in three
natural populations of Drosophila melanogaster from Japan. Significant
positive correlations between the frequencies of In(2L)t and
AdhS or
GpdhF were detected due
to tight linkage. An analysis of correlation with latitude showed that the
negative cline of AdhS frequency could be explained entirely
by its linkage with In(2L)t; the frequency of AdhS on
the standard chromosome did not show a latitudinal cline. To the contrary,
the cline of
GpdhF frequency itself was positive,
and its linkage with In(2L)t makes the positive cline unclear. These
results suggest that the two allozymes themselves respond to latitudinal natural
selection in different ways. When these populations were transferred to laboratory
cages and maintained for a long time, they lost the chromosomal polymorphism
but retained stable enzyme polymorphisms, although allele frequencies in the
cage were not the same as in nature. The frequencies of Adh and
Gpdh alleles were close to those in earlier cage populations of
the same geographical origin.
Accepted on October 14, 1983