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Is premating isolation in Drosophila overestimated due to uncontrolled factors?
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-114474
ABSTRACT
Sexual isolation in Drosophila is typically measured by multiple-choice mating tests. While many environmental variables during such tests are controlled by the researcher, there are some factors that are usually uncontrolled. We demonstrate, using Drosophila melanogaster and D. pseudoobscura flies, that the temperature of rearing, pre-adult density, and level of consanguinity, can all produce differences in mating propensity between genetically equivalent flies. These differences in mating propensity, in turn, can give rise to statistically significant results in multiple-choice mating tests, leading to positive isolation values and the artifactual inference of sexual isolation between populations. This fact agrees with a nonrandom excess of significant positive tests found in a review of the literature of Drosophila intraspecific mating choice. An overestimate of true cases of sexual isolation in Drosophila in the literature can, therefore, not be ruled out.
Subject(s)
Full text: Available Index: IMSEAR (South-East Asia) Main subject: Reproduction / Sexual Behavior, Animal / Temperature / Female / Male / Adaptation, Physiological / Drosophila / Inbreeding / Animals Language: English Year: 2005 Type: Article

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Full text: Available Index: IMSEAR (South-East Asia) Main subject: Reproduction / Sexual Behavior, Animal / Temperature / Female / Male / Adaptation, Physiological / Drosophila / Inbreeding / Animals Language: English Year: 2005 Type: Article