Genetic variation in heat-stress tolerance among South American Drosophila populations.

Genetica
Lindsey C FallisTheodore J Morgan

Abstract

Spatial or temporal differences in environmental variables, such as temperature, are ubiquitous in nature and impose stress on organisms. This is especially true for organisms that are isothermal with the environment, such as insects. Understanding the means by which insects respond to temperature and how they will react to novel changes in environmental temperature is important for understanding the adaptive capacity of populations and to predict future trajectories of evolutionary change. The organismal response to heat has been identified as an important environmental variable for insects that can dramatically influence life history characters and geographic range. In the current study we surveyed the amount of variation in heat tolerance among Drosophila melanogaster populations collected at diverse sites along a latitudinal gradient in Argentina (24°-38°S). This is the first study to quantify heat tolerance in South American populations and our work demonstrates that most of the populations surveyed have abundant within-population phenotypic variation, while still exhibiting significant variation among populations. The one exception was the most heat tolerant population that comes from a climate exhibiting the warmest annu...Continue Reading

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Citations

Mar 1, 2014·Journal of Evolutionary Biology·L C FallisT J Morgan
Nov 23, 2018·Ecology and Evolution·Carmen RolandiJulián Mensch
Aug 18, 2021·ELife·Lisa I CouperErin A Mordecai

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