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Estimates of heterozygosity and patterns of geographic differentiation in natural populations of the medfly (Ceratitis capitata)

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dc.contributor.author Kourti, A en
dc.date.accessioned 2014-06-06T06:45:02Z
dc.date.available 2014-06-06T06:45:02Z
dc.date.issued 2002 en
dc.identifier.issn 00180661 en
dc.identifier.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.1034/j.1601-5223.2002.01653.x en
dc.identifier.uri http://62.217.125.90/xmlui/handle/123456789/2216
dc.subject.other alloenzyme en
dc.subject.other Africa en
dc.subject.other article en
dc.subject.other bottleneck population en
dc.subject.other controlled study en
dc.subject.other evolutionary adaptation en
dc.subject.other gene frequency en
dc.subject.other gene locus en
dc.subject.other genetic drift en
dc.subject.other genetic polymorphism en
dc.subject.other genetic selection en
dc.subject.other genetic variability en
dc.subject.other geographic origin en
dc.subject.other geographical variation (species) en
dc.subject.other heterozygosity en
dc.subject.other Mediterranean fruit fly en
dc.subject.other Mediterranean Sea en
dc.subject.other natural population en
dc.subject.other natural selection en
dc.subject.other nonhuman en
dc.subject.other polymorphic locus en
dc.subject.other population genetics en
dc.subject.other United States en
dc.subject.other Capitata en
dc.subject.other Ceratitis en
dc.subject.other Ceratitis capitata en
dc.subject.other Drosophila melanogaster en
dc.subject.other Insecta en
dc.title Estimates of heterozygosity and patterns of geographic differentiation in natural populations of the medfly (Ceratitis capitata) en
heal.type journalArticle en
heal.identifier.primary 10.1034/j.1601-5223.2002.01653.x en
heal.publicationDate 2002 en
heal.abstract Allozyme variation at 25 gene loci was studied in fifteen populations of Ceratitis capitata (Wiedemann) (medfly,) originating from different countries. The study of genetic variation in natural populations of medfly was undertaken to identify different groups of polymorphic loci whose variation patterns might suggest different kinds of selection forces. The findings of this study are as follows: (1) the African populations have mean heterozygosity 17.8 % and the introduced 5.7 %. (2) An average population is polymorphic for 22.3 % of the gene loci and an average individual is heterozygous for 8.7 % of its gene loci. (3) The within population heterozygosity (Hs) is divided into two groups. The first had an Hs varying from 0 to 20 % and the second from 35 to 43 %. This abrupt transition between the two groups provides initial clues about selection on at least some loci. (4) The FST (fixation index) values have a wide range among loci from 40.7 % (Pep3) to 0 (Adh). The differentiation could be partly due to drift and partly by some sort of selection that affects particular genes. (5) Total heterozygosity (HT) could be separated into two groups with a gap between 20 % and 40 %. This distribution can sort out loci under purifying selection (low HT) and balancing selection (high HT). In conclusion, different evolutionary forces could have contributed to genetic changes during colonization by the medfly. In addition to the bottleneck effect, natural selection may have played an important role in the observed differences in the patterns of variation seen for different groups of loci in natural populations of C. capitata. en
heal.journalName Hereditas en
dc.identifier.issue 3 en
dc.identifier.volume 137 en
dc.identifier.doi 10.1034/j.1601-5223.2002.01653.x en
dc.identifier.spage 173 en
dc.identifier.epage 179 en


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