Abstract

Trimerotropis pallidipennis is a New World grasshopper whose South-American populations are polymorphic for six pericentric inversions. Previous work has demonstrated that the frequences of these inversions correlate with climatic variables, and hence a possible adaptive pattern was put forward. In the present work we analysed a sample of a natural population of T pallidipennis to ascertain whether the chromosomal inversions have effects on exophenotypes. Two hundred and sixty-eight males coming from a natural population at Uspallata, Mendoza Province, Argentina were analysed, and it was observed that most inversions had significant effects on phenotypes. Furthermore, some body size-related characteristics (such as tegmina length) were correlated with the number of inversions. Individuals from populations at higher altitude or latitude (i.e., at lower minimum temperatures), along with higher frequencies of standard sequences, were significantly smaller, and this coherence between interpopulational with intrapopulational results may indicate that the diminished body size of the standard sequence-carrying individuals may be caused by an effect of the inversions, or genes within the inversions, on body size. We finally put forward the hypothesis that reduced body size in a context of reduced minimum temperature may be a response to shortened development season, and so smaller individuals may be advantageous.

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