Abstract
Mitotic analyses of the brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) x arctic char (S. alpinus) hybrids (sparctic trout) revealed a mode of 2n = 82 with 18 metacentric and 64 acrocentric chromosomes. The brook trout had 2n = 84 with 16 metacentric chromosomes and the arctic char had 2n = 80 with 20 metacentric chromosomes; both species are derivatives of a single tetraploid event. Variable multivalent-like configurations that may be centromeric associations of bivalents were observed in C-banded pachytene figures of female sparctic trout. Metaphase I analyses of sparctic trout males indicated that two fusions of nonhomologous acrocentric chromosomes representing two duplicated chromosome sets must have occurred in the arctic char after its evolutionary divergence from the brook trout. A mode of seven tetravalent rods per cell suggests that preferential multivalent pairing occurs in the sparctic hybrid; metaphase I analyses of S. alpinus males revealed a mode of only five tetravalent rods per cell. The presence of multivalents implies that the arctic char, like the brook trout, is still undergoing diploidization. Cytochemical detection of the nucleolar organizer region (NOR) revealed intra- and interspecific as well as intraindividual variability in the numbers and types of chromosomes (metacentric or acrocentric) on which NORs appeared in arctic char and sparctic trout. Brook trout only had NORs on acrocentric chromosomes. This may indicate that different chromosomal fusions occurred in the evolution of brook trout from arctic char.
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