Abstract

SUMMARYTwenty‐seven protein coding loci were examined by means of horizontal starch gel electrophoresis in samples of larvae from four populations of the stalk borer Eldana saccharina Walker (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) in Natal, South Africa. The populations were collected in two localities approximately 250 km apart. In each locality a sample was obtained from sugarcane and also from the locally most abundant indigenous host plant of this insect (Cyperuspapyrus L. in one locality and C. dives Delile ‐ synonomous with C. immensus CB CI. ‐ in the other).More than one allele was detected at eight of the loci in all four populations and at a further locus in three of the populations; the other 18 loci were monomorphic for the same allele in all populations. Average expected heterozygosity over the 27 loci was approximately 0.12 in all populations. Genetic distances among the populations were small, but were greater between the two populations from the indigenous hosts and the two from sugarcane than within either of these pairs of populations. Possible explanations of these results are discussed.

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