Abstract

Drosophila sechellia, an island endemic that specializes on a single host plant, has a lower rate of egg production than its generalist sister species D. melanogaster, D. simulans, and D. mauritiana. Earlier work showed that part of this difference in egg production was due to a reduction in the number of ovarioles in D. sechellia relative to its sister species. Here, I extend this earlier work by genetically analyzing the difference in egg production between D. sechellia and D. simulans. In all, 10 genetic markers were used in several interspecific backcrosses to identify chromosome regions that affected the rate of egg production. While previously mapped factors affecting ovariole number appear to impact the rate of egg production, new, non-ovariole factors were also identified. Overall, the difference in egg production between D. sechellia and D. simulans appears to be a polygenic trait. The relationship between these factors and genes involved the adaptation of D. sechellia to its host plant is not yet clear. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that decline in egg production is, in part, a negative pleiotropic effect of genetic changes required for host specialization in D. sechellia, although finer-scale genetic analysis of both traits is needed to truly test this hypothesis.

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