Abstract

There were distinct ecotypie differences in the ability to develop to third stage larvae at a constant 11 or 13°C for two weeks. H. conforms cayugensis could develop at both 11 and 13°C; H. contortus from Louisiana could develop at 13°C but not 11°C and H. placei could not complete development at either temperature. Eggs produced from the first cross between ecotypes had the same cold tolerance as their maternal parent. F 1 eggs were intermediate between parental ecotypes, while F 2 eggs, when fertile, developed at the same temperature as the most cold-tolerant parent in the first cross. The H. placei knobbed vulvar morph type was dominant to H. contortus cayugensis smooth morph type and recessive to the H. contortus (Louisiana) smooth morph type. Knobbed morph type of H. contortus (Louisiana) was dominant to smooth of H. contortus cayugensis. Dominance of morph type was enhanced by a matroclinous effect in the between species matings but not in the within species matings. No fertile eggs were produced by the F 1 of the mating between female H. placei × male H. contortus (Louisiana) or by the F 2 of the reciprocal mating. Reciprocal matings between H. placei × H. contortus cayugensis produced an F 1 and F 2 that had reduced fertility but were not completely sterile. No decrease in fertility was observed in the F 2 and F 1 from the H. contortus cayugensis × H. contortus(Louisiana)matings. Cytological studies revealed several kinds of meiotic disturbances in the between species F 1 and F 2. The most frequent were aneuploidy, failure of chromosome pairing, and pairing between non-homologous chromosomes. Males were more seriously affected than females by meiotic disturbances. The H. placei X chromosome appeared to be selected against by the hybrid genetic background. Within species hybrids showed no meiotic disturbances and the percentage of male offspring from these crosses was the same as for female offspring.

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