Abstract

Five long-term selected lines of Drosophila melanogaster were monitored for the presence of lethals and inversions on the third chromosome for a period of nearly 100 generations after the cessation of selection. The results provide an example of the action of inversions as a trap for genes with homozygous detrimental effects in small populations. Lines polymorphic for cosmopolitan inversions In(3R)C and In(3L)P maintain linked lethal and detrimental genes in a near-balanced system. Consideration of the high selection response attained despite inversion polymorphism leads to the conclusion that extreme responses to selection can be obtained without exploiting the potential from large genomic regions.

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