Abstract

Male meiosis in the grasshopper Stethophyma grossum is well known as an example of proximal chiasma localisation. An investigation of female meiosis in oocytes of this species shows that both the frequency and distribution of chiasmata are quite different from the male situation. Mean chiasma frequency per cell (14.98) in considerably higher in females than in males (11.28) which agrees with the trend established in other comparative studies of male and female meiosis. More strikingly, males and females also show not only different but quite opposite patterns of chiasma distribution. In spermatocytes of males, chiasmata are strictly localised proximally in most bivalents, but in oocytes of females very few chiasmata form in proximal regions and nearly all chiasmata form either in distal or interstitial regions. The genetical significance of these findings is considered.

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