[personal profile] eub
Chromosome polymorphism and C-banding variation of the brachypterous grasshopper Podisma sapporensis Shir. (Orthoptera, Acrididae) in Hokkaido, northern Japan.
The grasshopper Podisma sapporensis consists of two main chromosome races in Hokkaido. The western group of populations of P. sapporensis, belonging to the XO race, has a diploid number of chromosomes 2n = 23 in the male and 2n = 24 in the female (sex determination XO male/XX female). The eastern group of populations of this species, belonging to the XY race, differs from the western one as a result of Robertsonian translocation between the originally acrocentric X chromosome and M5 autosome in homozygous state, having resulted in the forming of chromosome sex determination neo-XY male/neo-XX female (2n = 22).
[...]
In some solitary populations (the population at the summit of Mt Yotei, populations in the vicinity of Naganuma, Oketo, and Tanno) pericentric inversions are fixed in some pairs of chromosomes, which enables marking of the discrete karyomorphes. In the Mt Daisengen population all chromosomes are two-armed as a result of fixing the pericentric inversions.
I don't know what pericentric inversions are, but I like the beat and you can dance to it.

How does it work that XX and XO come out different phenotypic sexes? Any homogametic/heterogametic system I can wrap my head around, but homogametic/haploid? What crazy quinish design do you have to do on that X chromosome so it runs that way?

I wonder how hard it is to speciate by this kind of sex-system mechanism -- one "Robertsonian translocation", it sounds like. I wonder if it could happen to people.

Date: 2004-12-07 11:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eub.livejournal.com
Oh, I forgot about bees. Now I wonder how they work too.

Blushingly, what's the difference between haploid and XO?

Date: 2004-12-08 12:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jinian.livejournal.com
As you know, Bob, haploid organisms have n chromosomes, while diploid have 2n. Diploid but using XX/X0 sex differentiation organisms will have 2n and 2n-1 repectively. (That is a zero, by the way, not an O.)

Bees are weird, man. I hope to take entomology soonest. The 1942 Essig College Entomology text has, not surprisingly, little on genes.

Date: 2004-12-08 12:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eub.livejournal.com
Oh! I was zoomed in too far. Thanks.

O/0. Thanks also. Newfangled non-slashy zeros these days.

1942: heh.

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