31,30 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
  • Broschiertes Buch

Sex comb is a sexually dimorphic trait-a group of male specific bristles present on the tarsal segments of the prothoracic leg (T1) in Sophophoran species of Drosophila (fig 1.10a). It is absent from the rest of the species of Drosophilidae. Thus the sex comb is an evolutionary innovative trait (Lakovaara and Soura, 1982; Lemeunier et al., 1986; Kopp and True, 2002). The chaetotaxy of the prothoracic leg of females do not show variation from the chaetotaxy of the prothoracic leg of males of the non-Sophophoran group (Kopp and True, 2002; Barmina and Kopp, 2007). As previously mentioned there…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Sex comb is a sexually dimorphic trait-a group of male specific bristles present on the tarsal segments of the prothoracic leg (T1) in Sophophoran species of Drosophila (fig 1.10a). It is absent from the rest of the species of Drosophilidae. Thus the sex comb is an evolutionary innovative trait (Lakovaara and Soura, 1982; Lemeunier et al., 1986; Kopp and True, 2002). The chaetotaxy of the prothoracic leg of females do not show variation from the chaetotaxy of the prothoracic leg of males of the non-Sophophoran group (Kopp and True, 2002; Barmina and Kopp, 2007). As previously mentioned there exist a dramatic variation in the number, position and morphology of sex comb in different species of Sophophora enabling sex comb to enjoy a diverse evolutionary phylogenetic position (Kopp and True, 2002; Kopp and Barmina, 2005). Sex comb has got diverse roles in courtship and mating (Spieth, 1952; Cook, 1977; Ng and Kopp, 2008), indicating that their evolution has been driven by sexual selection. The sex comb develops from a group of bristles called the transverse bristle row (TBR) which is present on the T1 of both the males and females of Drosophilidea (Hannah-Alavah, 1958; Tokunaga, 1962). The TBR which are recruited to develop into sex comb undergo two important events of modifications i) rotation ii) chitinization (Held et al., 2004; Atallah et al., 2009; Tanaka et al., 2009). The transformation of the primitive bristle to the newly evolved sex comb should have been resulted from a genetic shift in the developmental circuit regulating the formation of the primitive bristles on the tarsal segments of the prothoracic leg.