Chromosome evolution in the owl monkey, Aotus
β Scribed by Nancy Shui Fong Ma
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 833 KB
- Volume
- 54
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0002-9483
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
We have reported nine distinct karyotypes for Aotus, of four pelagic phenotypes, and suggest that this single species has undergone extensive subspeciation. We reconstruct the mechanism of chromosomal evolution and propose a hypothesis about the events of subspeciation in Aotus. We speculate that isolated groups of ancestral individuals living in several confined areas have separately accumulated a fusion or inversion pair as a result of inbreeding. A subsequent reassociation of descendants from these individuals led to the formation of offspring with mixtures of fusion or inversion pairs in their complements. They, in turn, radiated into different ecological niches accompanied by adaptive genetic changes and eventually gave rise to the present forms of Aotus distinguishable by their karyotypes, but not easily recognizable by ordinary taxonomic criteria.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Karyotypic study of a population sample of twentyβone owl monkeys, Aotus, originating from Bolivia, revealed two sexβspecific somatic diploid chromosome numbers: 49 for males and 50 for females. The presence of a trivalent in male meiotic figures and the identification of chromosomes by
Owl monkeys are small monogamous primates ranging over a wide area extending from Panama to the Chaco region of northern Argentina. The Chaco, an alluvial plain covering over one million km2 of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, and Paraguay, consists of a mosaic of grasslands, savannas, xeric thorn forest