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The multiple chromosomes of Paratylotropidia brunneri Scudder (Orthoptera: Acrididae)

โœ Scribed by R. L. King; H. W. Beams


Book ID
102903399
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1938
Tongue
English
Weight
508 KB
Volume
63
Category
Article
ISSN
0362-2525

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

There are 19 chromosomes in diploid cells of male Paratylotropidia brunneri; of these, four are Vโ€shaped multiples. There are twenty chromosomes in diploid cells of females; of these, four are Vโ€shaped multiples. If the two arms of each multiple are counted as separate chromosomes, we have the usual number of chromosomes for the Acrididae, i.e., twentyโ€three in male and twentyโ€four in female.

There are nine chromosomes in the first spermatocyte divisions: seven tetrads, one octad and a decad. The latter is made up of the accessory chromosome associated with an octad.

One of the Vโ€shaped multiples in the male is limited to that sex. The homologue of one of the dyads of which it is composed is a free dyad, the homologue of the other forms a Vโ€shaped multiple with the accessory chromosome. The Vโ€shaped multiple limited to the male shows differential heteropycosis in the prophases of the first spermatocyte. There is evidence that its homologous parts are isolated from each other as far as crossingover is concerned.

A study of the first maturation division of the heterogametic sex is essential for the identification of the sex chromosome.


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