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  • 1
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    Springer
    Behavior genetics 20 (1990), S. 535-543 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; speciation ; sexual isolation ; behavior
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Drosophila mojavensis from the Sonora region and Baja California show asymmetrical sexual isolation in the laboratory: males from Sonora mate equally frequently with Sonora and Baja females, while the mating success of Baja males with Sonora females is reduced. This failure has been localized to three separate behavioral landmarks occurring during courtship. Genetic analysis was conducted using reciprocal F1 hybrids of Sonora and Baja strains to examine inheritance patterns of the responsible courtship behaviors. Mating success and propensity of F1 males were similar to Sonora males. F1 females mated with males of Sonora and Baja races equally, although mating propensity of F1 females was intermediate between that of Sonora and Baja females. Males of Baja strains presented with F1 females showed a relatively high level of failure at attempted intromission. Genes for mating behaviors are located in the autosomes, but different loci responsible for the sexual isolation appear to act in males and females.
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  • 2
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    Behavior genetics 10 (1980), S. 401-407 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: sexual isolation ; Drosophila ; geographic distance ; isolation index ; resource utilization
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Six strains of the cosmopolitan speciesD. immigrans from the Australian life zone plus one from the USA, show weak sexual isolation and more rarely sexual selection. Levels of sexual isolation cannot be related to geographic distances. Assortative mating may have evolved as a byproduct of ecological divergence.
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  • 3
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    Behavior genetics 13 (1983), S. 17-27 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: pupation site ; pupation height ; artificial selection ; Drosophila ; density-dependent behavior ; genotype-environment interaction
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Selection for increased pupation height was carried out for 17 generations in two lines ofDrosophila simulans derived from a genetically heterogeneous base population. The realized heritability for mean pupation height in each line, calculated over the 17 generations, did not differ significantly from zero. Both selected lines tended to pupate away from the center of the culture medium to a greater extent than the control in the latter generations of the experiment but not in earlier generations. Pupation height may have been refractory to artificial selection because of an adaptation of this species to pupate on the larval food source. In a subsequent experiment, each line was tested at three larval densities in an apparatus different from the one used for selection. Each successively higher density showed a corresponding increase in pupation height. Both selected lines had higher mean pupation heights than the control line. The differences between lines became more pronounced as the larval density increased.
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  • 4
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    Behavior genetics 14 (1984), S. 279-293 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: phototaxis ; Drosophila ; correlated response ; selection ; sepia
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Artificial selection for positive and negative phototaxis was conducted in populations ofDrosophila melanogaster that were polymorphic at thesepia locus. Photoselection response was accompanied by a correlated response in the frequency of thesepia allele. Changes insepia frequency were shown to be significantly different from those predicted by several neutral models. Implications of this correlated response are briefly discussed in terms of the neurogenetic basis of phototaxis.
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  • 5
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    Behavior genetics 14 (1984), S. 315-317 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; mating and barometric pressure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract During a study ofDrosophila mating behavior we observed unexpected changes in performance under ostensibly identical experimental conditions. We related the behavior during the 17 days of the experiment to changes in ambient humidity and barometric pressure. Humidity had no significant effect, but reduced barometric pressure was found to be associated with reduced mating activity (R 2=0.29,P〈0.025), accounting for close to 30% of the variation in total number of matings.
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; courtship ; learning ; circadian
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
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  • 7
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    Behavior genetics 14 (1984), S. 411-440 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; courtship ; pheromones
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    Topics: Biology , Psychology
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  • 8
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    Behavior genetics 14 (1984), S. 527-557 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; learning ; classical conditioning mutants ; cAMP
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    Topics: Biology , Psychology
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  • 9
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    Behavior genetics 14 (1984), S. 441-478 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; courtship ; pheromones
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Summary Experimental evidence and speculation relative to chemical messages exchanged byDrosophila during courtship and mating are reviewed. Only the speciesD. melanogaster andD. simulans are considered in detail. Emphasis is put on female aphrodisiacs, as they clearly participate in sex and species recognition. All the aphrodisiac molecules described are unsaturated long-chain hydrocarbons, and position 7 for a double bond seems important in both species. InD. melanogaster, only females are able to make 7,11-dienes, compounds which stimulate males of this species to court. InD. simulans, 7-tricosene plays a similar role but is produced by both sexes as well as maleD. melanogaster. In both species, polymorphism is shown for these molecules. Their biosynthesis is also considered and both preliminary biochemical and genetic data are introduced. Male-specific compounds which regulate male and female behaviors are also reviewed. For example,cis-vaccenyl acetate inhibits male courtship; one or two peptides control the female's receptivity and egg laying. Such compounds are transferred from males to females together with sperm.
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  • 10
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    Behavior genetics 15 (1985), S. 561-569 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; courtship ; mating ; experience ; competition
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Previous research has described conditions which will alter the mating behavior of femaleDrosophila. MaleD. melanogaster exposed to mated females or immature males will show reduced levels of courtship toward normally attractive virgin females or immature males, respectively. Experiments allowing experienced and naive subject males to compete for virgin females are described. The results indicate that experience with mated females does not significantly alter the effectiveness of a male competing for a mate. However, experience with immature males can significantly increase the chances of securing a mate in some circumstances. These results are consistent with previous suggestions that “learning” phenotypes inD. melanogaster may be associated with evolutionary fitness.
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  • 11
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    Behavior genetics 16 (1986), S. 271-279 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; habitat choice ; learning ; experience
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Microhabitat preferences ofDrosophila pseudoobscura strains were examined in a Waddington maze, with an emphasis on learning how early environment affected adult habitat choice. The genotypes were roughly those expected in a natural population; the environmental variables included light, temperature, and food. It was found that (1) the different genotypes chose habitats differently; (2) early experience affected subsequent habitat choice; and (3) the effect of early experience was complex, as preference for one niche dimension (temperature) was reinforced by experience with the generally preferred value, preference for another niche dimension (light) was weakened by experience with the generally preferred value, and preference for other niche dimensions (food) was generally unaffected by experience. In this study the contribution to the total chi square was about equal from genotype and from environment. The significance of these findings for studies of dispersal and population structure of natural populations is discussed.
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  • 12
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    Behavior genetics 11 (1981), S. 557-563 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; photobehavior ; pupation site selection ; sibling species
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Drosophila melanogaster prefers to pupate in the dark, while its sibling species,D. simulans, prefers the light when the species are tested in isolation and when cultured and tested together. Reciprocal interspecific hybridizations were carried out and the F 1 individuals were tested. Progeny from the cross ofD. melanogaster females withD. simulans males chose pupations sites exactly intermediate between those of the two parental species, while the reciprocal-cross offspring preferred light pupation sites. The pupation site preferences (PSPs) of the hybrids are compatible with a sex-linked locus or loci influencing light-dependent PSP in this pair of species. Examination of light preferences of larvae prior to the late third instar demonstrates that these preference are highly specific, being restricted to the time just before pupation. During the first two larval instarsD. melanogaster is quite photopositive whileD. simulans is comparatively photoneutral. These differences in light-dependent behavior could aid in reducing competition between the two species.
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  • 13
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; learning ; memory ; classical conditioning ; mutants
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Holliday & Hirsch (this issue) now agree that “Quinnet al. (1974) have demonstrated learning [inDrosophila] with group data, and their inability to identify individual differences (IDs) in performance does not invalidate their conclusion that some individuals in the population must have learned.” However, they consider it important, if not necessary, to show that anindividual fly has learned. In response to Holliday and Hirsch, this paper discusses why it is not necessary to measure learning in individual fruit flies before searching for underlying biochemical mechanisms.
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  • 14
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    Behavior genetics 17 (1987), S. 541-558 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: mating ability ; sexual selection ; fitness ; stress ; domestication ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Mating ability differences between flies of different alcohol dehydrogenase (Adh) genotypes have been assessed in the temperature range 15 to 29°C for laboratory-adapted and field-derivedDrosophila melanogaster. Significant differences amongAdh genotypes were detected principally for the laboratory-adapted strains due to departures from random mating associated with heterozygote superiority at the relatively extreme temperature of 29°C, although mating ability differences could not be attributed directly to theAdh locus. The difference between the laboratory and the field populations can be explained by the effects of genetic back-ground manifested in the form of fitness differences, being enhanced for the laboratory-adapted flies as a consequence of the stress of laboratory culture. In contrast with larval survival and development time, laboratory and field flies do not differe appreciably in their overall abilities to obtain mates, which indicates that mating ability is a direct fitness character not greatly affected by laboratory culture. It follows that direct fitness traits are the least amenable to change under domestication.
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  • 15
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    Behavior genetics 17 (1987), S. 559-569 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: sexual selection ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Since Darwin's formulation of the theory of sexual selection a number of population biologists have developed models that explore the genetic consequences of his theory. In all these models it is assumed that two forces act to counterbalance the runaway process of sexual selection. That is, female preference for a certain male character tends to select for extreme forms of that character until natural selection exerts its forces to maintain the optimum male phenotype that is able to survive in its environment. In this paper, an alternative explanation for the origin of secondary sexual characters is proposed. It is suggested that polymorphism in secondary sexual characters may be maintained not as a direct result of selection for these characters but by being either linked to or as pleiotropic effects of some other feature of the mate recognition pattern. While there are no genetic data to support these observations inDrosophila at this time, there appears to be compelling evidence that mating success is not wholly dependent on the presence of these characters.
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  • 16
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    Behavior genetics 18 (1988), S. 293-308 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: stress ; domestication ; extreme environments ; human evolution ; mice ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Genetic variability of behavioral traits under optimal and stressful environments is considered with examples fromDrosophila, rodents, and our own species. In agreement with direct fitness and life history traits, behavioral traits show a maximization of preexisting andde novo variation under stress. In order to understand evolutionary change,it appears necessary to emphasize those traits showing interactions with habitats under conditions of environmental stress; this can be shown at the behavioral level especially for domestication and adaptation to novel habitats.
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  • 17
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    Behavior genetics 18 (1988), S. 389-403 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: sexual selection ; sexual behavior ; assortative mating ; polymorphism ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Although many experiments on laboratory stocks ofDrosophila have suggested that mate choice is a major feature of sexual selection in this organism, few attempts have been made to measure its extent in wild populations. In this study, a crossing design was used to obtain a set of 13 genetically identical independent lines representative of genotypes from an African population ofDrosophila melanogaster. They were tested for variation in sexual behavior using dyadic tests. Significant variation in orientation and vibration latencies was found for males, and in mating speed and copulation duration for both sexes. No evidence of assortative mating, either positive or negative, was found. The absence of a correlation in mating speed between males and females sharing the same genotype leads us to doubt the applicability of the notion of “male eagerness” and “female reluctancy” inDrosophila and the importance of “vigor” as a factor in mating speed. The absence of mate choice in natural populations ofDrosophila seems to us the most likely hypothesis on the basis of both theory and empirical evidence.
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  • 18
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: reproductive behavior ; pulse song ; sine song ; acoustic spectrum ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Digital signal processing methods have revealed spectral components inDrosophila melanogaster's andD. simulans' male courtship songs that had gone undetected in previous studies. We found that a bout of courtship hum (“sine song”) inD. simulans typically consists of a narrowband fundamental frequency, accompanied by second and third harmonics that can comprise a major fraction of the power in the signal. The pulse song spectra consisted of single broad-band peaks of highly variable frequencies, which, nevertheless, are characteristically different in these two species. Genetic elements of the newly discovered song components were examined by analysis of theD. melanogaster/D. simulans hybrid. Such males were found to be intermediate in production of sine song harmonics as well as in other parameters of courtship song, except for sine song and intrapulse frequency bandwidths, for which there may be dominant factors inD. simulans.
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  • 19
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Mating behavior ; reproductive isolation ; sexual isolation ; semispecies ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Preadult seclusion imposed upon members of theDrosophila paulistorum complex of intersterile semispecies significantly decreased sexual isolation between adults of the semispecies. While seclusion at any developmental stage had this effect, there were quantitative variations correlated with the stage at which seclusion had been initiated: the earlier the stage at which seclusion began, the more frequent were the heterogamic matings. All the stages of development seemed to contribute to final adult sexual behavior, with no single stage emerging as the most important experiential phase. Seclusion also significantly affected intrasemispecific matings, in that flies were more likely to mate with partners having similar experiences.
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  • 20
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    Behavior genetics 20 (1990), S. 73-79 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; mating behavior ; mate choice ; anesthesia ; etherization ; genetic variation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Genetic differences that influence mating preferences were studied in genetically defined lines ofDrosophila melanogaster. Initial results suggested substantial differences between two types of females with respect to the types of male preferred as mates, but further experimentation showed that the mating patterns were conditional on the mode of anethesia (CO2 versus ether). In a statistical test of independence, the major determinant of mating choice in these experiments was due to an interaction effect between genotypes and mode of anesthesia. The observations might be explained by the differential sensitivity of male genotypes to ether. Etherization at emergence has lasting effects on mating behavior; it alters not only the latency and frequency of mating 4 days later, but also the pattern of matings observed.
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  • 21
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: assortative mating ; polymorphism ; partner selection ; pheromone ; behavior ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
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    Notes: Abstract Averhoff and Richardson [(1974)Behav. Genet. 4:207–225] reported a trend toward negative assortative mating inDrosophila melanogaster during the course of inbreeding. These authors proposed that the underlying mechanism was based on pheromone polymorphism and male selection. Mass mating experiments were carried out to verify their hypothesis, detailed behavior observations were made to identify the underlying mechanism, and sex pheromone composition and variation were examined by using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis. The results showed that negative assortative mating is not a general phenomenon. Although male pheromones are probably polymorphic, female pheromones are not. We found no evidence for male selection as predicted by Averhoff and Richardson. It is argued that the most parsimonious mechanism underlying negative assortative mating is similar to one proposed by Bryant [(1979)Behav. Genet. 9:249–256], which was based on interstrain differences in female reluctancy and male vigor.
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  • 22
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    Behavior genetics 14 (1984), S. 153-156 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: mating behavior ; statistical analysis ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Quite different sets of data are shown to generate identical output ratios so that analyses of mating behavior data based on the use of input and output ratios may obscure significant aspects of the mating behavior.
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  • 23
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; learning ; conditioning
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    Topics: Biology , Psychology
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  • 24
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; behavior ; alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) activity ; aldehyde oxidase (AO) activity ; aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract FourDrosophila melanogaster strains characterized by different alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) activity levels are compared for the behavior of their larvae in response to environmental ethanol. The larvae are attracted by ethanol if they are able to convert rapidly the acetaldehyde resulting from the metabolic oxidation of ethanol. A comparison is made with the oviposition behavior of flies of the same strains in response to environmental ethanol. A similarity between oviposition behavior and larval behavior is found only for a strain lacking both alcohol dehydrogenase and aldehyde oxidase (AO).
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  • 25
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    Behavior genetics 22 (1992), S. 469-487 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: courtship ; pheromones ; Drosophila ; apterous ; juvenile hormone ; reproductive development ; sexual behavior
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Theapterous (ap) gene ofDrosophila melanogaster exhibits extreme pleiotrophy: its functioning is essential for life, normal wing structure, juvenile hormone production, female fertility, and normal development of female sexual receptivity. Four mutantap alleles (ap 4,ap 56f,ap c, andap blt) were characterized for three additional phenotypes: male mating success, courtship behavior, and immature male sex appeal (the ability of males to stimulate homosexual cortship). Mating success with mature wild-type virgin females is reduced in males mutant for theap gene, the extreme case beingap 4/ap 4 males, which are behaviorally sterile. Inap mutants, nonwing courtship elements are qualitatively like those ofap +/ap + males. However, the mean rate of nonwing courtship directed toward virgin wild-type females (i.e., the mean temporal frequency of these displays) is reduced in males homozygous forap 4,ap 56f, orap c alleles. In contrast, theap blt allele makes for wild-type rates of nonwing courtship. Immature male sex appeal persists for at least 3 days in males homozygous forap c and, to a lesser extent, inap 56f orap 4 homozygotes;ap blt/ap blt and wild-type males lose immature male sex appeal after 1 day. All three male phenotypes map to theap locus, which is therefore essential for the development of normal levels of male courtship and male mating success and for the timely loss of immature male sex appeal. For each phenotype,ap + is dominant toap alleles making for behavioral abnormalities, with a single exception (for rate of nonwing courtship,ap +/ap c was low). For mating success and frequency of nonwing courtship, each allele pair exhibits at least partial complementation, except forap 4 andap 56f, which fail to complement. For immature male sex appeal,ap c,ap 4, andap 56f fall into the same complementation group. Juvenile hormone production is not correlated with effects on male reproductive behavior.
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  • 26
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    Behavior genetics 22 (1992), S. 557-573 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; biometrical analysis ; behavior genetics ; genetic analysis ; ss a ; deletion mapping
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    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract The homeotic mutationspineless-aristapedia (ss a ) transforms the aristae into second tarsi. Flies with aSS a phenotype also show extremely positive geotaxis as measured in a Hirsch-type geotaxis maze. Other antennal mutants and flies with their aristae amputated do not show such extreme positive geotaxis. Deletion analysis has comapped the geotaxis effect withSS a in band 89C on the third chromosome. Finally, a biometrical analysis has detected additional genes on the X chromosome that also affects geotaxis.
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  • 27
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    Behavior genetics 17 (1987), S. 597-611 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: sexual selection ; sexual isolation ; Drosophila
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    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract The idea that sexual selection is responsible for most of the characters, morphological, physiological, and behavioral, that are observed as subserving the efficiency of the reproductive act as an important monitor of fitness is developed. As a corollary, sexual isolation is downgraded, being considered a relatively unimportant secondary process for which the term “mechanism” is singularly inappropriate. The reproductive isolation frequently observed between allopatric species appears to me to be mostly an incidental out come of the fine tuning of the intrapopulational efficiency of the process of sexual reproduction. Two points are stressed: first, sexual selection is a powerful means of serving fitness; and second, hybridization poses little threat to the integrity or future well-being of a species.
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  • 28
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    Behavior genetics 23 (1993), S. 85-90 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: period gene ; Drosophila ; genetic coupling ; coevolution ; sexual selection ; female preference
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    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Mutations at theperiod (per) locus inDrosophila melanogaster alter rhythmic components of the male courtship song. We have examined the mating speed of females homozygous for mutantper alleles when presented with artificial mutant songs. Mutant females retain a preference for wild-type over mutant songs, thus male song and female preference are probably under separate genetic control. In contrast,per-mutant females from an established laboratory stock which had been maintained for nearly two decades appear to have an enhanced response to the corresponding mutant song in that they no longer discriminate against mutant song. These results are discussed in terms of the “genetic coupling” and “coevolution” theories of complementarity between male and female components of communication systems.
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  • 29
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; circadian clock ; ultradian oscillations ; disconnected mutant ; visual system
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    Notes: Abstract Free-running locomotor activity and eclosion rhythms ofDrosophila melanogaster, mutant at thedisconnected (disco) locus, are substantially different from the wild-type phenotype. Initial periodogram analysis revealed little or no rhythmicity (Dushayet al., 1989). We have reanalyzed the locomotor activity data using high-resolution signal analysis (maximum-entropy spectral analysis, or MESA). These analyses, corroborated by autocorrelograms, uncovered significant residual circadian rhythmicity and strong ultradian rhythms in most of the animals tested. In this regard thedisco mutants are much like flies expressing mutant alleles of theperiod gene, as well as wild-type flies reared throughout life in constant darkness. We hypothesize that light normally triggers the coupling of multiple ultradian oscillators into a functional circadian clock and that this process is disrupted indisco flies as a result of the neural lesion.
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  • 30
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Mating behavior ; reproductive isolation ; sexual isolation ; semispecies ; Drosophila
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    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract We have been utilizing membres of theDrosophila paulistorum complex of semispecies to study the development of adult discriminatory behavior. In this study, three rearing methods were used to examine the effects of previous exposure to heterosemispecifics on reproductive isolation among the various semispecies. Experimental flies were exposed to heterosemispecifics by one of three methods: exposure to airborne heterosemispecific stimuli from egg through sexual maturity, physical contact with heterosemispecifics only during the postimaginal period, and mixed culturing (total physical contact with heterosemispecific individuals during each of five preimaginal stages). Effects of the first treatment varied with semispecies. The second treatment had no significant effect on mating behavior. The third treatment of mixed culturing reinforced sexual isolation.
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  • 31
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    Behavior genetics 4 (1974), S. 301-303 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: light intensity ; malting behavior ; Drosophila ; phototaxis
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    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Mating inDrosophila pseudoobscura is known to be light independent. However, differences in the ability to mate in the presence of light or in the dark exist in lines selected for positive or for negative phototaxis.
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  • 32
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    Behavior genetics 4 (1974), S. 285-300 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: phototaxis ; mating behavior ; Drosophila ; light intensity
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    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Drosophila subobscura flies were selected for the ability to choose one of five light intensities (i.e., 30, 300, 1300, 3200, or 6500 lux), with the aid of an apparatus which enables the flies to choose freely. The original distribution of wild flies was as follows: about 60% repeatedly chose the space lighted by 6500 lux, about 30% 1300–3200 lux, and about 10% 30–300 lux. By mating the flies within each of the three categories for 19 generations, their proportion increased from 8 to 30% at 30–300 lux, from 32 to 55% at 1300–3200 lux, and from 60 to 78% at 6500 lux. The selective response was greatest at the beginning of the selection, and declined later. Using micronized dusts to mark the flies, it was determined that on the average about 33% of the flies chose the same light intensity in both of two 24-h runs, and about 31% more chose for the second time one of the neighboring light intensities. These experiments suggest that phototactic response is a relative property, so that a fly can be “photopositive” or “photonegative” to a dimmer light (including complete darkness) and to a light of much higher intensity.
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  • 33
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    Behavior genetics 16 (1986), S. 307-317 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: assortative mating ; sexual selection ; inbreeding ; polymorphism ; Drosophila
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    Notes: Abstract The hypothesis that negative assortative mating occurs as a mechanism limiting inbreeding between genetically related individuals ofDrosophila melanogaster was tested. In order to avoid bias linked to using inbred lines, experiments made use of the F1 hybrid progeny between lines rendered homozygous on chromosomes 1, 2, and 3. No negative assortative mating was found, but significant additive variation was observed between lines for orientation, vibration, copulation latencies, and copulation duration. There was no consistency of results, either among parameters or between sexes from the same line. It is therefore unlikely that the variations observed are due merely to quantitative differences in “vigor”. Since all lines originated from the same wild population, these differences are a possible estimate of natural variation in sexual behavior.
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    Behavior genetics 16 (1986), S. 407-413 
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    Keywords: Drosophila ; pupation height ; larval behavior ; light
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    Notes: Abstract A comparison of pupation height in light and dark was made using 12 species ofDrosophila, representing four species groups and four different ecological backgrounds (temperate-montane forest,virilis group desert,replate group; cosmopolitanmelanogaster group; tropical forest,willistoni group). Light condition has a significant effect on pupation height in only two of the species. In the light,D. montana stays close to the food surface, whileD. melanogaster pupates higher in light than in dark. Light-dependent patterns of pupation response do not correspond to those previously reported for the light-dependent mating response. Considerable interspecific variation exists for pupation height in each species triad, some of which could provide a basis for larval niche separation. Patterns of species differences in the desertrepleta triad are the same in light and in darkness.
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    Behavior genetics 12 (1982), S. 281-293 
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    Keywords: anemotaxis ; Drosophila ; habitat selection ; heritability ; wind-directed movement
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    Notes: Abstract Two strains ofDrosophila melanogaster were selected for anemotactic response for six generations—one line for upwind response and one line for downwind response. A realized heritability estimate ofh 2=0.131 ±0.029 was obtained for the upwind response, and a realized heritability estimate ofh 2=0.012±0.014 was obtained for the downwind response. The divergent selection estimate wash 2=0.031±0.013. These values are consistent with previously reported heritability estimates for phototaxis and geotaxis, and serve to suggest that wind-oriented movement can be rapidly modified by selection under different habitat conditions. A comparison of wind response among wild-caught individuals of 11 species shows significant response differences between closely related species. Evaluation of these differences in light of the ecology of the flies suggests that upwind movement occurs among the monophagous species, which must move long distances to find their specific feeding sites, while downwind movement is more typical of polyphagous species. Species which are found in riparian or montane forest conditions showed a general reluctance to move under windy conditions. This corresponds to previous observations on these species and reflects the absence of wind generally encountered by these species during their natural periods of activity.
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    Behavior genetics 17 (1987), S. 307-312 
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    Keywords: Drosophila ; D. melanogaster ; olfaction ; ethanol tolerance ; correlated response
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    Notes: Abstract The experiments usedDrosophila melanogaster lines previously selected for increased knockdown resistance to ethanol. Selected lines utilized ethanol as a metabolic resource to a greater extent than unselected lines. Lines were characterized by their olfactory responses to ethanol, ethyl acetate, and acetaldehyde in a wind tunnel. Selected lines were less attracted to ethanol than unselected lines but did not differ consistently in their responses to other chemicals. This suggests that increased tolerance and utilization of ethanol are not necessarily accompanied by increased attraction to this chemical.
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    Behavior genetics 17 (1987), S. 409-425 
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    Keywords: effect of isolation on mating ; rare-male mating advantage ; rare-female mating advantage ; artifact ; bias ; size of mating chamber ; Drosophila
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    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Virgin males (or females) of some species ofDrosophila, when stored singly, are known to be superior in mating to males (or females) stored in groups. This may create a spurious rare-male effect on some occasions. When no account is taken of this storage effect in an experimental setup designed to show rare-male mating advantage, bias in favor of a raremale effect may result. It is shown that merely by storing the rare males singly and the common males in groups, with males not differing in any other respect, a very strong spurious rare-male effect can be produced. Similarly, it is shown that a spurious rare-female effect is possible too. It is proposed that the very strong rare-male effect for pepperment scent as found by Dal Molin [(1979).Am. Nat. 113:951–954] is merely a result of such a bias. The relevance for natural populations of the mating advantage associated with the single housing condition is discussed. In the experiments designed to show a spurious rare-male effect, mating chambers of two different sizes were used. It is shown that sexual selection is more severe in the small chambers, for both males and females.
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    Behavior genetics 10 (1980), S. 237-249 
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    Keywords: Drosophila ; behavior ; ADH activity ; adaptation ; evolution ; alcohol avoidance ; Adh genotypes
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    Notes: Abstract Three alcohol dehydrogenase genotypes, homozygous for either the electrophoretically fast, slow, or null allele at theAdh locus inD. melanogaster, were tested for relative larval alcohol preference behavior (APB) over a range of ethanol concentrations. Differences in behavior between genotypes were not significant at concentrations below 10%. At concentrations greater than 10%, avoidance behavior was negatively correlated with the relative ADH activity levels of the genotypes tested. A model based on the differential buildup of toxic acetaldehyde is proposed to explain the avoidance response.
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    Behavior genetics 11 (1981), S. 127-133 
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    Keywords: sexual isolation ; Drosophila ; isofemale strains ; isolation index ; mating propensity
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    Notes: Abstract Eight isofemale strains of the cosmopolitan speciesDrosophila immigrans derived from a single location in Melbourne, Australia, were crossed in all combinations to test for sexual isolation. Statistically significant sexual isolation occurred in 12 of 28 crosses, with one strain showing significant isolation from the other seven. There were significantly unequal male mating propensities (relative rates of mating) in 7 of the 28 crosses.
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    Behavior genetics 27 (1997), S. 483-488 
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    Keywords: Drosophila ; sex peptide ; ovulation ; mating suppression ; antiaphrodisiac pheromone
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    Notes: Abstract Virgin females of Drosophila melanogaster that are ectopically expressing the sex-pep-tide gene show a high level of ovulation and are unreceptive to males. However, if they are genetically deprived of eggs, receptivity is considerably restored (Fuyama, 1995). These females, whether they have eggs or not, extrude their ovipositors toward courting males as frequently as do fertilized females. However, this rejection behavior was ineffective in suppressing male courtship. Of females with eggs, about half of them could suppress male courtship. Females lacking eggs could not suppress male courtship and continued to elicit vigorous courtship. This difference seems to account for the increased mating frequency in sterilized females. Courtship behavior by mutant males defective in olfaction or learning suggested that females are capable of repelling males by emitting a volatile pheromone(s) with an inhibitory effect on male courtship.
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    Behavior genetics 29 (1999), S. 65-73 
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    Keywords: Mating behavior ; reproductive isolation ; sexual isolation ; sibling species ; Drosophila
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    Notes: Abstract In an investigation into the effects of developmental isolation from all conspecifics, the Drosophila willistoni group of six sibling species responded to differing degrees: all six are reproductively isolated from D. paulistorum, the tester species. Drosophila pavlovskiana, a narrow endemic, proved the most vulnerable, responding by reducing its adult sexual isolation, if eggs, any instar, and sometimes even pupae were socially isolated. To lesser degrees, D. tropicalis and D. willistoni both produced similar results only when their eggs were isolated, i.e., when from the moment of egg deposition on, there was absolutely no contact with other flies until testing for mating behavior. The remaining siblings, D. equinoxialis and D. insularis, were immovable.
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    Behavior genetics 4 (1974), S. 159-164 
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    Keywords: Drosophila ; mating behavior ; age effects on mating ; experience effects on mating ; rare-male advantages ; frequency-dependent selection ; sexual selection
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    Notes: Abstract Because published experiments documenting frequency-dependent sexual selection have exclusively used young virgins, we endeavored to test for this same phenomenon in females who differed in age and in previous mating experiences. Direct observation tests were conducted employingDrosophila pseudoobscura females of the previously described Arrowhead (AR) and Chiricahua (CH) homokaryotypes. Four-day-old virgin females confer mating advantages on all tested rare males, i.e.,or. AR, and CH. Females who had a previous mating experience when younger award a rare-male advantage only when the rare male is of the same genotype of karyotype as their first mate, and matings are random when the first-mate type males are common. Equivalently aged (11 days) virgin females mate significantly more than expected with minority males if they are of the same karyotype as the females themselves. whereas matings are near random when the males are different. Frequency-dependent mating, therefore, is both age and experience dependent.
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    Behavior genetics 4 (1974), S. 207-225 
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    Keywords: assortative mating ; pheromone ; genetic variation ; inbreeding ; sterility ; Drosophila
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    Notes: Abstract Multiple-choice mating tests comparing the mating propensity among and within inbred lines were performed forDrosophila melanogaster. Courtship activity, time to copulation, and assortative mating were all directly correlated with the degree of inbreeding. By the eighth generation of sib mating, there was a 76% incidence of negative assortative mating in multiple-choice tests and a marked reduction of courtship behavior among sibs. Furthermore, absence of sperm in the females of nonreproductive pairs indicated that much of the attrition of inbred lines was due to failure of sibs to mate. When individuals of “sterile cultures” were allowed an opportunity to outcross, most were fertile and exhibited normal mating and courtship activity. Olfactometer tests with either unrelated flies or collected pheromone samples as source material indicated that airborne chemosignals are required for initiation of courtship inD. melanogaster. Visual and audio cues were found to be noncritical inD. melanogaster courtship and mating. Intraspecific qualitative pheromone variation, at one or a few loci, is thought to be functioning as the control mechanism in selective mating.
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    Behavior genetics 4 (1974), S. 395-404 
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    Keywords: Drosophila ; mating speed ; fitness ; genetics
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    Notes: Abstract From a survey of published data on the genusDrosophila, it is clear that male mating speed or male virility is probably the most important component of fitness. Rapid matings tend to be controlled by the male genotype, while the genotype of the female may assume importance for slower matings. Where data exist, male mating speed is subject to directional selection in the direction of rapid speed, as would be expected for an important component of fitness.
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    Behavior genetics 9 (1979), S. 233-241 
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    Keywords: Drosophila ; oviposition site preference ; ethanol ; Darwininian fitness
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    Notes: Abstract Comparative studies of oviposition site preference (OSP) inDrosophila suggest that choice of oviposition site is an important adaptive behavior which influences individual fitness and the potential of populations for speciation. OSP has been investigated under conditions which provided females with a choice of standard medium or medium containing ethanol for oviposition. OSP is an extremely labile behavior in the laboratory, but a technique has been developed which minimizes variation between replicates and allows the detection of OSP differences between semispecies of a single species. An analysis of the OSP of 14Drosophila species shows that this behavior is not correlated with phylogenetic relationships. OSP with respect to ethanol may be correlated with the presence of ethanol in the environment and the activity of alcohol dehydrogenase in the species tested.
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    Behavior genetics 9 (1979), S. 249-256 
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    Keywords: mating speed ; sexual vigor ; inbreeding ; Drosophila
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    Notes: Abstract An alternative explanation to the pheromonal control of mating through chemoreceptor saturation proposed by Averhoff and Richardson (1974) is offered for the apparent rise in heterogamic mating in their experiments, after several generations of full-sib mating. In a multiple-choice mating between two genotypic strains differing in their level of sexual vigor, there is a sequence from heterogamic to homogamic mating. It is proposed that, by reducing mating speed, inbreeding changes the rate of this sequence but not its pattern, so the apparent level of heterogamic mating will increase during inbreeding, for a fixed observation period. This hypothesis was tested using the Kence-Bryant model of mating success.
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    Behavior genetics 9 (1979), S. 359-365 
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    Keywords: ethanol preference ; ADH ; behavior ; genetics ; Drosophila ; Adh electromorphs ; oviposition
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    Notes: Abstract Two alcohol dehydrogenase genotypes (Adh F /Adh F andAdh S /Adh S ) exhibit different behavioral responses when presented with a choice between ethanol and nonethanol environments at the larval stage but not at the adult stage. The larval preferences are correlated with alcohol dehydrogenase activity, which also differs between genotypes. Since ethanol is important in the ecology of this species, the preference may be related to microhabitat selection in nature.
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    Behavior genetics 9 (1979), S. 579-584 
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    Keywords: Drosophila ; courtship behavior ; artificial selection ; genetic analysis ; heritability ; wing vibration
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    Notes: Abstract Selection for the wing vibration component of courtship in the Oregon-R stock ofD. melanogaster was practiced for 44 generations. Selection was successful, indicating that there is genetic variation for the trait in the Oregon-R stock. The mean realized heritability of the trait, based on the first 11 generations of selection, was 15%. Biometrical analysis showed that there is some additive genetic variance for the trait with the possibility of some ambidirectional dominance. No maternal effects for the trait were found.
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    Behavior genetics 5 (1975), S. 255-267 
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    Keywords: genetic selection ; Drosophila ; phototaxis ; geotaxis ; interspecific difference
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    Notes: Abstract The initial experimental population ofDrosophila persimilis was photopositive and slightly geonegative. In this respect, the initial population ofD. persimilis differed from the experimental population ofD. pseudoobscura, described by others, which was close to photo- and geotactic neutrality. InD. persimilis, as inD. pseudoobscura, photo- and geotactic selection was efficient in both positive and negative directions. InD. persimilis, unlike inD. pseudoobscura, the responses to geotactic and phototactic selection were clearly asymmetrical. As a result of such responses, selection practically eliminated interspecific difference in geotaxis and almost eliminated interspecific difference in phototaxis. The realized heritabilities of photo- and geotaxis over the first ten generations of selection inD. persimilis are between 6 and 7%. Practically, these heritabilities inD. persimilis have the same value, whereas inD. pseudoobscura the heritabilities are clearly different. These findings suggest thatD. persimilis differs considerably fromD. pseudoobscura in the composition of the genes determining photo- and geotactic behavior, most probably reflecting adaptations of these sibling species to different ecological niches. However, both species are capable of reacting quickly to external stresses by reorganizing their gene pools and by correspondingly changing their behavior.
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    Keywords: Drosophila ; geotaxis ; selection ; heritability ; correlated responses
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    Notes: Abstract Selection for geotaxis was carried out with flies from a natural population ofDrosophila melanogaster; geotactic behavior was measured by means of a Hirsch classification maze. The population was initially almost neutral to gravity, and it responded to both positive (downward) and negative (upward) selection with a realized heritability of about 0.13. Stabilizing selection toward neutral gravity was carried out simultaneously. At generations 6, 9, and 10, all possible hybrid crosses between pairs of the selected populations were generated and tested. The geotactic scores of hybrids in generations 6 and 9 were not significantly different from the midparent values, while the scores of hybrids in generation 10 deviated significantly from the midparent values in the direction of positive geotaxis. The frequencies of polymorphic inversions declined in every population during selection, but the population under neutral selection seemed to maintain a higher chromosomal polymorphism than those under positive or negative selection. There was no significant depression of productivity, measured as number of progeny, in any population during nine generations of selection.
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    Behavior genetics 6 (1976), S. 141-143 
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    Keywords: Drosophila ; yellow mutant ; receptivity ; chromosome substitution ; backcrossing
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    Notes: Abstract Yellow mutant females ofDrosophila melanogaster are more receptive to yellow males than are wild-type females. By chromosomal substitution, this enhanced receptivity has been localized to the X chromosome. repeated backcrossing between a yellow and a wild-type inbred line, with the yellow locus maintained segregating, allows the conclusion that the yellow locus itself is responsible for the enhanced female receptivity.
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    Behavior genetics 9 (1979), S. 51-54 
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    Keywords: rare male mating advantages ; sexual selection ; heterosis ; Drosophila
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    Notes: Abstract It is shown that minority mating advantages, so commonly observed inDrosophila, would be selectively advantageous in a heterotic system. When an allele is below the equilibrium frequency maintained by heterosis, females mating with that homozygote produce offspring of highest mean fitness.
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    Behavior genetics 9 (1979), S. 61-67 
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    Keywords: phototaxis maze ; sex-linked behavior ; Drosophila ; chromosomal homologies ; species differences
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    Notes: Abstract Using Hirsch-Hadler phototaxis mazes, selection for photopositive and photonegative behavior was carried out for 21 generations inDrosophila ananassae. The chromosomes that are important in influencing photomaze behavior inD. ananassae are different from what has been observed for other members of themelanogaster species group, and the differences cannot be entirely attributed to the chromosome rearrangements which have occurred during the evolution of these related species.
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    Keywords: sexual behavior ; sexual selection ; origin of parthenogenesis ; Drosophila
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    Notes: Abstract Three instances are described in which bisexual laboratory strains spontaneously adopted an exclusively parthenogenetic mode of reproduction, even in the presence of fertile, bisexual males. The few males produced by the parthenogenetic strains lack a Y chromosome and are sterile but, nevertheless, showed no correlated impairment of normal mating behavior. In contrast, females show a strong reluctance to accept copulation. This behavioral correlate of parthenogenesis also has been observed previously in experimentally produced parthenogenetic lines. We suggest that genetic breakdown in female mating behavior may contribute to an evolutionary stimulus that results in a selective increase in the frequency of diploidizing events in unfertilized eggs. This ultimately might lead to the origin of an exclusively parthenogenetic reproductive mode.
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    Keywords: female receptivity ; Drosophila ; apterous ; juvenile hormone ; reproductive development ; sexual behavior
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    Notes: Abstract During reproductive maturation of female insects, the acquisition of sexual receptivity is coordinated with ovarian development. Juvenile homone regulates vitellogenesis in the ovaries, but the action of this hormone in the development of sexual behavior is less well-understood. A strain ofDrosophila melanogaster carrying a mutation in theapterous gene(ap 4) was known to exhibit arrested vitellogenesis (rescuable by applying exogenous juvenile hormone), sterility of both sexes, and a deficiency of juvenile hormone. In this study, we examined the effects of mutations ofap on female receptivity and its relationship to juvenile hormone. We observed abnormally low female receptivity in homozygousap strains, and heteroallelic combinations ofap mutations exhibited low receptivity. For female receptivity,ap showed no dominance (i.e.,ap/ap + was intermediate betweenap/ap andap +/ap +). Low receptivity mapped genetically to theap locus. The reduction in female receptivity in these mutants is positively correlated with levels of juvenile hormone synthesized by their corpora allata.
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    Keywords: Drosophila ; memory mutants ; cyclic AMP ; phosphodiesterase ; olfaction
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    Notes: Abstract Theophylline and 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, two cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase inhibitors, when fed to wild-typeDrosophila adults, cause the rapid decay of learning index after training in a shock-odor learning paradigm. The drugs practically do not affect the olfactory acuity of flies, hence they influence the learning/memory process itself. The time courses of memory decay resemble those of the memory mutantsrutabaga andamnesiac and, to a lesser extent,dunce 2 anddunce M11. Theophylline further deteriorates the learning performance ofdunce M11. Biochemical characterization of the inhibition of the two major phosphodiesterase isoenzymes inDrosophila by theophylline predicts only a slight inhibition of these enzymesin vivo, in accordance with the unchanged level of cAMP in wild-type fly heads during drug feeding. 8-Phenyltheophylline, an adenosine receptor antagonist in mammals, slightly retards memory decay in the wild-type. It is suggested that alkylxanthines induce memory decay inDrosophila by interfering with cAMP dynamics at more than one point of its metabolism.
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    Behavior genetics 23 (1993), S. 99-104 
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    Keywords: Anesthesia ; photoresponse ; phototaxis ; relative light values ; behavior ; Drosophila
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    Notes: Abstract Five isofemale strains from each of four sympatric species,Drosophila immigrans, D. repleta, D. melanogaster, andD. affinis, were lightly anesthetized with ether, CO2, Flynap, or cold temperature. The photoresponse of each treatment group was measured in an open field and a Y-tube apparatus. Relative light values were compared with those of the unanesthetized control groups of each species, as well as among the different treatments themselves and among species. Significant differences between species were apparent for all treatments in the Y-tube and for all treatments except ether and CO2 in the open field. Response to anesthesia may differ between species due, in part, to their differing genotypes. Comparing treatment groups within species in the Y-tube design, all species exceptD. melanogaster showed significant differences between treatments. In the open field, onlyD. affinis was significantly affected. Particularly in the Y-tube, anesthetized flies generally differed significantly from the controls, indicating that the use of anesthesia during a behavioral study could cause deviations in behavior from that of normal unanesthetized flies.
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    Behavior genetics 28 (1998), S. 57-65 
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    Keywords: Courtship ; sexual selection ; sexual isolation ; semispecies ; Drosophila
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    Notes: Abstract Early social experiences play important roles in adult Drosophila paulistorummate selection. Differences in courtship between control males and wholly socially isolated males were observed in chambers. Socially isolated males displayed more courtship toward virgin females than did controls. Socially isolated males were more successful in competing for mates. Yet socially isolated males from all six semispecies also displayed notable frequencies of homosexual behavior.
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    Behavior genetics 28 (1998), S. 395-402 
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    Keywords: Sexual selection ; age ; fitness ; good genes ; mate choice ; Drosophila
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    Notes: Abstract We examined the relationship of genetic quality to age in male Drosophila melanogaster to test two contrasting hypotheses. The traditional hypothesis is that older males have proven their viability and therefore produce offspring of superior genetic quality. This hypothesis is often evoked as an explanation for female preference for older mates. In contrast, we have recently argued that older fathers may produce offspring of inferior genetic quality. Here, we present results from an experiment designed to measure the genetic quality of offspring produced by 2 day old, 2 week old and 5 week old male D. melanogaster. We found a statistically significant small reduction in larval viability and a similar but statistically non-significant reduction in son mating ability among the offspring of the 5 week old males. Daughter fecundity showed no apparent trend for a reduction nor an increase in performance with increasing age of the fathers. There was no evidence of a difference between the 2 day old and the 2 week old males for any of these three fitness components. These results are in somewhat better accordance with our alternative hypothesis, but the relatively weak and late occurring effects indicate that mate choice based on age may not be a viable strategy in this population.
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    Keywords: Drosophila ; oviposition-site preference ; alcohol dehydrogenase ; transgene coplacement ; ethanol
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    Notes: Abstract The preference of Drosophila females to lay eggs on substrates that do or do not contain alcohol is an excellent system to study the evolutionary genetics of behavior, because (1) there is variation in this behavior within and among species, (2) the behavior is amenable to laboratory investigation, and (3) the behavior presumably has a direct relationship to reproductive fitness. Moreover, a key genetic component of the system, the Alcohol dehydrogenase (Adh) locus, is arguably the most well characterized gene known. However, because the Adh gene and its genetic background are inseparable in reproductively isolated species, it is difficult to establish its role in behavioral divergence. By transgene coplacement, we created pairs of strains of D. melanogaster expressing an Adh allele from either D. melanogaster or D. affinidisjuncta, a Hawaiian species with very low levels of ADH in adults. When raised on ethanol-containing medium, the affinidisjuncta–Adh strains experience high mortality relative to the melanogaster–Adh strains. However, affinidisjuncta–Adh females show the same preference for oviposition on ethanol-containing medium as melanogaster–Adh females. Thus, preference for ethanol in these strains is not determined primarily by Adh genotype.
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    Behavior genetics 7 (1977), S. 139-146 
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    Keywords: phototaxis maze ; eye color mutants ; Drosophila
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    Notes: Abstract Five different eye color mutations ofDrosophila melanogaster have been tested for their effect on phototactic behavior. All five mutations seem to cause flies to be less photonegative than Canton-S control flies. The mutation sepia was found to produce this effect when heterozygous as well. It was also found that wild-type flies from highly photopositive and photonegative strains seem to be more photoneutral with age.
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    Behavior genetics 7 (1977), S. 349-357 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; sexcombs ; sexual behavior ; strain differences
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract The sexcombs were amputated from males of three strains ofDrosophila melanogaster and one strain ofD. simulans in order to assess the importance of these structures in the sexual behavior of these species. InD. melanogaster the sexcombs are important in attempts to copulate with the female. Their removal delays copulation but does not suppress it entirely. Other aspects of courtship are not influenced by removal of the sexcombs. Strain differences in quantitative aspects of courtship were found, and also in the insemination rates of females by males without sexcombs. The present evidence suggests that the sexcombs are primarily structures adapted to grasping the female securely during the act of intromission.
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    Behavior genetics 7 (1977), S. 359-372 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; behavior genetics ; male responses to female physiological state
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract MaleDrosophila melanogaster differ in the age at which they reach sexual maturity following eclosion from the pupa. Courtship latency, which is the time taken by a male to initiate courtship of a conspecific female, is related to age. Young males take significantly longer than older males to begin courtship. The probability that a male will initiate courtship is influenced by the physiological state of the female. Males of different genotypes readily court mature (3-day-old) virgin females, but they differ significantly in their reaction to immature (12-hr-old) and fertilized females. Genes located on the third chromosome largely control male courtship latency, but responses to immature and fertilized females have different genetic bases, suggesting that the relevant stimulus inputs governing these responses also differ. The adaptive significance of courtship directed toward immature or fertilized females, which rarely mate, probably depends on the average level of sexual responsiveness of potentially receptive mature virgin females in a given population.
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  • 64
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    Behavior genetics 7 (1977), S. 427-432 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: allozymes ; Drosophila ; frequency-dependent selection ; rare male mating advantage
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Matings betweenDrosophila pseudoobscura strains differeing at the amylase (Amy) locus were observed in Elens-Wattiaux chambers. Males homozygous for eitherAmy 1.00 orAmy 0.84 alleles in the CH gene arrangement enjoyed a mating advantage when moderately rare, but none when quite rare. The minority male advantage for strains differing at theAmy locus, and other loci linked to it, was comparable in size to that observed between strains carrying the ST or CH gene arrangements, and either alike or different at theAmy locus. Although some features of our results are puzzling, there is evidence that theAmy locus and others for which it serves as a marker have effects on mating behavior which include some degree of rare male mating advantage.
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    Behavior genetics 7 (1977), S. 389-402 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; mazes ; phototaxis ; geotaxis ; learning ; strain differences
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Although mazes have been widely used in studying phototaxis, geotaxis, and, more recently, learning inDrosophila, there is no uniformity in maze design, and little is known about the effects such apparatus differences may have on behavior. The new maze design described here is based on T-junctions, molded individually in acrylic, and provides an inexpensive and standardized means of building mazes to any desired specification. The need for uniformity in maze design is demonstrated with an experiment on three variables at the start of a maze that affect the subsequent response of four strains ofD. melanogaster in different ways. Some implications for futureDrosophila research using mazes are considered.
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    Behavior genetics 7 (1977), S. 447-455 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; countercurrent mutants ; geotaxis ; phototaxis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Ten behavioral mutations, originally isolated in the countercurrent fractionation device, were tested in phototaxis and geotaxis mazes. While none of the mutations caused an altered ERG, they all caused photomaze behavior to differ from that seen in Canton-S controls. Eight of the mutants showed altered geotactic behavior. There was no correlation between the kind of change in phototactic behavior and the geomaze behavior of a given mutant. Certain mutations cause flies to be more photopositive and more geonegative than Canton-S; others result in behavior that is photo- and geopositive. The results suggest that certain mutations may be affecting visual components other than the ERG while other mutations may be more centrally or generally acting.
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    Behavior genetics 7 (1977), S. 457-464 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; wild-type larvae ; mutant larvae ; olfactory discrimination ; U-maze
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Wild-type (+B) and compound chromosome mutant(bB) Drosophila melanogaster larvae were tested in a U-maze. FreshDrosophila food or food and larvae were placed in each of the two goals (+B only in goal 1,bB in goal 2) and served as stimulus. Separate trials were conducted using +B andbB larvae to test for preference in the maze. Significantly more test larvae went to the arm of the maze containing their own strain as stimulus when (1) both goals contained larvae, (2) one goal contained homogenetic larvae and the other fresh food only, and (3) the goals contained biotic residues of stimulus larvae. The strength of the stimulus necessary to elicit the response differed for the two strains, the +B strain apparently being more sensitive. As the density of the stimulus larvae was increased, the choices of the test larvae became statistically nonsignificant and the number of larvae remaining in the starting arm of the maze increased. The data suggested that the strains of larvae utilized here have the capacity for olfactory discrimination.
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  • 68
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Insect ; larval photobehavior ; locomotion ; Drosophila ; behavioral mutants
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract A new assay was designed, named checker, that measures the individual response to light in the fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster larva. In this assay the Drosophila larva apparently modulates its pattern of locomotion when faced with a choice between a dark and lit environment by orienting its movement towards the dark environment. We show that, in this assay, a response to light can be measured as an increase in residence time in the dark versus the lit quadrant. Mutations that disrupt phototransduction in the adult Drosophila abolish the larval response to light, demonstrating that this larval visual function is similar to that of the adult fly. Similarly, no response to light was detected in strains where the larval visual system (photoreceptors and target area) was disrupted by a mutation in the homeobox containing gene sine oculis (so) gene. Ablation of photoreceptors by the targeted expression of the cell death gene hid under the control of the photoreceptor-specific transcription factor glass (gl) abolishes this response entirely. Finally, we demonstrate that this response to light can be mediated by rhodopsins other than the blue absorbing Rh1.
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    Behavior genetics 5 (1975), S. 373-379 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: assortative mating ; rare-male advantage ; frequency-dependent selection ; sexual vigor ; inbreeding ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Frequency-dependent sexual selection was studied using three geographically isolated strains ofDrosophila melanogaster. The Oregon-R and Canton-Special wild-type strains were essentially homogeneous, having been maintained in laboratories since 1925; the wild Macomb strain was relatively genetically heterogeneous, having been collected in September 1972, immediately prior to this investigation. All possible double combinations of the three strains were placed in separate chambers of a modified Elens-Wattiaux observation apparatus at ratios of 5∶20, 12∶12, and 20∶5. Allowing 2 hr observation time for each chamber, data were collected to detect mating preference between these strains. There was no sexual isolation between the strains. However, frequency dependence, where rare males have a definite mating advantage in a population, was exhibited by the strains studied. Sexual vigor appeared to be a factor when the heterogeneous Macomb strain was mated to either of the two homogeneous strains in equal numbers.
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    Behavior genetics 8 (1978), S. 511-526 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: habitats ; evolutionary strategies ; Drosophila ; physical environments ; lek behavior ; alcohol
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract There is an association among resource utilization divergence, habitat selection, and taxonomic divergence in the genusDrosophila. Given permissive conditions of temperature, humidity, and light intensity, an enormous variety of resources is used in a diversity of habitats. These resources are considered in the cosmopolitan and endemic Australian fauna, providing evidence for habitat selection in the laboratory and field. Lek behavior in picture-winged species of subgenusHirtodrosophila, a case of parallel evolution with lek behavior in subgenusDrosophila in Hawaii, is discussed in detail. Other examples of habitat selection discussed concern behavioral reactions of larvae to alcohol and other metabolites and the avoidance by adults of extreme physical environments. Evolutionary strategies involved in habitat selection are considered at various taxonomic levels inDrosophila. These considerations show that it is essential to relate results from laboratory studies to natural environments in order to explore the genetics of habitat selection.
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    Behavior genetics 9 (1979), S. 7-21 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: frequency-dependent fitness ; statistical analysis ; logistic regression models ; maximum likelihood estimation ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Experiments on frequency-dependent fitness often consist of forming pairwise mixtures of distinguishable types at several frequency combinations. These mixtures are allowed to undergo competition, after which the performance of each type is enumerated. A statistical method for analyzing such experiments is described in this article. This method, suggested previously for other purposes, is superior to the statistical procedures now commonly employed. It involves the maximum likelihood estimation of parameters for two logistic regression models: one which assumes that fitness is frequency-dependent, the other that fitness is constant over changing frequency. Estimators for both models can be calculated without difficulty using an iterative numerical algorithm implemented in a Fortran computer program available from the authors. Fitting both models allows for the construction of a likelihood ratio statistical test for whichever model is more appropriate. The method is illustrated by application to publishedDrosophila data from differential mating success experiments.
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