Original Research

Translocation heterozygosity in southern African species of Viscum

D. Wiens, B. A. Barlow
Bothalia | Vol 13, No 1/2 | a1306 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/abc.v13i1/2.1306 | © 1980 D. Wiens, B. A. Barlow | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 06 November 1980 | Published: 06 November 1980

About the author(s)

D. Wiens, Department of Biology, University of Utah, United States
B. A. Barlow, chool of Biological Sciences, Flinders University of South Australia, Australia

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Abstract

Sex-associated and floating translocation complexes are characteristic of dioecious species of  Viscum,  but are virtually absent in monoecious species. The majority of dioecious species has fixed sex-associated translocation complexes with the male being the heterozygous sex. The sex-associated multivalent is usually O4 (ring-of-four) or O6 , rarely O8 . Dioecious species without sex-associated translocations are much less common. Most of the dioecious species are also polymorphic for floating translocations, producing one or more additional multivalents ranging from O4 to O12. Floating translocations may be more frequent in species that do not have sex-associated translocations. Supernumerary chromosomes are also present in several species. Sex ratios are at unity in most dioecious species, but female-biased ratios may occur in some species. The high correlation between dioecy and translocation heterozygosity suggests that translocations are primarily associated with the origin and establishment of dioecy. Any róle in the maintenance of biased sex ratios through meiotic drive is probably secondary. Sex-associated translocations may serve to stabilize dioecy by bringing the sex factors into close linkage. Subsequent structural rearrangements within a sex-associated translocation complex may bring the sex factors together in one chromosome pair, releasing floating translocations. The high frequencies of floating translocation heterozygosity in some species indicate that such heterozygosity also has adaptive value.


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