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        Body melanization and its adaptive role in thermoregulation and tolerance against desiccating conditions in drosophilids

        Subhash RAJPUROHIT,Ravi PARKASH,Seema RAMNIWAS 한국곤충학회 2008 Entomological Research Vol.38 No.1

        Melanism seems to have evolved independently through diverse mechanisms in various taxa and different ecological factors could be responsible for selective responses. Increased body melanization at higher altitudes as well as latitudes is generally considered to be adaptive for thermoregulation. Physiological traits such as body melanization and desiccation resistance have been investigated independently in diverse insect taxa at three levels: within populations, between populations and among species. A substantial number of Drosophila studies have reported clinal variations in both these traits along latitude. A possible link between these traits had remained unexplored in wild and laboratory populations of ectothermic insect taxa, including drosophilids, to date. Simultaneous analysis of these traits in assorted darker and lighter phenotypes in each population in the present study showed parallel changes for body melanization and desiccation resistance. The mechanistic basis of evolving desiccation resistance was explained on the basis of differential rates of water loss per hour in darker versus lighter phenotypes in six populations of Drosophila melanogaster from adjacent localities differing substantially in altitude all along the Indian subcontinent. Data on cuticular impermeability suggest a possible role of melanization in desiccation tolerance. However, substantial gaps remain in extending these results to other insect taxa and further exploring the physiological and molecular changes involved in melanization for conferring desiccation resistance.

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        Climate change, boundary increase and elongation of a pre-existing cline: A case study in Drosophila ananassae

        Subhash RAJPUROHIT,Ravi PARKASH,Shama SINGH,Seema RAMNIWAS 한국곤충학회 2008 Entomological Research Vol.38 No.4

        During the past two to three decades, Drosophila ananassae, a warm adapted tropical species, has invaded low to mid altitude localities in the western Himalayas. Due to its cold sensitivity, this species had never been recorded from higher latitudes as well as altitudes in India to the 1960s. A latitudinal cline in this desiccation-sensitive species corresponds with southern humid tropical localities rather than northern drier subtropical localities. An extension of its cline into lowland to midland montane localities has resulted due to global climatic change as well as local thermal effects through anthropogenic impact. However, D. ananassae populations at species borders are characterized by lower genetic variability for body melanization as well as for desiccation resistance. There is a lack of thermal plastic effects for body melanization, and the observed extended cline might represent evolutionary (genetic) response due to selection pressure imposed by drier habitats. A comparison of fecundity, hatchability and viability at three growth temperatures (17, 20 and 25°C) showed significant reduction in trait values at 17 °C in D. ananassae. Thus, its recent range expansion into northern montane localities might involve genetic effects on stress-related traits and plastic effects on life history traits. We suggest that D. ananassae could serve as an indicator species for analyzing range expansion under changing climatic conditions.

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