Polymorphisms in Continental and Island Populations of Drosophila willistoni*

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RESUMO

A comparative study of genic allozyme and chromosomal polymorphisms in four continental (South American) and six oceanic island (West Indies) populations of Drosophila willistoni has been made. The pattern of genic polymorphism is closely similar in all populations. Although regional and local differences in gene frequencies are found, generally the same alleles occur at high, intermediate, and low frequencies in all populations. An average individual is heterozygous at 18.4 and 16.2% of its loci in the continental and island populations, respectively. By contrast, chromosomal polymorphism is sharply reduced on the islands compared to most continental populations, and some chromosomal inversions are more frequent on some islands than on others. The observations are not compatible with the hypothesis that most of the gene variants are adaptively neutral. Balancing natural selection is responsible for most of the genic polymorphism in natural populations of D. willistoni.

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