X chromosome influences sperm length in the stalk-eyed fly Cyrtodiopsis dalmanni

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Abstract

Whether sexually selected traits are sex linked can have profound effects on their evolution. In the diopsid stalk-eyed fly, Cyrtodiopsis dalmanni, sperm length and female reproductive tract morphology have coevolved across species, postcopulatory sexual selection is known to occur, and X-linked genes affect female ventral sperm receptacle size. Here, we estimate the location of quantitative trait loci (QTL) for spermatocyst tail length by using F2 progeny segregating for an X-linked factor that causes sex-ratio meiotic drive. We found two QTL, including a major X-linked QTL responsible for 25% of the variation in spermatocyst tail length 2.1 cM from the sex-ratio element and 0.8 cM from a major eye span QTL. Sex-ratio males produce shorter spermatocyst tails and shorter eye spans. Thus, X-linked factors affect both pre- and postcopulatory traits, and linkage between the alleles for short eye span and short spermatocyst tail length allow pre- and postcopulatory sexual selection to potentially act in concert against the transmission bias caused by the sex-ratio chromosome. © 2007 Nature Publishing Group All rights reserved.

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Johns, P. M., & Wilkinson, G. S. (2007). X chromosome influences sperm length in the stalk-eyed fly Cyrtodiopsis dalmanni. Heredity, 99(1), 56–61. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.hdy.6800963

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