‘Vertition’ of integumental organs in mites revisited: a case of fluctuating asymmetry

Maurice Leponce, Mundon-Izay Noti, Vincent Bauchau, Georges Wauthy
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Vertition in mites is defined as a meristic variation for a bilateral integumental organ with a separate genetic control for each body side. A prominent hypothesis expressed by Grandjean is the role of vertition in the evolutionary trend towards a reduced number of hair-like organs (mechano- and/or chemo-receptors) known to have occurred in many mite groups. Observations on leg setae in the two-spotted spider mite Tetranychus urticae do not support this hypothesis. Meristic variation for leg setae rather conforms to the notion of fluctuating asymmetry: the difference between the number of leg setae on the right and left sides of the body had a unimodal distribution with a mean of zero. Moreover, lack of heritability for left/right absences of leg setae in an inbred laboratory strain suggests that vertition could be purely environmental. It is therefore argued that meristic variation for hair-like organs in mites is caused by random developmental accidents not corrected by homeostatic mechanisms normally resulting in a perfect bilateral symmetry.

螨虫被皮器官的“旋转”:一个波动不对称的案例
螨虫的垂直被定义为双侧被皮器官的分生变异,每个身体侧面都有单独的遗传控制。Grandjean提出的一个重要假设是,在许多螨虫群体中,已知的毛发样器官(机械和/或化学受体)数量减少的进化趋势中,垂直的作用。对双斑叶螨腿刚毛的观察不支持这一假设。腿刚毛的分生变异相当符合波动不对称的概念:身体左右两侧的腿刚毛数量之差呈单峰分布,平均值为零。此外,在一个自交系的实验室菌株中,腿刚毛的左/右缺失缺乏遗传力,这表明倒立可能纯粹是环境造成的。因此,我们认为螨虫毛发样器官的分生变异是由随机发育事故引起的,而不是由通常导致完美双边对称的稳态机制所纠正的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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