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      A new species of Neotropical Drosophila (Diptera, Drosophilidae) belonging to the guarani group

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          Abstract

          Abstract Drosophila butantan sp. nov., a species belonging to the guarani group and closely related to Drosophila nigrifemur from Bolivia, is described based on a female, and some of its offspring, collected at the forest reserve of the Instituto de Biociências da Universidade de São Paulo, Cidade Universitária "Armando de Salles Oliveira", São Paulo City, state of São Paulo, Brazil. Although externally similar, the two apparently forest-dwelling species can be told apart by having distinct oviscapt valves and spermathecal introverts and tips. Accordingly, a proposal is made to also include D. nigrifemur, a previously unassigned species, in the guarani group. The two species seem to be also related to Drosophila alexandrei and Drosophila guaraja as indicated by their external morphology, their elongate spermathecae and the not so sharply pointed oviscapt valves. The karyotypes of the new species differ from those described for D. alexandrei and D. guaraja, while those of D. nigrifemur remain still unknown. Photomicrographs of the male and female imagines, in addition to drawings and photos of their terminalia, are also included.

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          Most cited references25

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          Modes of spontaneous chromosomal mutation and karyotype evolution in ants with reference to the minimum interaction hypothesis.

          Aspects of chromosomal mutation and karyotype evolution in ants are discussed with reference to recently accumulated karyological data, and to detailed karyotype analyses of several species or species complexes with low chromosome number and unusual chromosomal mutations (the complexes of Myrmecia pilosula (Smith) (n = 1, 5 or 9 to 16); M. piliventris Smith (n = 2, 3-4, 17 or 32), and Ponera scabra Wheeler (n = 3 or 4, 2n = 7 or 8). Translocations and Robertsonian polymorphisms are confirmed to be non-randomly distributed among ants -the former are found at high frequencies in species with low chromosome numbers (n less than or equal to 12), while the latter predominate in those with high numbers (n greater than 12). This situation is consistent with the minimum interaction hypothesis of Imai et al. (1986), under which translocations are expected to occur most frequently in low-numbered karyotypes, and that the resulting genetic risks are minimized by increases in chromosome and/or arm numbers through centric fission and pericentric inversion. Centric fusion is considered to be a transient event in karyotype evolution, resulting from telomere instability in acrocentric chromosomes.
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            Die sudamerikanischen Drosophiliden (Dipteren) unter Beruckssichtigung auch der anderen neotropischen sowie der nearktischen Arten

            O Duda (1927)
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              Die costaricanischen Drosophiliden des Ungarischen National-Museums zu Budapest.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Journal
                rbent
                Revista Brasileira de Entomologia
                Rev. Bras. entomol.
                Sociedade Brasileira De Entomologia (São Paulo, SP, Brazil )
                0085-5626
                1806-9665
                September 2017
                : 61
                : 3
                : 232-238
                Affiliations
                [2] Montevideo Montevideo orgnameUniversidad de la República orgdiv1Facultad de Ciencias orgdiv2Instituto de Biología Uruguay
                [1] São Paulo São Paulo orgnameUniversidade de São Paulo orgdiv1Instituto de Biociências orgdiv2Departamento de Genética e Biologia Evolutiva Brazil
                Article
                S0085-56262017000300232
                10.1016/j.rbe.2017.06.002
                5a0783e3-ee29-4b0c-9b89-da7530292bff

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 02 March 2017
                : 08 June 2017
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 25, Pages: 7
                Product

                SciELO Brazil


                Atlantic forest,Female terminalia,Male terminalia,Brazil,Karyotypes

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