Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Non‐reciprocal cross‐incompatibility in Trichogramma deion

View through CrossRef
AbstractIn non‐reciprocal cross‐incompatibility (NRCI), the crossing of a female of a strain A with a male of a strain B results in hybrid offspring, whereas the reciprocal cross produces few or no hybrids. Only females are of hybrid origin in Hymenoptera because they arise from fertilized eggs; males arise from unfertilized (haploid) eggs. Crosses between many strains of Trichogramma deion showed some degree of NRCI. Crosses between a T. deion culture collected in Seven Pines, California (SVP) with one from Marysville, California (MRY) showed an extreme form of NRCI in which practically no female offspring was produced when MRY females were crossed with SVP males. The reciprocal cross produced a close to normal proportion of female and male offspring. Detailed studied of this cross indicated that 1) the female offspring produced in the compatible interstrain cross were not the result of parthenogenesis but were true hybrids, 2) the incompatible interstrain cross did not produce female offspring because fertilized eggs died during development, 3) the death of these eggs could not be prevented by either antibiotic or temperature treatment, 4) cytoplasmically inherited factors causing NRCI could be discounted because backcrossed females with the genome of MRY and the cytoplasm of SVP, exhibit the NRCI relationship characteristic of their genome. Therefore the NRCI between these strains appears to be caused by a modification coded for by the nuclear genes of MRY that results in incompatibility when SVP sperm fertilizes MRY eggs. In addition the level of incompatibility in crosses between the SVP females and MRY males is temperature sensitive, the higher the rearing temperature the lower the level of compatibility.
Title: Non‐reciprocal cross‐incompatibility in Trichogramma deion
Description:
AbstractIn non‐reciprocal cross‐incompatibility (NRCI), the crossing of a female of a strain A with a male of a strain B results in hybrid offspring, whereas the reciprocal cross produces few or no hybrids.
Only females are of hybrid origin in Hymenoptera because they arise from fertilized eggs; males arise from unfertilized (haploid) eggs.
Crosses between many strains of Trichogramma deion showed some degree of NRCI.
Crosses between a T.
deion culture collected in Seven Pines, California (SVP) with one from Marysville, California (MRY) showed an extreme form of NRCI in which practically no female offspring was produced when MRY females were crossed with SVP males.
The reciprocal cross produced a close to normal proportion of female and male offspring.
Detailed studied of this cross indicated that 1) the female offspring produced in the compatible interstrain cross were not the result of parthenogenesis but were true hybrids, 2) the incompatible interstrain cross did not produce female offspring because fertilized eggs died during development, 3) the death of these eggs could not be prevented by either antibiotic or temperature treatment, 4) cytoplasmically inherited factors causing NRCI could be discounted because backcrossed females with the genome of MRY and the cytoplasm of SVP, exhibit the NRCI relationship characteristic of their genome.
Therefore the NRCI between these strains appears to be caused by a modification coded for by the nuclear genes of MRY that results in incompatibility when SVP sperm fertilizes MRY eggs.
In addition the level of incompatibility in crosses between the SVP females and MRY males is temperature sensitive, the higher the rearing temperature the lower the level of compatibility.

Related Results

Factors affecting the severity of RH Incompatibility newborn
Factors affecting the severity of RH Incompatibility newborn
Rh incompatibility is a not common pediatric problem, that cause morbidity and mortality in children, and it is an important cause of hemolysis, anemia and jaundice in newborn.   T...
Influence of microbe‐associated parthenogenesis on the fecundity of Trichogramma deion and T. pretiosum
Influence of microbe‐associated parthenogenesis on the fecundity of Trichogramma deion and T. pretiosum
AbstractMicrobe‐associated parthenogenesis (thelytoky) has been discovered in nine Trichogramma species, parasitoids of mainly lepidopteran eggs. Parthenogenetic and bisexual consp...
15. Reciprocal-marked and marked reciprocal events in Kuuk Thaayorre
15. Reciprocal-marked and marked reciprocal events in Kuuk Thaayorre
Kuuk Thaayorre has a single dedicated reciprocal marker, the verbal suffix -rr. There are, however, a number of alternative strategies for encoding semantically reciprocal events. ...
Why Must Incompatibility Be Symmetric?
Why Must Incompatibility Be Symmetric?
Abstract Why must incompatibility be symmetric? An odd question, but recent work in the semantics of non-classical logic, which appeals to the notion of incompatibil...
Enhancing the Effectiveness of Trichogramma Wasps through Innovative Formulations
Enhancing the Effectiveness of Trichogramma Wasps through Innovative Formulations
The mass of Trichogramma wasp larvae, recognized as a vital agent for pest biocontrol in Iran, is produced primarily in the form of Trichocards. These bacteria are utilized for the...

Back to Top