A cytotaxonomic study of the most common larval Chironomidae in a series of saline waters in the southern interior of British Columbia

A preliminary cytotaxonomic study of the common Chironomidae in a series of saline waters in the southern interior of British Columbia has been undertaken. The banding pattern of the salivary gland chromosomes, once it had been described, was used as a taxonomic criterion and as an indicator of the...

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Main Author: Bassett, Michael Conway
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/36271
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-362712018-01-05T17:48:22Z A cytotaxonomic study of the most common larval Chironomidae in a series of saline waters in the southern interior of British Columbia Bassett, Michael Conway Chironomidae Mosquitoes -- Larvae -- British Columbia A preliminary cytotaxonomic study of the common Chironomidae in a series of saline waters in the southern interior of British Columbia has been undertaken. The banding pattern of the salivary gland chromosomes, once it had been described, was used as a taxonomic criterion and as an indicator of the relationships between the groups involved. In order to obtain associated stages in the life cycle, the larvae were reared in individual vials. The polytene chromosome analysis revealed seven well defined larval species. The subsequent morphological analysis showed that five of these larval species could usually be separated by their external morphology. However, two cytologically distinct species are morphologically indistinguishable. Recent work on sibling species in Drosophila and Chironomus (Diptera) has shown that sibling species have salivary gland chromosomes with an identical banding pattern but, differ from one another in the frequency of inversions. The present study suggests that the morphologically identical larvae mentioned above are sibling species in larval morphology but are clearly separable by chromosome analysis. The fact that they occur together in the same lake tends to eliminate the view that they are distinct populations of a single species. That there may be more than one species involved in those here considered to be a single taxa, should however not be forgotten. Science, Faculty of Zoology, Department of Graduate 2011-07-22T19:03:02Z 2011-07-22T19:03:02Z 1967 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/36271 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Chironomidae
Mosquitoes -- Larvae -- British Columbia
spellingShingle Chironomidae
Mosquitoes -- Larvae -- British Columbia
Bassett, Michael Conway
A cytotaxonomic study of the most common larval Chironomidae in a series of saline waters in the southern interior of British Columbia
description A preliminary cytotaxonomic study of the common Chironomidae in a series of saline waters in the southern interior of British Columbia has been undertaken. The banding pattern of the salivary gland chromosomes, once it had been described, was used as a taxonomic criterion and as an indicator of the relationships between the groups involved. In order to obtain associated stages in the life cycle, the larvae were reared in individual vials. The polytene chromosome analysis revealed seven well defined larval species. The subsequent morphological analysis showed that five of these larval species could usually be separated by their external morphology. However, two cytologically distinct species are morphologically indistinguishable. Recent work on sibling species in Drosophila and Chironomus (Diptera) has shown that sibling species have salivary gland chromosomes with an identical banding pattern but, differ from one another in the frequency of inversions. The present study suggests that the morphologically identical larvae mentioned above are sibling species in larval morphology but are clearly separable by chromosome analysis. The fact that they occur together in the same lake tends to eliminate the view that they are distinct populations of a single species. That there may be more than one species involved in those here considered to be a single taxa, should however not be forgotten. === Science, Faculty of === Zoology, Department of === Graduate
author Bassett, Michael Conway
author_facet Bassett, Michael Conway
author_sort Bassett, Michael Conway
title A cytotaxonomic study of the most common larval Chironomidae in a series of saline waters in the southern interior of British Columbia
title_short A cytotaxonomic study of the most common larval Chironomidae in a series of saline waters in the southern interior of British Columbia
title_full A cytotaxonomic study of the most common larval Chironomidae in a series of saline waters in the southern interior of British Columbia
title_fullStr A cytotaxonomic study of the most common larval Chironomidae in a series of saline waters in the southern interior of British Columbia
title_full_unstemmed A cytotaxonomic study of the most common larval Chironomidae in a series of saline waters in the southern interior of British Columbia
title_sort cytotaxonomic study of the most common larval chironomidae in a series of saline waters in the southern interior of british columbia
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/36271
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