Sex-specific ultraviolet radiation tolerance across Drosophila
James E. Titus-McQuillan, Brandon A. Turner, Rebekah L. Rogers

TL;DR
This study investigates sex-specific UV radiation tolerance differences in Drosophila species from island and mainland regions, highlighting genetic and phenotypic adaptations to UV stress.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence of UV tolerance variation between Drosophila populations and suggests genetic factors involved in adaptation.
Findings
Mainland Drosophila are less UV resistant than island populations.
Significant differences in UV stress response were observed between sexes and regions.
Genes related to DNA repair and stress resistance may underlie UV tolerance differences.
Abstract
The genetic basis of phenotypic differences between species is among the most longstanding questions in evolutionary biology. How new genes form and the processes selection acts to produce differences across species are fundamental to understand how species persist and evolve in an ever-changing environment. Adaptation and genetic innovation arise in the genome by a variety of sources. Functional genomics requires both intrinsic genetic discoveries, as well as empirical testing to observe adaptation between lineages. Here we explore two species of Drosophila on the island of Sao Tome and mainland Africa, D. santomea and D. yakuba. These two species both inhabit the island, but occupy differing species distributions based on elevation, with D. yakuba also having populations on mainland Africa. Intrinsic evidence shows genes between species may have a role in adaptation to higher UV…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarine and coastal plant biology · Lepidoptera: Biology and Taxonomy · Insect behavior and control techniques
