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Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand abstracts


(c) Journal of The Royal Society of New Zealand,

Volume 30, Number 4, December 2000, pp 411-418

Inheritance of the two dorsal colour/pattern phenotypes in New Zealand populations of the polymorphic meadow spittlebug Philaenus spumarius (L.) (Homoptera: Cercopidae)

Selcuk Yurtsever*

R99033. Received 6 August 1999; accepted 9 June 2000

*School of Pure & Applied Biology, University of Wales, College of Cardiff, Cardiff CF1 3TL, UK. Present address: Trakya University, Faculty of the Arts and Science, Biology Department, 22030 Edirne, Turkey.

The meadow spittlebug Philaenus spumarius (L.) exhibits a striking dorsal colour/pattern polymorphism throughout its distribution in the Holarctic region. At least 16 different dorsal colour morphs have been reported from several European and North American populations. It is also abundant in New Zealand, but only two different forms--flavicollis (FLA) and typicus (TYP)--are expressed by the two different alleles, "F" and "t" respectively. This paper describes the laboratory crossing experiments performed on the inheritance of the FLA and TYP phenotypes in New Zealand populations of Philaenus spumarius. A total of 431 progeny from 25 successful crosses using New Zealand material clearly show that FLA is dominant over TYP in both sexes, as established in British P. spumarius populations. But the model of inheritance found in New Zealand populations of P. spumarus differs from that in previously studied Fennoscandian populations, where there is a reversal dominance in the sexes involving FLA and TYP.

Keywords inheritance; colour/pattern; polymorphism; polyandry; meadow spittlebug; Philaenus spumarius; Homoptera; Cercopidae; New Zealand

PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (483K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)


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