Seventeen controlled crosses in which the mitotically unstable B chromosome of Locusta migratoria was carried by one parent only have provided evidence that B chromosomes are significantly eliminated during sexual transmission in males, at a mean rate that almost counteracts the premeiotic accumulation derived from mitotic instability during germ line development. On the other hand, B chromosomes are significantly accumulated in females, presumably by their preferential migration to the secondary oocyte during the first meiotic division. These results substantially change the current knowledge about this B chromosome system, because the main B accumulation occurs in females and not in males, as was hitherto thought. Furthermore, this case shows that the maintenance of a single B system in natural populations may be the result of many different forces and mechanisms acting for and against B chromosomes.
The odd-even effect, by which B chromosomes are more detrimental in odd numbers, has been reported in plants and animals. In grasshoppers, there are only a few reports of this effect and all were referred to as traits related to the formation of aberrant meiotic products (AMPs). Here we review the existing information about B chromosome effects on AMPs, chiasma frequency and the number of active nucleolus organizer regions (NORs) per cell. Polysomy for A chromosomes and B chromosomes are two kinds of chromosome polymorphism frequently found in grasshoppers. In some aspects, e.g. meiotic behaviour and mitotic instability leading to individual mosaicism (in the case of mitotically unstable Bs), polysomic As show similar characteristics to B chromosomes. In fact, polysomy is regarded as one of the main mechanisms for B chromosome origin. Here we review some features of meiotic behaviour in known cases of polysomy and mitotically unstable Bs in grasshoppers, in looking for possible causes for the odd-even effect. In all these traits, the odd-even effect was apparent, although its appearance was not universal in any case, with variation among species or populations within the same species. The equational division and lagging of the extra chromosomes, when univalents, could favour the appearance of abnormal meiotic products, and the formation of bivalents, when there are two or more extra chromosomes, inhibits this process. Therefore, the odd-even effect might be a consequence of the concomitant operation of both aspects of extra chromosome meiotic behaviour. The possibility that the odd-even effect might result from an increase in cell stress generated by odd numbers is suggested.
The analysis of 19 populations of the grasshopper Eyprepocnemis plorans, collected along four rivers belonging to the Segura basin (Mundo, Benamor, Taibilla and Segura itself), has shown that the presence of B chromosomes ends abruptly in each river, coinciding with the existence of a narrow pass in which this grasshopper cannot live because of the absence of the appropriate habitats. The existence of a broad inland region lacking grasshoppers with B chromosomes suggests that B chromosomes arose after the first colonization of the Iberian Peninsula by E. plorans specimens from North African populations. The B chromosome seems to have spread upstream along each of these four rivers until reaching geographical barriers that have impeded its advance and thus have preserved the non-B chromosome region. The available evidence indicates that the observed geographical distribution of the B chromosome polymorphism in this zone was shaped mainly by historical non-selective events.
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