Published March 12, 2015 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Sex-chromosome differentiation and 'sex races' in the common frog (Rana temporaria)

  • 1. University of Lausanne
  • 2. Rana Konsult, Sjöstorp 332, Dalby 247 94, Sweden*

Description

Sex-chromosome differentiation was recently shown to vary among common frog populations in Fennoscandia, suggesting a trend of increased differentiation with latitude. By rearing families from two contrasted populations (respectively, from northern and southern Sweden), we show this disparity to stem from differences in sex-determination mechanisms rather than in XY-recombination patterns. Offspring from the northern population display equal sex ratios at metamorphosis, with phenotypic sexes that correlate strongly with paternal LG2 haplotypes (the sex chromosome); accordingly, Y haplotypes are markedly differentiated, with male-specific alleles and depressed diversity testifying to their smaller effective population size. In the southern population, by contrast, a majority of juveniles present ovaries at metamorphosis; only later in development do sex ratios return to equilibrium. Even at these later stages, phenotypic sexes correlate only mildly with paternal LG2 haplotypes; accordingly, there are no recognizable Y haplotypes. These distinct patterns of gonadal development fit the concept of 'sex races' proposed in the 1930s, with our two populations assigned to the 'differentiated' and 'semi-differentiated' races, respectively. Our results support the suggestion that 'sex races' differ in the genetic versus epigenetic components of sex determination. Analysing populations from the 'undifferentiated race' with high-density genetic maps should help to further test this hypothesis.

Notes

Files

Files (219.1 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:72d66fac42e2fe6d39e30b184f256e2b
219.1 kB Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1098/rspb.2014.2726 (DOI)