European Journal of Entomology (Nov 2015)
First chromosomal study of Mantophasmatodea: Karyotype of Karoophasma biedouwense (Austrophasmatidae)
Abstract
We have investigated for the first time the chromosomes of Karoophasma biedouwense, a species belonging to the Mantophasmatodea, a recently discovered order of carnivorous insects. Our study has revealed that males of this species display testes with numerous seminal tubes (follicles), as in other Polyneoptera, and short tubular seminal vesicles embedded in a utricular gland. The karyotype consists of 2n = 12A + X monocentric and biarmed, meta/submetacentric chromosomes (fundamental number of arms: FN = 26) with blocks of heterochromatin around centromeres. The autosomes are classified into two size groups, one represented by a single, very large pair of autosomes, the other by five smaller pairs which constitute a continuous series gradually decreasing in size. Among "monocentric" orders of Polyneoptera, K. biedouwense shares its low chromosome number, 2n = 13, as also found with some Orthoptera (Acridoidea, Grylloidea, Gryllacridoidea). Male meiosis is of the classical pre-reductional type and the X(0) sex determination system is probably an ancestral state. Use of FISH along with an 18S rDNA probe revealed multiple ribosomal clusters, which most likely represent an apomorphic condition. We identified the ancestral insect telomeric sequence (TTAGG)n in the terminal areas of the chromosomes. Currently available data on the polyneopteran orders putatively related to Mantophasmatodea showed a wide variability of cytogenetic characteristics within and between them. The only character allowing some tentative inference to be made on the ancestry of K. biedouwense is its low chromosome number, the karyotypic pattern so far unreported for the Polyneoptera except in certain Orthoptera.
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