Evolution reverses dispersal rates among fruit flies: Study – The Indian Express

Written by Anjali Marar | Pune | Published: August 4, 2020 12:10:23 am The research aimed at determining the role of population density of the flies in a location to their dispersion behaviours, and how evolved male and female flies undertook dispersion. (Representational)

A study by a group of city-based biologists has concluded that male and female Drosophila, more commonly known as fruit flies, undergo differential rates of dispersal as they evolve.

A team, led by Sutirth Dey, at Indian Institute of Science, Education and Research (IISER), Pune, studied 29,000 fruit flies under controlled conditions in the laboratory. The research aimed at determining the role of population density of the flies in a location to their dispersion behaviours, and how evolved male and female flies undertook dispersion.

Every organism, including humans, disperses from one location to another, either in search of food or better chances of survival. In simple terms, a location with higher density offers fewer resources, like food, forcing organisms to disperse at a higher rate.

Among many factors influencing this movement are environment, habitat, and density of a given location. Dey, along with team members Abhishek Mishra and Partha Chakraborty, attempted to determine this pattern in which female and male fruit flies dispersed as they evolved.

One key parameter that researchers used while performing the evolutionary study was density dependent dispersal (DDD), which tells the existence of an organism at a particular place.

Dey said, In the initial phases, the rate of dispersal of females outnumbered that of males. But as they evolved, the dispersal rate was higher among males. This means evolution completely changed the behaviour and reversed the rate of dispersal of the two sexes, an evidence gathered for the first time.

Scientists said dispersal and its rate offered clues in understanding and predicting movement patterns of organisms. Studies on dispersal could be useful in epidemiology, conservation of biodiversity, and importantly, devising strategies for controlling agricultural pests, they added.

The paper, recently published in Evolution, also highlights a greater need to study endangered organisms, especially when their dispersal is increasingly strained due to climate change and fragmentation of suitable habitats.

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Evolution reverses dispersal rates among fruit flies: Study - The Indian Express

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