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Evolution of chromosome number in grasshoppers (Orthoptera: Caelifera: Acrididae)

Publication at Faculty of Science |
2022

Abstract

Orthoptera have some of the largest genomes of all insects. At the same time, the architecture of their genomes remains poorly understood.

Comparative cytological data across a wide range of taxa, even for basic parameters such as chromosome number, may provide important insights into the evolution of these genomes and help answer the question of why some species attained such large sizes. We collected and compiled more than 1,000 records of chromosome numbers of 339 genera (13.8% of 2,452 known genera) and 769 species (6.2% of 12,250 known species) of Caelifera, the suborder of Orthoptera that includes those taxa with short antennae.

Within the family Acrididae, most of the records come from the subfamilies Oedipodinae (N = 325), Melanoplinae (N = 192) and Gomphocerinae (N = 254). Out of the 621 investigated species of Acrididae, 459 (73.9%) shared a chromosome number of 2n male = 23.

Chromosome numbers of 2n male = 17 (12.2%) and 2n male = 21 (9.9%) were less common. The remaining 4.0% of species exhibited different chromosome numbers between 2n male = 8 (6 + XY) and 2n male = 27.

Plotted on a phylogenetic tree, our results confirm that chromosome numbers, especially in the largest grasshopper family Acrididae, are highly conserved with a basic count of 2n male = 23 (22 + X0), sometimes reduced to, e.g., 2n male = 17 (16 + X0) in some genera of the slant-faced grasshopper subfamily Gomphocerinae. Species with divergent chromosome numbers occur in many of the groups we studied, but are not a systematic trait and have evolved multiple times independently.

Our study supports the view that chromosome numbers are much more stable across the investigated Caelifera compared to Ensifera, the second suborder of Orthoptera that includes the long antennae bush crickets and crickets. Our results significantly extend our knowledge on the diversity of this character in Caelifera.