The persistence of parasitic B chromosomes in natural populations depends on both B ability to drive and host response to counteracting it. In the grasshopper Eyprepocnemis plorans, the B-24 chromosome is the most widespread B chromosome variant in the Torrox area ( Malaga, Spain). Its evolutionary success, replacing its ancestral neutralized B variant, B-2, was based on meiotic drive in females, as we showed in a sample caught in 1992. In females collected six years later, mean B-24 transmission ratio (k(B)) was 0.523, implying a very rapid decrease from the 0.696 observed in 1992. This shows that B-24 neutralization is running very fast and suggests that it might most likely be based on a single gene of major effect. Copyright (C) 2004 S. Karger AG, Basel.
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