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. 2006 Jan;172(1):305–316. doi: 10.1534/genetics.104.036806

TABLE 1.

Sperm genotypes and descriptive parameters for progeny of crosses to attached-2 females

Malea Nb X22 X0 Y22 Y0 XY22 XY0 022 00 NDc D1d D2d D3d RXd RYd R2d
+/cry+Y 3245 29 40 0 42 0 10 0 1 0.08 0.88 0.99 1.00 1.00 0.01 0.01
(0.80–0.94) (0.81–1.00) (0.90–1.00) (0.79–1.00) (0.00–0.30) (0.00–0.17)
Xh/cry+Y 1230 5 51 1 40 1 19 2 15 0.22 0.71 0.61 0.71 1.00 0.51 0.06
(0.62–0.79) (0.42–0.81) (0.42–0.89) (0.57–1.00) (0.19–1.00) (0.02–0.12)
+/cryY 835 110 554 4 446 1 97 104 36 3.24 0.73 0.81 0.98 0.49 0.09 0.05
(0.69–0.76) (0.74–0.88) (0.97–0.99) (0.41–0.58) (0.05–0.14) (0.03–0.07)
Xh/cryY 125 1 96 1 43 1 21 2 79 3.90 0.61 0.40 0.46 0.68 0.46 0.02
(0.54–0.69) (0.18–0.70) (0.17–0.85) (0.25–1.00) (0.16–1.00) (0.01–0.05)
a

+, SteW12; Xh, Df(1)X1, SteW12 Bx; cry+Y, BSY y+; cryY, BScry1Y y+.

b

Number of males crossed. Matings were peformed in vials with five males and 15 females.

c

2 × progeny/male.

d

Maximum-likelihood estimates of disjunctional frequencies and chromosome-specific sperm recoveries (see text). Ninety-five percent support intervals are in parentheses.