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<i>Belgica antarctica</i> (Diptera: Chironomidae): A natural model organism for extreme environments

Iryna Kozeretska, Svitlana Serga, Pavlo Kovalenko, Volodymyr Gorobchyshyn, Peter Convey

2021Insect Science26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Belgica antarctica (Diptera: Chironomidae), a brachypterous midge endemic to the maritime Antarctic, was first described in 1900. Over more than a century of study, a vast amount of information has been compiled on the species (3 750 000 Google search results as of January 10, 2021), encompassing its ecology and biology, life cycle and reproduction, polytene chromosomes, physiology, biochemistry and, increasingly, omics. In 2014, B. antarctica's genome was sequenced, further boosting research. Certain developmental stages can be cultured successfully in the laboratory. Taken together, this wealth of information allows the species to be viewed as a natural model organism for studies of adaptation and function in extreme environments.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyPolytene chromosomeBelgicaChironomidaeEcologyMidgeOrganismExtreme environmentZoologyAdaptation (eye)LarvaGeneticsDrosophila melanogasterGeneOceanographyBacteriaNeuroscienceGeologyCruisePolar Research and EcologyTardigrade Biology and EcologyInvertebrate Taxonomy and Ecology
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