Oh, the D-S diode. Good question. AFAIK, it is part of the construction of the FET, and is known as the "body drain diode". You get it when you tie the Source to the Body of the die. That's the asymmetrical part of these FETs -- it's done inside the package, and that's why the symbol for these FETs shows the body tie explicitly. So for the enhancement mode N-channel FET we are talking about, the wells under the D and S are N+, and the Body is P-. When you tie the S to the Body inside the FET chip, that forms the P-N junction diode from the Source (and Body) to the Drain. With some MOSFET devices, the body is not connected to the Source internal to the device, and is brought out on a separate pin. See the ALD1101 duals, for example. If you don't explicitly tie the Source to the Body when using those devices, then you won't get just the one body diode -- you get one each from the Body to the Drain and Source. For N-channel FETs, the Body usually should be tied to the lowest voltage in the system that the FET can see, so for typical use of an N-channel FET, that means that the Body gets tied to the Source, and many power FETs are connected that way internally. For P-channel MOSFETs, the Body is connected to the highest voltage, which is still usually the Source.
Here are a couple links for more info:
IRF App note on power MOSFETs talks about body-drain diode:
http://www.irf.com/technical-info/appnotes/an-936.pdf
Fairchild Semi app note about FETs
http://www.fairchildsemi.com/an/AN/AN-9010.pdf#page=16