Publication | Open Access
Juvenile Hormone Involvement in Pupal Diapause of the Flesh Fly <i>Sarcophaga Crassipalpis</i>: Regulation of Infradian Cycles of O2 Consumption
54
Citations
20
References
1984
Year
Comparative EndocrinologyMammalian PhysiologyEntomologyReproductive BiologyEmbryologyJh ActivityPublic HealthInfradian CyclesAnimal PhysiologyJuvenile Hormone InvolvementMorphogenesisEndocrinologyO2 ConsumptionBiologyDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyJh AnalogueMetabolismMedicineAnimal BehaviorCyclic PatternReproductive HormoneComparative Physiology
ABSTRACT A cyclic pattern of juvenile hormone (JH) activity is retained during pupal diapause in the flesh fly, Sarcophaga crassipalpis. Cycles of JH activity correlate with infradian cycles of O2 consumption. JH activity progressively increases during a 4-day cycle and appears to trigger the onset of an peak. During the first 2 days of an cycle, pupae are insensitive to an application of JH analogue, but when JH analogue is applied during the last 2 days of the cycle, rises and the cyclic pattern is destroyed. When JH analogue is applied to third instar larvae, O2 consumption is sustained at a steady, high rate throughout pupal diapause. The cycles persist in abdomen-ligated pupae but disappear following head ligation.
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