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Induction of diapause in Colladonus montanus reductus (Van Duze)

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Title Induction of diapause in Colladonus montanus reductus (Van Duze)
Names Marsh, Terrence George (creator)
Swenson, K. G. (advisor)
Date Issued 1965-04-23 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1965
Abstract Experiments conducted in the greenhouse showed that the leafhopper,
Colladonus montanus reductus (Van Duzee), is a long-day
insect. This conclusion is based on the production of diapausing eggs
when the leafhoppers were kept under short days (ten hours) during
the nymphal stage and the adult pre-oviposition period. Continuous
development of generations occurred when insects were kept under
long days (16 hours) during the nymphal stages and the adult pre-oviposition period. The effect of short days during the nymphal
stages could be reversed if the nymphs were transferred to long days
as they became adults; few diapausing eggs were produced under
these conditions. The effect of long days during the nymphal stages
was only slightly altered if the nymphs were transferred to short days
as they became adults; very few, if any, diapausing eggs were
produced. Embryos in diapause appeared to be in the anatrepsis
stage of development; segmentation was taking place insofar as buds
of future legs and mouthparts could be seen.
Females deposited the majority of their eggs in the leaves of
Trifolium subterraneum L., regardless of the combinations of photo-periods that they had experienced during their life cycles. Very few,
if any, eggs were laid in the basal portions of the plants by adults
that spent all of their life cycle under the 16-hour photoperiod. Females
that spent part or all of their life cycle under the ten-hour
photoperiod laid significantly greater percentages of their eggs in
the basal portions of the plants than females that spent all of their
life cycle under the 16-hour photoperiod. I suggested that diapausing
eggs laid in the basal portions of the plants would be better protected
from injury and dessication during the winter.
In general, adult leafhoppers that were reared as nymphs under
eight-hour or ten-hour photoperiods were somewhat lighter in color
than adults reared under a 16-hour photoperiod. Males were usually
black and females were usually brown, although the color variation
was such that the darkest females were about as dark as the color of
the lightest males. The sexual dichromatism was much more striking
than the seasonal dichromatism.
Adults reared as nymphs under ten-hour and 16-hour photo-periods did not vary significantly in length when each sex was compared
separately in one of the experiments. In another experiment,
females reared under an eight-hour photoperiod were significantly shorter than females reared under a 16-hour photoperiod. Similarly,
males reared under the eight-hour photoperiods were significantly
shorter. I suggested that the significant difference in the latter
experiment was due to the poor vigor of the plants that the nymphs
fed on under the eight-hour photoperiod, rather than to a direct influence
of the photoperiod on the leafhoppers.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Colladonus
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/48444

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