Abstrakt: |
Three night-break experiment protocols were utilized in an attempt to help clarify the role of the circadian system in photoperiodic time measurement in the European corn borer, Ostrinia nubilalis. Larvae raised in a light-dark (LD) cycle consisting of 12 hr of light alternating with 12 hr of darkness (LD 12:12), at a constant temperature of 30°C, enter a state of arrested growth and development known as diapause (Takeda and Skopik, 1985). In the present research (Experiment 1), the induction of diapause was prevented by 1-hr light pulses that systematically scanned the dark phase of LD 12:12. Thus, the importance of 12 hr of uninterrupted darkness for maximal induction of diapause is stressed. The same experimental protocol applied to larvae already in diapause (Experiment 2), however, resulted in a bimodal curve of diapause termination. Although this result is consistent with the proposition that a nonperiodic hourglass timer underlies this event (Skopik and Takeda, 1986), it does not rule out the circadian system.Like LD 12:12, a thermoperiod in constant darkness (12 hr at 4°C alternating with 12 hr at 25°C) also induces diapause. Scanning such a thermoperiod with 1-hr light pulses, however, resulted in only a small effect (reduction of diapause) when light fell in the early to middle part of the warm phase (Experiment 3). Thus, the time-measuring system, under these exper imental conditions, showed only a weak response to light. This unexpected result is discussed with respect to Experiment 1 and two general models that have been proposed to account for photoperiodic time measurement in insects. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER] |