Physiology of Insect Ecdysis: Neural and Hormonal Factors Involved in Wing-Spreading Behaviour of Moths
Open Access
- 1 August 1974
- journal article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Experimental Biology
- Vol. 61 (1) , 47-55
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.61.1.47
Abstract
1. In the tobacco hornworm, wing spreading involves a stereotyped series of movements which take 74 min to complete and which include two components, wing folding and wing inflation. 2. Moths decapitated at the moment of eclosion show neither wing inflation nor wing folding. If decapitation is delayed until 5 sec after emergence, then the full wing-spreading behaviour is displayed. 3. Newly emerged moths which are confined show intense digging-behaviour and delay the onset of wing spreading until after their release. Decapitated moths attempt to spread their wings immediately, regardless of whether or not they are confined. 4. Surgical experiments showed that the brain was not required in a neural capacity in order for wing spreading to occur; it was needed only as a source of the eclosion hormone. The neural influence of the suboesophageal ganglion was required until immediately after eclosion. 5. Newly emerged moths whose abdomens had been removed showed wing-folding behaviour. No inflation occurred and the duration of wing folding was much longer than normal. It was concluded that wing-folding behaviour was centrally programmed but that the abdomen could modify the length of the programme. 6. Injections of bursicon into abdomenless moths reduced the duration of wing-folding behaviour to almost normal levels. Therefore, in some manner, bursicon has an important role in determining when wing-folding behaviour will come to an end.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- PHYSIOLOGY OF INSECT ECDYSIS. II. THE ASSAY AND OCCURRENCE OF THE ECLOSION HORMONE IN THE CHINESE OAK, SILKMOTH, ANTHERAEA PERNYIThe Biological Bulletin, 1973
- Physiology of Insect RhythmsJournal of Experimental Biology, 1972
- Silk Moth Eclosion: Hormonal Triggering of a Centrally Programmed Pattern of BehaviorScience, 1972
- Bursicon, a hormone which mediates tanning of the cuticle in the adult fly and other insectsJournal of Insect Physiology, 1965
- Insect Ecdysis with Particular Emphasis on Cuticular Hardening and DarkeningPublished by Elsevier ,1964
- Hormonal and Nervous Control of Tanning in the FlyScience, 1962
- The Imaginal Ecdysis of Blowflies. Evidence for A Change in the Mechanical Properties of the Cuticle at ExpansionJournal of Experimental Biology, 1962
- PHYSIOLOGY OF INSECT DIAPAUSE. IV. THE BRAIN AND PROTHORACIC GLANDS AS AN ENDOCRINE SYSTEM IN THE CECROPIA SILKWORMThe Biological Bulletin, 1952
- A Technique of Transplantation for DrosophilaThe American Naturalist, 1936
- Observations and Experiments on the Blow‐fly (Calliphora erythrocephala) during the First Day after Emergence.Journal of Zoology, 1935