Abstract
The female Blattella germanica pushes out an oötheca 11 days after adult ecdysis and carries it for about 25 days until nymphs hatch out. The terminal oöcyte begins to accumulate yolk abruptly 4 or 5 days after adult ecdysis and grows fully on day 10 when its volume reaches 180 times as compared to that at adult ecdysis. Vitellogenin, the vitellogenic female-specific protein, was identified by immunoelectrophoresis and Ouchterlony's test. Fluctuation of vitellogenin in the blood, ovary and embryo at various stages was analyzed. Vitellogenin appears in the female blood 3 or 4 days after adult ecdysis and disappears soon after terminal oöcytes have been released to an oötheca. In the ovary, it appears 4 or 5 days after adult ecdysis and disappears when terminal oöcytes leave the ovary. It remains in embryos until shortly before hatching, but is absent in newly hatched nymphs.