Abstract

Abstract The effect of the dark‐colour‐inducing neurohormone (DCIN = [His7]‐corazonin) of locusts was investigated in field‐collected young and old adults of the grasshopper, Oedipoda miniata (Pallas) (Orthoptera: Acrididae). This species shows homochromy, but neither green‐brown, nor phase‐dependent colour polymorphism. By injecting graded doses of synthetic DCIN in 2 µL of olive oil, young adults were tested within a week of their last moult, and old adults 3.5 months later, a few weeks before natural termination of their reproductive summer diapause. Colour changes were followed for 28 days after injection. Darkening of the young adults was considerable, but their response to DCIN is more moderate than that of conspecific nymphs, by exhibiting a higher threshold, slower response and weaker maximal response. Old adults also show a clear effect, but their response is even slower and less marked than the response of the young adults. It is concluded that the response to DCIN decreases from nymphs to young adults and it is further decreasing with ageing of the adults.

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