Abstract
Summary Before the shortening of the germ band, embryos of Calliphora erythrocephala secrete an electron dense layer which resembles a thin atypical cuticle. After completion of the dorsal closure, a second, typical, cuticle is deposited. It is characterized by a thick procuticle and by the presence of hooked setae. This cuticle develops into the larval cuticle of the first instar. We did not find in newly-laid eggs of Calliphora detectable amounts of either free or hydrolysable conjugated ecdysteroids. A marked rise in ecdysteroid concentrations, essentially attributable to free ecdysone and 20- hydroxyecdysone, occurs shortly before the deposition of the typical cuticle. After a transient decrease, the ecdysteroid titre rises again before hatching. When eggs are mid-ligatured at blastula or early gastrula stages, the posterior embryonic half is able to build up a typical cuticle with hooked setae. This cuticulogenesis is therefore not dependent on the presence of the embryonic ring glands.
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More From: International Journal of Invertebrate Reproduction and Development
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