Abstract

A maternal effect that operates in the flesh fly, Sarcophaga bullata Parker (Diptera: Sarcophogidae), prevents the expression of pupal diapause in the progeny of females that have been reared under short day conditions. This set of experiments tests the possibility that the maternal effect can be prevented by the use of various environmental stresses or chemical treatments administered to the mother. High and low temperature shocks, food deprivation and reducing the size of the mother were all ineffective in altering transmission of the diapause‐suppressing maternal effect. Several chemical agents, however, were effective. Gamma‐aminobutyric acid (GABA) and one of its antagonists, picrotoxin, elicited opposite responses when injected into female flies. Whereas GABA suppressed the incidence of diapause in the female’s progeny, picrotoxin increased the diapause incidence, thus suggesting the possibility of a central role for GABA in regulation of the maternal effect. Octopamine and pilocarpine injected into females also were effective in countering the maternal effect and thus permitting expression of diapause in the female’s progeny.

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