Abstract

Daily light and temperature cycles entrain adult eclosion rhythms in many insect species, but little is known about their interaction. We studied this problem in the onion fly, Delia antiqua. Pupae were subjected to various combinations of a photoperiod of 12L:12D and thermoperiods. The thermoperiods consisted of 12 h warm phase (W) and 12 h cool phase (C), giving a mean temperature of 25 °C with different temperature steps of 8, 4 and 1 °C. As the phase relation of the two Zeitgebers was varied, the phase of eclosion rhythm was shifted, depending on the phase angle with the light cycle and the amplitude of the temperature cycle. When the temperature step in the thermoperiod was 8 °C (WC 29:21 °C), the eclosion rhythm was entrained mainly to thermoperiod rather than photoperiod. In the regime with a 4 °C temperature step (WC 27:23 °C), both thermoperiod and photoperiod affected eclosion rhythm, and a phase jump of the eclosion rhythm occurred when the warm phase of thermoperiod was delayed 15–18 h from light-on. In regimes with a 1 °C temperature step (WC 25.5:24.5 °C), the eclosion rhythm was completely entrained to photoperiod. The observed interacting effect of light and temperature cycle on the eclosion rhythm in D. antiqua can be explained by the two-oscillator model proposed by Pittendrigh and Bruce (1959).

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