Abstract
The median neurosecretory cells (M-NSC) of Anacridium aegyptium were studied by light and electron microscopy during the ovarian diapause (autumn and winter) and the ovarian activity (spring) in normal females and in females infected by a tachinid fly Metacemyia calloti. In spring, the M-NSC contain comparatively much stainable material in normal females than in parasitized ones. This difference results from the ovarian maturity of normal females and the ovarian immaturity of parasitized females. The activity of the M-NSC was assessed in spring using the evolution of the radioactivity of the pars intercerebralis (PI) and corpora cardiaca (CC) after injection of 35S-cysteine. The activity of the M-NSC is impaired in the parasitized females without ovarian development. The ovarian diapause was broken by massive implantations of corpora allata (CA) or electrical stimulations of the PI. Implantations of CA induce in parasitized females the same state of ovarian development than during natural activity in spring. Electrical stimulations of the PI. which increase the activity of the M-NSC. enhance the ovarian development of the parasitized females. A hypoactivity of the M-NSC is involved in the ‘castration’ of the Egyptian grasshopper.
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