Abstract

Juvenile hormone and ecdysteroid titre developmental profiles were compared between Gryllus rubens that were genetically-determined to develop into long-winged vs short-winged adults. Hormone titres were measured during the penultimate and last stadia, two periods during which wing length development is sensitive to exogenous juvenile hormone. No large differences in juvenile hormone titres were observed between nascent wing morphs during any stage in development. Slightly elevated titres were observed in long-wing vs short-wing-destined crickets during the middle third of the penultimate stadium. However, titre differences were opposite those inferred from earlier experiments involving topical application of juvenoids. An earlier decline in the juvenile hormone titre was also suggested in presumptive long-winged crickets during the last stadium. The earlier decline in macropters is consistent with previous juvenile hormone topical application experiments as well as with morph specific differences in juvenile hormone esterase activity. Peak ecdysteroid titres were higher in presumptive macropterous vs brachypterous males, while an elevated ecdysteroid titre occurred for a longer duration in macropterous females during the penultimate stadium. In both sexes, ecdysteroid titres were higher in presumptive long-winged vs short-winged morphs throughout the last stadium; peak titres were significantly higher in macropterous vs brachypterous females but not males. Both the longer duration of elevated ecdysteroid titres and the higher hormone titres in presumptive long-winged crickets are consistent with a regulatory role of ecdysteroids in wing morph determination.

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