Abstract
Tetraploid and hexaploid silkworms, Bombyx mori L. (Lepidoptera Bombycidae) were induced by applying a cold shock to diploid and triploid eggs at the first cleavage stage. Male meiosis in the primary spermatocytes of these silkworms having a different ploidy was observed. In the polyploid cells, chromosome bridges, 2 for the tetraploid and 3 for the hexaploid, occurred between the newly formed daughter nuclei at telophase. Observation in the living spermatocytes showed that tetraploid cells needed a longer time than the diploid ones to complete the first meiotic division. The delay in the cell division may be responsible for the high sterility of the tetraploid males.
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