Abstract

ABSTRACT. Of sixty‐seven adult female Periplaneta americana (L.) isolated when less than 8h old and kept without food at 25–30°C in LD 12:12, only six produced oothecae during 25–35 days. Growth of the basal oocytes was retarded, and maximal oocyte volume, only one‐third of that in fed virgins, was achieved after about 12 days. By day 14, 60% of the basal oocytes were being resorbed in the starved females, and corpora lutea were usually all that remained beyond day 20. Oocyte growth was potentiated in starved, virgin females by severing either of the two nervi corporis allati 1 (NCA 1), and oothecae were then produced in 45–80% of cases. Sham‐operated controls oviposited in fewer than 27% of the trials. Because oocyte maturation was prevented by extirpating both corpora allata (CA), but not when the glands were replaced, and because the juvenile hormone analogue, ZR 515, was highly effective in causing the starved cockroaches to produce oothecae, the starvation‐induced reproductive failure probably reflects diminished hormone production by the CA. The most likely consequence of severing NCA 1 is de‐repression of juvenile hormone production. The directness of the neural influence was shown by removing the one denervated CA, in which case stimulation of oogenesis was minimal even though the contralateral innervated gland was present. The incidence of ootheca production was not enhanced by transecting the NCA 2, which suggests that the CA of starved cockroaches are not inhibited via this pathway.

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