Abstract
Larvae of Gibbium psylloides secrete a peritrophic membrane (PM) which has a mainly orthogonal fibrillar structure, but this merges freely with hexagonal and random arrangements of microfibres. The random arrangement predominates in PM used for cocoons. Shortly before the cocoon is constructed the PM no longer forms a tube but collapses and is compressed in the gut and emerges from the anus as a flat thread. This thread is wound around the larva and forms the cocoon ‘silk’. Both normal and cocoon-forming PMs are produced mainly in the posterior midgut and their constituent microfibres appear first at the tips of the microvilli which form the brush border of the midgut cells.
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