Abstract

Field observations indicate that white grub beetles Dasylepida ishigakiensis Niijima et Kinoshita (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) pupate approximately 40 cm underground and then emerge from the soil surface as adults. Although the factors influencing adult emergence from the soil have been studied, the migration of adults from belowground to the surface has never been characterized. In this study, the vertical movement of virgin adults from natural eclosion depths to their emergence from the soil surface was investigated. Virgin adults were introduced at a depth of 40 cm from the soil surface in wooden-framed glass cases, and the vertical position of each individual was checked every day. Both females and males emerged near the soil surface at approximately day 50 after they were transferred from 24 °C to 18 °C conditions. The maturity of the ovaries in unemerged and emerged females was also observed by magnetic resonance imaging. All females that had emerged from the soil possessed developed oocytes, and most possessed mature eggs. The cross-sectional area of eggs was determined in magnetic resonance images and compared between unemerged and emerged females, and the egg areas of emerged females were significantly larger than those of unemerged females. Our results indicate that the timing of female emergence from soil corresponded to ovary maturity in this species.

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