Abstract

AbstractThe photoperiodic control of diapause induction in the larvae of the yellow‐spotted longicorn beetle, Psacothea hilaris (Pascoe), was investigated using a west Japan‐type population collected from Ino, Kochi Prefecture, Japan. In this population, the larvae expressed a long‐day photoperiodic response with a critical daylength between 13.5 and 14 h at 25 °C; under a long daylength, the larvae pupated after the 4th or 5th instar, while the larvae entered diapause under a short daylength after 2.3 additional molts on average. When the photoperiod was changed from a short (L12:D12) to a long (L15:D9) daylength, pupation occurred in most of the individuals irrespective of the time of the change. When the photoperiod was changed from long to short at 1 or 2 weeks after hatching, all of the larvae entered diapause, whereas when the photoperiod was changed at 5 weeks after hatching or later, most of the larvae pupated. The 2 weeks exposures to a long daylength against a ‘background’ of a short daylength at various times revealed that the larvae of this insect are most sensitive to the photoperiod from 4 to 6 weeks after hatching.

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