Abstract

There is scant information on the chromosomes of Lepidoptera, the largest order of insects with more than 100,000 described species (Imms 1965), despite the abundance of the material and cosmopolitan distribution of many species. the lack of information on the chromosomes (the haploid number being known for about 1% of the total number of species) and detailed analysis of the karyotype in this order may be partly due to the small size and isodiametric nature of the chromosomes and partly due to the difficulty in obtaining satisfactory squash preparations of the adult testes, which are enclosed together in a thick-walled scrotum. This difficulty of the interference of the scrotum in obtaining stages satisfactory for study (fixation of the material worsens the situation, for the scrotal wall hardens on fixation) seems to have discouraged the cytological study of this group, especially in the adults. Some workers have tried to circumvent this difficulty by squashing larval testes, which are not enclosed in a...

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call