Abstract
Fully grown Cephus cinctus larvae go into an obligatory diapause, the ending of which involves the elimination of two separate factors. The first, or x factor, is eliminated only at subdevelopmental temperatures and has a positive temperature coefficient in a temperature range from the undercooling point up to the developmental threshold. The second, or y factor, is eliminated at either low or moderate temperatures, having a positive coefficient in a temperature range from the undercooling point up to about 30 °C. When the x factor reaction is complete, diapause may be said to be 'broken', but it is not 'eliminated' until the y factor reaction is complete.When the x factor reaction is complete but the y factor is still present, the insect can be returned to diapause by either high temperatures or a lack of adequate moisture or a combination of these. This sometimes occurs in nature, resulting in a two-year life cycle. Once the y factor has been eliminated the insect starts postdiapause development and can no longer return to a state of diapause.Postdiapause development under constant favourable conditions is rather uniform after it has once started, but the time of its initiation is variable, dependent on the y factor. Evidence is presented that indicates that the y factor is eliminated faster in large larvae than in smaller ones, accounting for the rather wide variability in development in samples uniformly treated but not selected as to size.At 10 °C. roughly 40 to 110 days were required to break diapause, each larva requiring a definite conditioning period. Thus the process ends abruptly in individuals, gradually in a group. Under natural conditions diapause was broken as early as Oct. 19, 1945, in a few cases, and was broken in all cases by the end of January 1946.
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