Abstract

As an approach to the problem of pattern formation in the insect appendage, various graft combinations were studied in the legs of the large milkweed bug Oncopeltus fasciatus. Metathoracic legs of fourth instar larvae were amputated through the tibia within 24 hr after ecdysis and grafted back onto the stumps. The orientation of the graft was altered by rotation through 90 or 180° and/or by exchanging right and left stumps and grafts, yielding seven possible orientations in addition to the control. Many of these grafts resulted in the production of one or two supernumerary regenerates of the distal segments, which appeared at the graft junction after the second postoperative ecdysis. When two supernumerary regenerates resulted, one appeared to be produced from the stump and the other from the graft. When one regenerate was present, it appeared to be a composite of material produced from both the stump and the graft. In contrast to the results obtained in cockroaches, the external face of the leg appeared to be the only one capable of giving rise to a supernumerary regenerate.

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