Abstract

Pupal diapause in Heliothis zea is regulated by a temperature-sensitive mechanism which prevents ecdysone production despite the release of prothoracicotropic hormone. To determine how this mechanism functioned, donor prothoracic glands were implanted into prothoracic gland-ablated hosts to test their ability to produce ecdysone in a diapause-sustaining temperature of 19°C. Results of these experiments ruled out the possibility that ecdysis production was regulated by the nervous system or by a mechanism intrinsic to the prothoracic glands, and suggested that a humoral factor was required for diapause termination. Haemolymph injection experiments supported this humoral factor hypothesis, i.e. haemolymph from non-diapausing donor pupae terminated diapause in hosts maintained at 19°C, whereas haemolymph from diapausing donor pupae had no such effect. These findings indicate that the temperature-sensitive mechanism regulating H. zea diapause functions by controlling the availability of a humoral factor necessary for ecdysone production by the prothoracic glands.

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