Abstract

The characteristic coating of frass of last-instar tobacco hornworms, Manduca sexta, reared on artificial diet, proved to be uric acid. Results indicated that uric acid is the major nitrogenous excretory product; during most of the larval feeding stage, 5–7% of the excreta (dry weight basis) was uric acid; only minute quantities of allantoic acid were present. The rate of uric acid excretion was linear for the periods when coated pellets were observed. Abrupt increases in uric acid resulted from delays in pellet expulsion associated with delays in feeding activity. A distinctive coating was not generated by penultimate instar larvae, but abrupt changes in uric acid content did occur, which suggests that the phenomenon of coated frass is directly related to a differential in uric acid concentration. The source of uric acid in the frass was the Malpighian tubule system. The transition period between feeding and the wandering stage was a time of rapid decrease in uric acid excretion; there were only low levels in the last fecal pellets and none in Malpighian ampullae of wandering-stage larvae. Since the first appearance of coated fecal pellets preceded the release of ecdysone by about 24 hr, the involvement of this hormone was not indicated.

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