Abstract
The rate of loss of water and the rate of uptake of oxygen were measured continuously throughout the development of Lucilia cuprina within the puparium. Changes in these parameters were correlated with changes observed in morphology of cuticles and respiratory structures during development. In development at 26°C, there is, at 20–22 hr after puparium formation a major loss of water by mechanical expulsion of moulting fluid chiefly through the posterior larval spiracles after the severing of the posterior larval tracheae. This loss of water is essential to survival and is followed by an extremely low rate of water loss attributed to slow diffusion of water through the resulting air gap between the pupal cuticle and the puparium. There is an increase in oxygen consumption during the pupal movements associated with the casting of the larval tracheae followed by a sharp reduction in oxygen consumption until the pupal horns are everted a short time later. This combination of physiological events enables development to proceed over a wide range of conditions in the puparial environment.
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