Abstract

The relation between the size of a fly and the number of ovarioles in its ovary was investigated in Phormia regina and Sarcophaga bullata. Small flies of varying size were produced by taking larvae prematurely off the food. The smallest flies thus obtained were derived from larvae only 1 8 of the weight of a normal larva. The number of ovarioles in an ovary is directly proportional to the size of the fly and, in the extreme case, is about 1 5 the normal number in Sarcophaga and about 1 3 in Phormia. Larvae prematurely taken off the food, but fed again after starving for several days, grow to normal or almost normal size and develop ovaries with about the normal number of ovarioles. Small or re-fed Sarcophaga do not show any changes in the anatomy of individual ovarioles but in Phormia disorders in ovariole development and a consequent reduction of fertility are frequent. The number of ovarioles remains identical from the early pupal stage all through the development of the pharate fly and then through ovarian development in the adult fly: it is determined by the size of the larva when it was taken off the food. This shows that it is not lack of space in a small adult fly abdomen which determines the number nor the occurrence of degenerative processes during ovarian development.

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