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                     DIAPAUSE
IN DEVELOPMENTAL STAGES
             
                   AND
THE IMAGO of Arthropods
                                                                      (Contacts)
 
 
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| Overview           Diapause
  refers to the state of arrested growth or reproduction that is typical of
  many hibernating or aestivating arthropods (Lees 1956). One must distinguish
  diapause from quiescence. Some borderline cases do occur, but certain
  physiological mechanisms can be recognized in the diapausing insect which are
  absent in the quiescent (Tauber & Tauber 1976). Harvey (1962) stated that
  diapause is a state of developmental arrest which persists even when
  environmental conditions are favorable for growth. In some insects the arrest
  is facultative: environmental stimuli direct the organism either to continue
  or to terminate development. In other insects the arrest is obligatory. In
  both facultative and obligatory diapause, control over development is
  exercised by the endocrine system (Beck 1968).           The principal
  stimulus for the onset of diapause is photoperiod, although temperature,
  water and diet may be involved. Diapause may terminate abruptly when the
  brain regains its full function. All insect stages may enter diapause. In the
  larva and pupa diapause is an arrest in molting controlled by the
  brain-thoracic gland system. In adult insects diapause is characterized by an
  inhibition in the maturation of eggs associated with corpus allatum failure
  (deWilde & Boer 1961). Diapause in the early embryo of Melanoplus differentialis involves an interruption in embryogenesis.           Each of the
  following endocrine organs of insects is associated with some form of
  diapause: (1) brain-thoracic gland, (2) corpus allatum and (3) subesophagael
  ganglion. It is recognized that insect diapause is an endocrine deficiency
  syndrome of the prothoracic glands (or the corpora allata). There is little
  doubt that diapause found in the growing stages is due to a temporary absence
  of neurosecretory activity in the brain. The the case of adult diapause there
  may be active inhibition of the corpora allata (deWilde 1962).           Direct and Indirect Action
  of Photoperiod.--In
  parasitic insects, development is in many cases dependent upon the
  physiological state of the host. In some instances, however, parasitoids have
  their own independent photoperiodic responses. In Apanteles glomeratus
  (L.) reared on Pieris brassicae and in Apanteles spurius Wesmael reared on several different species of hosts,
  pupal diapause is determined by the photoperiod applied during the larval
  stage (Danilevskii 1961, deWilde 1962). There also may be interactions of
  photoperiod with temperature as found in Neodiprion
  sertifer (Geoffroy)
  (Sullivan & Wallace 1967).           It is possible to select photoperiods
  that induce diapause in the parasitoid, the host remaining in the active
  stage (Geyspitz & Kyao 1953). In Pteromalus
  puparum (L.) reared on Pieris brassicae, Pieris
  napi (L.) and Pieris rapae (L.), photoperiodic responses of the host and
  parasitoid are difficult to separate. But in P. napi,
  rearing the pupa at 17°C in a 12-hr day induces diapause in 100% of the
  parasitoids without interfering with the development of the host pupa
  (Maslennikova 1958).            Perception of the Photoperiod.--The insect's eyes may be involved in perception, but the brain is probably directly involved
  in receiving the stimulus through the body of the insect directly (deWilde
  1962).           Photoperiodicity in Geographic Races.--Photoperiod
  is one of the most important isolating factors in intraspecific geographical
  differentiation and, hence, in insect evolution. Photoperiodic response in
  local strains of an insect species may differ according to the geographical
  latitude at which they occur without being accompanied by distinguishing
  morphological features. These strains may differ in intensity of response, in
  the effect of temperature on the response and in the critical photoperiod.           Increasing
  latitude causes local insect populations to be more univoltine and showing
  more obligatory diapause. Moreover, photoperiod-induced diapause tends to be
  more intense in populations of high latitudes.           Seasonal Forms and Activities Controlled
  by Photoperiod.--There
  are two forms: (1) long-day
  and (2) short-day. Seasons
  exert their influence according to the particular form.          
  Sensitive Stages.--Sensitivity
  is never extended to the whole life cycle in insects. All stages except the
  pupa may be receptive, but in most cases sensitivity is intensified in a
  limited number of instars. The sensitive stage and the responsive stage are
  usually different (Ryan 1965).  In Hippelates
  eye gnats the egg enters diapause following a period of desiccation  (Legner, Olton & Eskafi 1966).  Larvae of the navel
  orangeworm, Amyelois transitella, enter diapause following a period of
  drought (Legner 1983).  The causes of diapause in parasitic
  Hymenoptera are not simple. In many species the individuals may enter a state
  of diapause at a time when the environment is favorable to continuous
  development and increase of the species (Flanders 1944, 1972; Simmonds 1948).           Photoperiodic Induction.--There
  are generally two rates of induction found in insects: one where the required
  level is gradually built-up and the other where a few to many cycles are
  required. Diapause can be easily reversed by periods promoting normal
  activity. Of course this depends upon at what stage the insect is at the
  time.           Temperature
  effects on diapause are variable (Saunders 1967, 1968) and temperature may
  also affect the induction of diapause through photoperiodic influences
  (Sullivan & Wallace 1967). High temperatures tend to avert diapause in
  long-day species, although low temperatures may avert diapause in some cases
  also. Apparently temperatures are important in determining whether or not
  photoperiod can act. Temperature and photoperiod act differently on different
  developmental stages to cause diapause (Eskafi & Legner 1974). Diapause
  Termination           The duration
  of diapause is extremely variable among species. Nine days to 200 days and
  even 12 years (e.g., Sitodiaplosis
  sp. midge) are known.           A general
  requisite for breaking diapause is the taking up of water from the
  environment, which is probably related to the increasing metabolic activity
  of awakening insects.           The effects
  of temperature are variable. Tropical species require generally a higher
  temperature to break diapause than do temperate species. Diapause
  in Parasitic Insects Specifically           There is
  considerable variability in the expression of diapause among parasitic
  insects. The following examples give some of the more commonly expected
  behaviors:            The eggs of
  parasitoids deposited in host larvae usually hatch, but the parasitoid larvae
  do not undergo further development until the host forms the puparium.
  Examples are found in Diplazon
  fissorius Grav., Stilpnus anthomyiidiperda, Tachinaephagus
  zealandicus, Agathis lacticinctus, Figites
  spp. and Phygadeuon spp.
  Sometimes this behavior is regarded as a form of quiescence rather than
  actual diapause, however.           Some
  parasitoids additionally exhibit a second form of arrest, a definite diapause
  which is expressed at the end of the last larval instar after the host has
  been consumed. Certain Diptera which serve as hosts for hymenopterous
  parasitoids form their puparia prematurely in the fall when parasitized.
  Varley & Butler (1933) observed this in parasitized larvae of a
  chloropid.           Parker (1935)
  showed that the larva of the satin moth parasitized by Apanteles solitarius
  (Ratzeburg) terminate their diapause earlier than do unparasitized larvae.
  Schneider (1950, 1951) showed that Diplazon
  pectoratorius (Thunberg)
  caused premature pupation in its syrphid host. The induced pupation was the
  direct action of a substance secreted by the parasitoid.           Parasitoids attacking the pink
  bollworm are stimulated to enter diapause along with their host (Legner 1983).           Endocrine Processes Involved.--It
  is now recognized that insect diapause is an endocrine deficiency syndrome of
  the prothoracic glands (or the corpora allata). There is little doubt that
  diapause found in the growing stages is due to a temporary absence of
  neurosecretory activity in the brain. In the case of adult diapause, there
  may be active inhibition of the corpora allata (deWilde 1982).           Doutt (1959)
  believed that the intervention of diapause in some stage of the life cycle of
  a parasitic species is often essential if there is to be synchronization of
  development between host and parasitoid.           Theories and Experiments.--Flanders (1944) considered diapause in parasitoids to be adaptive in that it delays
  development until the host attains the stage presumably most suitable for the
  nutritional requirements of the parasitoid. Simmonds (1946, 1947, 1948),
  however, considered diapause as due to some physiological maladjustment during development. He did not
  consider diapause as adaptive so as to enable a species to survive a period
  unfavorable to further growth, but rather a pathological state due to previous environmental or intrinsic
  influences.  [Also see Etzel &
  Legner 1999]           The causes of
  diapause in parasitic Hymenoptera are not simple. In many species the
  individuals may enter a state of diapause at a time when the environment is
  favorable to continuous development and increase of the species (Flanders
  1944, Simmonds 1948).           The
  physiological state of the parent female prior to and at the time of
  oviposition can influence the proportion of her progeny that enter diapause
  (Simmonds 1946, 1947, 1948, Saunders 1962, 1965, 1966a,b). In Spalangia drosophilae Ashmead, as the female ages a decreasing
  percentage of her progeny enter diapause. In the ichneumonid Cryptus inornatus Pratt , progeny from females which in
  development had passed through a period of diapause showed a much lower
  incidence of diapause than did progeny from females which had developed
  without diapause. If the adult female's life were prolonged by a change in
  diet, diapausing progeny were increased from 2.5% to 36.5%. Simmonds also
  found in S. drosophilae that diapause
  incidence increased if low temperatures prevailed during development. In Cryptus, diapause increased if
  the quality of the larval food was changed in the form of providing an
  unnatural host.           Schneiderman
  and Horwitz (1958) supported Simmonds' findings of the influence of maternal
  physiology on diapause in the progeny. Schneiderman believed that the trigger
  stimulus acts at an early stage in the life cycle while actual diapause is
  not manifested until much later. Exposing female Nasonia vitripennis
  to low temperatures during ovigenesis caused diapause in the offspring at the
  end of the last larval instar. Temperatures below 15°C were necessary to
  break diapause in larval Nasonia.           It seems well
  established that in some endoparasitic species diapause is induced only by
  being in hosts that are themselves in a condition of diapause (Doutt 1959).
  An example in Trichogramma cacoeciae Marchal which
  parasitizes eggs of Archips rosana L.           Flanders
  (1942, 1944) considered the undeposited yolk-free eggs of many species as
  being in a state of diapause which permits them to be stored in oviducts or
  modified portions of the ovary. Further development is dependent on immersion
  in the nutrient body fluids of the host. Doutt (1959) suggested that this may
  be quiescence rather than diapause.          
  Metaphycus helvolus Compere is forced into imaginal
  diapause when it is isolated from its host for two r three weeks
  (Flanders 1942, 1944). Ovisorption is complete and diapause is broken only
  when the female can feed on the body fluids of the host. The term
  "imaginal diapause" should probably be limited to obligatory
  resting stages such as occur in Tiphia
  vernalis Rohwer (Clausen
  & King 1927) and in Porizon
  parkeri Blanchard (Parker et
  al. 1950).           The
  reproductive arrest that occurs in Peridesmia
  sp. and Cedria paradoxa Wilkinson and in
  social Hymenoptera, is a facultative phenomenon known as phasic castration (sometimes called agravidity).           Andrewartha
  (1952) agreed that diapause in the adult stage may take the form of a failure
  to ripen eggs or sperm and may be manifest by an extended preoviposition
  period. He cited work of Skoblo (1941) on Habrobracon
  brevicornis (Wesmael). The
  preoviposition period of the adult was greatly prolonged by subjecting the
  feeding larvae to temperatures in the lower ranges.            In the navel orangeworm, Amyelois transitella, variable percentages of field collected
  larvae enter diapause. Three of its imported parasites, Pentalitomastix and two Goniozus spp. also enter diapause with their host.
  Diapause seems triggered by several seasonally varying factors, and there are
  possibly latitudinal effects present (Gal 1978, Legner 1983). Exercise 23.1--What is diapause? Distinguish it from quiescence? Exercise 23.2--What causes the diapause condition? What stages are
  effected? Exercise 23.3--How may photoperiod be involved with diapause? Exercise 23.4--How may diapause be broken? Exercise 23.5--Can you think of ways in which diapause might be
  useful in biological control work?   REFERENCES:         [ Additional references may be found
  at  MELVYL Library ] Andrewartha, H. G.
  1952. Diapause in relation to the ecology of insects. Biol. Rev. 27: 50-107. Beck, S. D. 1968.
  Insect Photoperiodism. Acad. Press, London. 188 pp. Bellows, T. S., Jr.
  & T. W. Fisher, (eds) 1999. Handbook of Biological Control: Principles
  and Applications. Academic Press, San Diego, CA.  1046.p. Danilevskii, A. S.
  1961. Photoperiodism and seasonal development of insects. Oliver & Boyd
  Ltd., Edinburgh & London. 383 p. deWilde,
  J. & J. A. deBoer. 1961. Physiology of
  diapause in the adult Colorado beetle. II. Diapause as a case of
  pseudo-allatectomy. J. Insect Physiol. 6: 152-61. Doutt, R. L. 1959. The
  biology of parasitic Hymenoptera. Ann. Rev. Ent. 4: 141-182. 1974  Eskafi, F. M. & E. F. Legner.  1974.  Fecundity, development and diapause in Hexacola sp. near websteri, a parasite of Hippelates
  eye  gnats.  Ann.
  Entomol. Soc. Amer. 67(5):  769-771.Flanders, S. E. 1944. Diapause
  in the parasitic Hymenoptera. J. Econ. Ent. 37: 408-11.   264.   Etzel, L. K. & E. F. Legner.  1999.  Culture and Colonization.  In:  T. W. Fisher & T. S. Bellows, Jr.
  (eds.), Chapter 15, p. 125-197, Handbook
  of Biological Control:  Principles and
  Applications.  Academic Press, San
  Diego, CA  1046 p.   Flanders,
  S. E. 1972. The duality of imaginal
  diapause inception in pteromalids parasitic on Hypera postica.
  Ann.
  Ent. Soc. Amer. 65: 105-08. Gal,
  A. 1978. Der Einfluss der Temperatur auf die Fruchtbarkeit, Entwicklungs- und
  Uberlebensrate von Paramyelois
  transitella (Lep.,
  Pyralidae). Mitt. Dtsch. ges. Algem. Angew. Ent. 1: 265-69. Geyspitz,
  K. F. & I. I. Kyao. 1953. The
  influence of the length of illumination on the development of certain
  braconids (Hymenoptera). Entomol. Oboz. 33: 32-35. [in Russian]. Harvey, W. R. 1962. Metabolic
  aspects of insect diapause. Ann. Rev. Ent. 7: 57-80. Hodek,I. 1965. Several
  types of induction and completion of adult diapause. Proc. 12th Intern.
  Congr. Ent. (1964): 431-32. Lees, A. D. 1956. The physiology and
  biochemistry of diapause. Ann. Rev. Ent. 1: 1-16. 1979  Legner, E. F.  1979.  Emergence
  patterns and dispersal in Chelonus
  spp. near curvimaculatus and Pristomerus hawaiiensis, parasitic on Pectinophora
  gossypiella.  Ann. Entomol. Soc. Amer. 72(5):  681-686.   1983  Legner, E. F.  1983.  Patterns of field
  diapause in the navel orangeworm (Lepidoptera: Phycitidae) and three imported
  parasites.  Ann. Entomol. Soc. Amer.
  76(3):  503-506.   1966  Legner, E. F., G. S. Olton & F. M.
  Eskafi.  1966.  Influence of physical factors on the
  developmental stages of Hippelates collusor in  relation
  to the activities of its natural parasites. 
  Ann. Entomol. Soc. Amer. 59(4): 
  851-861. Maslennikova, V. A.
  1958. On the conditions determining the diapause in the parasitic
  Hymenoptera, Apanteles glomeratus L. (Braconidae) and Pteromalus puparum (Chalcididae). Rev. Ent. 37: 538-45. Ryan, R. B. 1965. Maternal
  influence on diapause in a parasitic insect, Coeloides brunneri
  Vier. (Hymenoptera, Braconidae). J. Insect Physiol. 11: 1331-36. Saunders, D. S. 1962b.
  The effect of age of female Nasonia
  vitripennis (Walker)
  (Hymenoptera, Pteromalidae) upon the incidence of larval diapause. J. Insect
  Physiol. 8:
  309-18. Saunders,
  D. S. 1964. Rearing tsetse-fly
  parasites in blowfly puparia. Bull. Wld. Hlth. Org. 31: 309-10. Saunders,
  D. S. 1965. Dispause of maternal
  origin. Proc. 12th Internatl. Cong. Ent., London 1964. p. 182. Saunders,
  D. S. 1965a. Larval diapause induced
  by maternally-operating photoperiod. Nature, London 206(4985): 739-40. Saunders, D. S. 1965b.
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  maternal origin. - II. The effect of photoperiod and temperature on Nasonia vitripennis. J. Insect Physiol. 12: 569-81. Saunders,
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  maternal origin. - III. The effect of host shortage on Nasonia vitripennis.
  J. Insect Physiol. 12:
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  D. S. 1967. Time measurement in
  insect photoperiodism: reversal of photoperiodic effect by chilling. Science
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  Photoperiodism and time measurement in the parasitic wasp, Nasonia vitripennis. J. Insect Physiol. 14: 433-50. Saunders,
  D. S. 1973. Thermoperiodic control
  of diapause in an insect: theory of internal coincidence. Science, Wash.,
  D.C. 181(4097): 358-60. Saunders,
  D. S. 1974. Evidence for
  "daw" and "dusk" oscillators in the Nasonia photoperiodic clock. J. Insect Physiol 20: 77-88. Saunders,
  D. S. 1974. Spectral sensitivity
  and intensity thresholds in Nasonia
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  D. Sutton. 1969. Circadian rhythms in the insect photoperiodic clock. Nature,
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  H. A. & J. Horwitz. 1958. The induction and
  termination of facultative diapause in the chalcid wasps Mormoniella vitripennis
  (Walker) and Tritneptis klugii (Ratzeburg). J. Expt.
  Biol. 35: 520-51. Schneiderman,
  H. A., J. Horwitz & C. G. Kurland. 1956a.
  An analysis of the action of low temperatures in terminating the diapause of Mormoniella. Anat. Rec. 125: 557. Schneiderman,
  H. A., J. Kuten & J. Horwitz. 1956b.
  Effect of x-irradiation on the postembryonic development of a chalcid wasp. Anat. REc. 125: 625-26. Schneiderman,
  H. A., J. Weinstein & J. Horwitz. 1957.
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  D. R. Wallace. 1967. Interaction of temperature and photoperiod in the
  induction of prolonged diapause in Neodiprion
  sertifer. Canad. Ent. 99: 834-50. Tauber,
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  (Hymenoptera, Pteromalidae). Gerontologia 12: 89-98.   |