Studies in the mode of action of royal jelly in honeybee development. IX. The carbohydrates and lipids in the haemolymph and the fat body of developing larvae

1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (11) ◽  
pp. 1139-1148 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Tsao ◽  
R. W. Shuel

No qualitative difference between honeybee queens and workers was found in the haemolymph sugars during their postembryonic development. Trehalose was the chief sugar and accounted for 95% of the total carbohydrates in both castes; glucose was the only other significant sugar. Sugar concentrations varied widely both with stage of development and caste. Different caste patterns of variation in fat body glycogen, trehalose, and glucose were observed. Glycogen concentration increased in queen larvae after they were sealed in their cells. Tissue lipid concentrations were higher in queens than in workers and increased in queens after larvae were sealed in their cells. The rapid reproductive development in queens during the short pupal period may be related to their ability of accumulating large food reserves.

1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (10) ◽  
pp. 1101-1108 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Tsao

Changing the sugar concentration in the diet of laboratory-reared honeybee larvae to simulate that of the natural diet for worker larvae induced sugar patterns similar to those found in natural worker larval haemolymph but not in the fat body. Feeding a low-sugar-level diet to larvae in the incubator showed changes in haemolymph sugar concentration similar to those found in natural worker larvae. This indicates that the changes in sugar concentrations around the third and the fourth molts are not the consequence of the changes of the dietary-sugar level but are regulated by an endogenous system. Addition of sugar to the early larval diet in the incubator showed changes in sugar concentration resembling those found in natural queen larvae. This indicates that the high level of sugar in the early diet is a factor inducing the development of the endogenous system in queen larvae. High sugar level in the early diet decreased tissue carbohydrate concentration but increased tissue lipid concentration which may be essential for the maturation of the reproductive system in queen larvae.


2016 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 119-128
Author(s):  
Georgios Goras ◽  
Chrysoula Tananaki ◽  
Sofia Gounari ◽  
Elissavet Lazaridou ◽  
Dimitrios Kanelis ◽  
...  

Abstract We investigated the rearing of drone larvae grafted in queen cells. From the 1200 drone larvae that were grafted during spring and autumn, 875 were accepted (72.9%) and reared as queens. Drone larvae in false queen cells received royal jelly of the same composition and of the same amounts as queen larvae. Workers capped the queen cells as if they were drones, 9-10 days after the egg laying. Out of 60 accepted false queen cells, 21 (35%) were capped. The shape of false queen cells with drone larvae is unusually long with a characteristically elongate tip which is probably due to the falling of larvae. Bees start the destruction of the cells when the larvae were 3 days old and maximised it before and after capping. Protecting false queen cells in the colony by wrapping, reversing them upside down, or placing in a horizontal position, did not help. The only adult drones that emerged from the false queen cells were those protected in an incubator and in push-in cages. Adult drones from false queen cells had smaller wings, legs, and proboscis than regular drones. The results of this study verify previous reports that the bees do not recognise the different sex of the larvae at least at the early stage of larval development. The late destruction of false queen cells, the similarity in quality and quantity of the produced royal jelly, and the bigger drone cells, allow for the use of drone larvae in cups for the production of royal jelly.


1977 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-66
Author(s):  
LOIS E. TUCKER

Changes in live weight and in the water, Na+ and K+ content of the tissues and faeces have been examined in adult male Periplaneta americana in various states of hydration. During dehydration the haemolymph volume decreases markedly, but the Na+ and K+ concentrations rise only slightly. Less than 25% of the Na+ removed from the haemolymph during dehydration was found to be excreted, but the K+ excreted during dehydration was in excess of that removed from the haemolymph alone. It seems likely that the major tissue for regulating the haemolymph Na+ during dehydration and rehydration is the fat body, in which dehydration causes an increase, and rehydration a decrease, in the Na:K ratio. The Na+ and K+ content of the fat body was found to be variable in both hydrated and dehydrated animals and absolute changes in the ion content of the tissue could not be estimated because of unknown changes in the amount of food reserves and excretory products.


Apidologie ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur R. DAVIS ◽  
Reginald W. SHUEL
Keyword(s):  

1993 ◽  
Vol 44 (8) ◽  
pp. 1799 ◽  
Author(s):  
CA Atkins ◽  
A Pigeaire

Exogenous application of a 2 mol m-3 buffered solution of N6 benzylaminopurine (BAP) to flowers on the main stem inflorescence of Lupinus angustifolius L, cv. Danja profoundly altered reproductive development by reducing post-anthesis abscission of flowers and small pods. The same effect of BAP was recorded for a mutant (abs-) of cv. Danja, in which organ abscission was completely absent, indicating that localized application of cytokinin enhanced reproductive development rather than reduced pedicel abscission per se in the parent line. Application to pedicel and sepals at the open flower stage completely eliminated flower abortion on the main inflorescence, compared with less than 50% pod initiation on untreated inflorescences, more than doubled final pod yield on the main inflorescence and increased the number of mature pods on the whole plant by 33%. A single dose of BAP, to an inflorescence which bore flowers ranging in their stage of development from post-anthesis to immature flower buds, significantly increased the number of pods initiated and at final harvest, measured on a per plant basis. A number of synthetic and naturally occurring cytokinins, including zeatin riboside and dihydrozeatin riboside, were also effective. BAP application induced a longer period of flowering and resulted in a considerably thickened raceme. This was most marked at the distal end which showed enhanced cambial development and secondary vascularization compared with untreated controls. The positive effects of BAP application on pod initiation were not restricted to cv. Danja but were found also for cv. Warrah and cv. Gungurru, both of which have enhanced pod set compared with Danja. Enhanced pod initiation on the main inflorescence generally reduced the number of pods developing on branch inflorescences. Additional application of BAP to flowers on branches, even at the most opportune time and at the most effective site, did not enhance pod initiation and, in some cases, significantly reduced pod set on these branches. The data indicate that it would be very difficult to exploit the positive effect of exogenous cytokinin application on pod set in field crops of lupin. However, selection or genetic engineering of plants with higher levels of endogenous cytokinins in flowers or flower parts at anthesis may provide a means by which to assess the importance of this factor in determining yield stability.


1996 ◽  
Vol 199 (11) ◽  
pp. 2409-2418 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Sandeman ◽  
D Sandeman

The antennules of the crayfish Cherax destructor can first be observed as antero-laterally located lobes in embryos that have reached the 50 % stage of development. Clusters of cells that are probably the olfactory receptor neurones (ORNs) appear at the distal end of these lobes, which later differentiate into the lateral flagella of the antennules. New clusters of ORNs and segments are added at the proximal end of the lateral flagellum throughout the postembryonic stages and well into the juvenile adult stage. From a comparison of the exuvia and the newly emerged flagella in animals over a wide range of sizes, we conclude that, once the animals reach a certain size (approximately 7 mm carapace length), the most distal, and oldest, segments of the antennule are shed. Growth occurs from the proximal end of the flagellum, and the addition of new ORNs is the result of a delayed differentiation of the flagellar segments that takes place at the proximal end of the chemoreceptor array, about halfway along the flagellum.


2018 ◽  
Vol 28 (8) ◽  
pp. R350-R351 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian W.W. Pirk
Keyword(s):  

1935 ◽  
Vol s2-77 (307) ◽  
pp. 405-495
Author(s):  
FLORENCE V. MURRAY ◽  
O. W. Tiegs

1. Metamorphosis of the external form of the larva commences with a voiding of the mid-gut contents; thus arises the prepupa in which the external features of the imago are more nearly revealed. In the prepupa the rostrum, legs, and wings grow out. In the pupa the whole body, and particularly the appendages, shrink and differentiate into the elegant form of the imago. 2. The larval epidermis (hypodermis) is not divisible into dormant imaginal and functional larval cells. The ‘imaginal disks’ of the appendages are functional epidermis in the larva and are distinguishable only by their stronger basiphil staining especially in the late larva; as, indeed, are other parts of the epidermis (e.g. rostrum ‘Anlage’) where rapid growth is to occur. The epidermal cells divide in the growing larva. During metamorphosis they extrude chromatic material and some cytoplasm, and undergo renewed cell-division. Cell degeneration is rare. Epidermal gland-cells disintegrate and are partly phagocytosed. 3. The mid-gut disintegrates and is regenerated from the larval fore-gut, i.e. from ectoderm(?); the mid-gut ‘replacing cells’ survive at the tips of the mid-gut caeca. The cells of foreand hind-guts behave like those of the epidermis. Mycetocytes wander from the mycetoma into the anterior mid-gut caeca. 4. Salivary glands disintegrate, are partly phagocytosed, and regenerate from cells at the openings of the larval ducts. 5. The Malpighian tubes disintegrate and regenerate from local mid-gut cells; there is no phagocytosis. 6. The heart and alary muscles pass into the imago. The nephrocytes survive from the early larva and without further division into the imago; there is occasional chromatic globule extrusion early in the metamorphosis. Leucocytes multiply in the blood; they seem to arise largely from masses of ‘pericardial tissue’ in the dorsal sinus. 7. The fat-cells divide in the growing larva, and accumulate food reserves, which are partly depleted during metamorphosis. Destruction of fat-cells does not occur. In the pupa the clumps of fat-body break into individual cells. The fat-body is phagocytic during metamorphosis. In the imago the fat-body retrogresses. 8. The oenocytes grow in size in the larva; there is no multiplication. In the pupa they undergo histolysis, partly by phagocytosis ; some survive for a time into the imago. The imaginal oenocytes arise apparently from the epidermis. 9. The tracheal system undergoes extensive elaboration during metamorphosis, particularly to meet the needs of the enlarged thorax and of the appendages. The cellular changes in the larva and during metamorphosis are similar to those of the epidermis. The chitinous intima, even of minute tracheoles, is withdrawn, at the last larval moult, through the stigmata. 10. The larval musculature (somatic and intestinal) degenerates and is reformed from myoblasts that have proliferated in the larval period. The myoblasts may be (a) parts of the larval muscle-fibre syncytium, as in all the muscles that regenerate in connexion with pre-existing larval muscles, and (b) scattered cells, in cases where they regenerate independently of larval muscles (leg muscles). Tendons are epidermal invaginations. The highly specialized condition of the imaginal musculature is mainly the outcome of changes in the region of insertion and origin of the muscles, owing to the altered form of the imago. The histogenesis of the wing-muscles is quite different from that of all other muscles. 11. The thirteen ganglia of the larval nerve-cord enlarge and become concentrated into five ganglia, not extending beyond the thorax. In the brain there occurs an elaboration of all its parts: the optic ganglia are new structures. Dormant neuroblasts occur in the larval cord in addition to nerve-cells. The former (and latter?) exhibit chromatic globule extrusion and proliferate during metamorphosis. There is no histolysis of larval nerve-tissue; specialization of the nervous system seems to be mainly on its sensory side. 12. The larval ocelli survive as pigment spots on the brain of the imago. Compound eyes develop from larval epidermis; they are of the exocone type. 13. Growth of the gonads proceeds throughout the larval stage, but is greatly accelerated in the prepupa and early pupa. The copulatory organs are developed as invaginations probably entirely from the ninth segment. 14. The hypothesis is offered that the abrupt changes that occur in the larval tissues at metamorphosis are the outcome of the hypertrophy of their cells.


1983 ◽  
Vol 38 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 112-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Franz Römer ◽  
Ilona Eisenbeis

The mode of growth of several tissues in Gryllus bimaculatus was investigated during postembryonic development by cytophotometric methods. In contrast to the situation in holo- metabolous insects, the tissues growing by endomitosis reach only moderate levels of polyploidy. In this case the growth of tissues is achieved by mitotic divisions of small cells with subsequent polyploidization. The time courses of DNA synthesis were measured within the 3rd and, for comparison, the 8th larval instar by incorporation of labelled thymidine followed by autoradiography. Hemocytes, cells of the regeneration crypts of the midgut, gonads and nervous tissue showed a continuous incorporation rate; by contrast, DNA synthesis in other tissues was confined to a given time within the moulting cycle. The changes in moulting hormone titre of the 3rd larval instar were investigated. The quantities of ecdysone and 20-OH-ecdysone were estimated by radioimmunoassay, and the hormones were identified by high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC). The titre changes in time with at least 2 distinct maxima. The DNA synthesis periods are correlated with the hormone peaks, that of epidermis and tracheae with the first peak, and that of pylorus, ileum, rectum, Malpighian tubules and fat body with the second. DNA synthesis in prothoracic glands and oenocytes exhibits a time course that is the inverse of the hormone-secretion time course. The question whether moulting hormones have an influence on DNA synthesis is discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 287 (1927) ◽  
pp. 20200614 ◽  
Author(s):  
Garett P. Slater ◽  
George D. Yocum ◽  
Julia H. Bowsher

In species that care for their young, provisioning has profound effects on offspring fitness. Provisioning is important in honeybees because nutritional cues determine whether a female becomes a reproductive queen or sterile worker. A qualitative difference between the larval diets of queens and workers is thought to drive this divergence; however, no single compound seems to be responsible. Diet quantity may have a role during honeybee caste determination yet has never been formally studied. Our goal was to determine the relative contributions of diet quantity and quality to queen development. Larvae were reared in vitro on nine diets varying in the amount of royal jelly and sugars, which were fed to larvae in eight different quantities. For the middle diet, an ad libitum quantity treatment was included. Once adults eclosed, the queenliness was determined using principal component analysis on seven morphological measurements. We found that larvae fed an ad libitum quantity of diet were indistinguishable from commercially reared queens, and that queenliness was independent of the proportion of protein and carbohydrate in the diet. Neither protein nor carbohydrate content had a significant influence on the first principle component 1 (PC1), which explained 64.4% of the difference between queens and workers. Instead, the total quantity of diet explained a significant amount of the variation in PC1. Large amounts of diet in the final instar were capable of inducing queen traits, contrary to the received wisdom that queen determination can only occur in the third instar. These results indicate that total diet quantity fed to larvae may regulate the difference between queen and worker castes in honeybees.


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