Y. Kimura et S. Masaki, HOURGLASS AND OSCILLATOR EXPRESSIONS OF PHOTOPERIODIC DIAPAUSE RESPONSE IN THE CABBAGE MOTH MAMESTRA-BRASSICAE, Physiological entomology, 18(3), 1993, pp. 240-246
Both oscillator and hourglass features are found in the photoperiodic
response that controls the pupal winter diapause of Mamestra brassicae
. The expression of oscillatory response to extended long-night cycles
is temperature dependent, i.e. circadian resonance appears at 23 and
25-degrees-C but not at 20 and 28-degrees-C. At 20-degrees-C, scanning
of extended scotophases by a short light pulse does not reveal any cl
ear circadian rhythmicity. However, a circadian feature of the photope
riodic response is indicated even at 20-degrees-C by a bistability phe
nomenon, i.e. either one of the two dark periods in symmetrical skelet
on photoperiods determines the diapause response depending on the phas
e angle with the preceding (entraining) light-dark cycles. At 20 and 2
5-degrees-C, the incidence of diapause increases as a function of the
number of light - dark cycles regardless of the cycle length (T), if T
is 24 h or 2 x 24 h (with a 12 h light period). A non-diel cycle (T =
36 h) is less effective, suggesting that disturbance of the circadian
organization partly impairs the diapause-inducing function. The induc
tive effect of a long night is largely affected by temperature, and be
comes saturated with eight cycles at 20-degrees-C and 14 cycles at 25-
degrees-C. Presumably, an hourglass mechanism measures the dark time,
and a circadian component involved in some later sequence of the photo
periodic response may or may not be expressed depending on the mode of
interaction between them.