Stimulation of oogenesis by proteinaceous adult diets for screwworm, Cochliomyia hominivorax (Diptera : Calliphoridae)

Authors
Citation
L. Hammack, Stimulation of oogenesis by proteinaceous adult diets for screwworm, Cochliomyia hominivorax (Diptera : Calliphoridae), B ENT RES, 89(5), 1999, pp. 433-440
Citations number
42
Categorie Soggetti
Entomology/Pest Control
Journal title
BULLETIN OF ENTOMOLOGICAL RESEARCH
ISSN journal
00074853 → ACNP
Volume
89
Issue
5
Year of publication
1999
Pages
433 - 440
Database
ISI
SICI code
0007-4853(199910)89:5<433:SOOBPA>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
The influence of protein in the adult diet on first cycle gonotrophic devel opment was examined in newly colonized screwworm flies, Cochliomyia hominiv orax (Coquerel), reared on an artificial larval diet and bred in subsequent generations from females stimulated to oviposit only after all individuals in a colony were expected to have matured their eggs. This latter criterio n was established with the goal of reducing selection for early ovarian mat urity and increased autogeny. Under these conditions, supplementing the die t with raw meat during the first week after adult emergence hastened egg ma turation by two to four days or more, increased the percentage of seven- to ten-day-old females that was gravid by 45%, and boosted the number of eggs per gravid female by c. 30%. The serous discharge from screwworm-infested sheep wounds, a casein-salt mixture, or casein in potassium hydroxide was a s effective as raw meat. Addition of B vitamins to the casein-salt mixture was without further effect. The measures taken to reduce selection for alte red gonotrophic development were not critically evaluated here, but they ap peared successful in that age and protein affected ovarian maturation rates similarly in F-2 and F-27. Fecundity measured as eggs matured per gravid f emale differed between generations, but appeared correlated with size diffe rences that were unrelated to colonization duration.