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Mating effects on the feeding and locomotion of the German cockroach, Blattella germanica
Authors:HOW-JING LEE  YEN-LI WU
Institution:Department of Plant Pathology and Entomology, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Abstract:Abstract. Feeding cycles and daily locomotory patterns of the German cockroach, Blattella germanica L. (Dictyoptera: Blattellidae), were correlated with the ovarian development cycle. To meet the nutrient requirement for ovarian development, females increased feeding before forming oothecae. Locomotory activity also increased when females became sexually receptive. All these activities reached a peak just before the formation of oothecae. Ovarian development ceased and locomotion and food consumption decreased during pregnancy. Both mated and virgin females showed similar reproductive cycles, but those of mated females were more precisely timed (intervals between successive oothecae, and pregnancy duration, were 5 ± 0.6 and 17 ± 0.6 days, respectively). However, the intervals between successive oothecae of virgin females were longer and less synchronized. During this longer interval, feeding took place immediately following the discharge of the ootheca, but locomotory activity increased 5 days later when females became sexually receptive. Mated females increased locomotory activities 1 or 2 days before the end of pregnancy, presumably searching for deposition sites for oothecae. Female adults were found to exhibit a daily nocturnal locomotory pattern. However, under the physiological demands of reproduction, the pattern could be changed, for example by increasing activity during photophase when females were sexually receptive. The physiological effects of reproduction override the control of the daily locomotory pattern by its diel clock.
Keywords:Reproduction cycle  sexually receptive  food consumption  locomotion  German cockroach              Blattella germanica
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