Glycerol accumulation and water content in larvae of Limenitis archippus: Their importance to winter survival |
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Authors: | Vasilios H Frankos Austin P Platt |
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Institution: | Department of Biological Sciences, University of Maryland Baltimore County, 5401 Wilkens Avenue, Catonsville, Maryland 21228, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Half-grown (third instar) larvae of the viceroy butterfly enter facultative winter diapause in response to short-day photoperiod after constructing tubular silk hibernacula in the basal portions of partly eaten willow leaves. Larval water content soon decreases from 80% to about 55%. No detectable quantities of glycerol occur in diapausing larvae maintained at room temperature. Subjection to cold and freezing temperatures causes high levels of glycerol to accumulate (up to 1.9 M or 7.8 g%) within the larvae. These metabolic changes probably lower the supercooling points of the larval fluids and retard both nucleative and inoculative freezing. Diapause termination is not photoperiod dependent, but involves an increase in water content and glycerol breakdown. An unidentified enzyme possibly removes the phosphate group from α-glycerophosphate, thus forming glycerol in the diapausing larvae. |
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Keywords: | To whom reprint requests should be addressed |
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