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Female reproductive system of the decapitating fly Pseudacteon wasmanni Schmitz (Diptera: Phoridae)
Authors:Zacaro Adilson A  Porter Sanford D
Affiliation:a Departamento de Biologia, UNESP, CP 199, CEP 13506-900, Rio Claro, SP, Brazil;b USDA-ARS, CMAVE, P.O. Box 14565, Gainesville, FL 32604, USA
Abstract:Pseudacteon wasmanni is a South American decapitating fly that parasitizes workers of Solenopsis fire ants. We used light microscopy (historesin serial-sectioning stained with Haematoxylin/Eosin) and scanning electron microscopy to show and analyze internal and whole external views of the female reproductive system. All specimens analyzed (n=9) by light microscopy showed post-vitellogenic oocytes inside the ovaries. The lack of typical follicles (oocyte-nurse cell complexes) in all specimens suggests that oogenesis occurs during the pupal stage. The total number of eggs found ranged from 31 to 280 (X=142±73, SD). The egg has a slugform or torpedo shape (about 130 by 20 μm) with a pointed apex at the posterior pole as defined by the fly; the micropyle appears to be in a depression or invagination at the anterior pole. An acute hypodermic-like ovipositor is evaginated from the hard sclerotized external genitalia during egg laying. The existence of a muscular bulb associated with the end of the common oviduct suggests that the egg is injected into the ant's body by a strong contraction of the bulb which probably is stimulated by bending of several ventral sensilla. During contraction, the abdomen extends out along a large fold between the sixth and seventh tergites in such a way that the sclerotized genitalia is rotated ventrally into a slightly anterior orientation in preparation for oviposition.
Keywords:Ovary   Fire ant   Solenopsis   Biocontrol   Ovipositor   Brazil
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