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The integument of the Queensland fruit fly,Ddacus tryoni (Frogg.)
Authors:Dr. Jeremy J. T. Evans
Affiliation:(1) School of Biological Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia;(2) Department of Zoology, University of Melbourne, Parkville N. 2, Victoria, Australia
Abstract:Summary During the pupal stage of Dacus tryoni, the hypodermis of the larva is replaced by an imaginal generation of smaller cells. The hypodermal cells of the tergal glands on the fifth abdominal segment of the adult were examined with the electron microscope; they contain slender, membrane-limited bundles of hollow wax filaments that traverse the cuticle in branched pore canals. Outside the glandular areas, the pore canals are narrower. The cuticle of the adult undergoes its greatest increase in thickness soon after emergence; it becomes sclerotized gradually. No epicuticle was detected with either the light or electron microscopes.Early in adult development, bristles are formed over the general surface of the terga. Most of these are innervated by single, bipolar nerve cells, and have more or less enlarged trichogen cells that appear to secrete wax through pore-plates in the cuticle. The bristles in different regions of the abdomen range in function from pure sensory receptors to pure secretors. The sensory bristles on the tergal glands were examined with the electron microscope.For assistance with the electron microscopy, I thank Mr. Tony Webber and Miss Ann Miller of the Electron Microscopy Unit at Sydney University. — Supported by a C.S.I.R.O. Junior Post-Graduate Studentship.
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