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Activity patterns in pregnant tsetse flies, Glossina morsitans
Authors:JOHN BRADY  GABRIELLA GIBSON
Affiliation:Department of Pure and Applied Biology, Imperial College of Science and Technology, London
Abstract:ABSTRACT. Actograph measurements of the spontaneous flight activity of isolated female Glossina morsitans morsitans Westw. were made through their first two pregnancy cycles in constant conditions under LD 12:12. Activity fell from a mean of c. 20 units/day to near zero during the 24 h preceding the day on which larvipositionoccurred. Activity on the day of larviposition rose significantly, to c. 35 units/day, then fell back to the baseline 20 units on subsequent days. The circadian pattern of activity was changed markedly by larviposition: 48 h before it, activity in the morning peak of the usual V-shaped diel pattern was twice normal; over 70% of the flies then fed, and the evening arm of their V disappeared; 24 h before larviposition, most flies were totally inactive, the few that did fly performing only 1 or 2 units/day, and only in the first and last hours of the photophase; on the day of larviposition, the morning peak of the V was reduced by c. 70%, and activity peaked instead during the post-noon 2–3 h, before and during the act of parturition. Almost all larvipositions occurred between noon and lights-out. It is suggested that the c. 48 h of pre-larviposition quiescence may play a role in the fact that pregnant G. morsitans females often survive non-residual aerosol insecticide campaigns.
Keywords:Glossina morsitans    tsetse fly    circadian rhythms    activity level    behaviour    oviposition    larviposition    insecticide avoidance
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