Abstract
The eggs ofLocusta migratoria migratorioides, R. & F., increase in size during development. The increase is due to the absorption of water from the surrounding moist soil.The wet weight of a freshly laid egg is 0·0063±0·0008 gms, and of a fully developed egg 0·014±0·002 gms. The dry weight of a freshly laid egg is 0·003± 0·0004 gms. and of a fully developed egg 0·0024±0·0002 gms. The water-content of an egg increases from 51·92±3·53 per cent, of the wet weight in the freshly laid egg to 82·36±2·14 per cent, in the fully developed egg.The egg-wall consists of an exo- and endochorion and a thick vitelline membrane. The latter has a felt-like structure in the freshly laid egg, but as the egg develops, this membrane increases in thickness and acquires a laminated character.The micropylar apparatus consists of a ring of about 35–43 oblique, funnelshaped canals arranged round the egg near its posterior end.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Insect Science,Agronomy and Crop Science,General Medicine
Reference46 articles.
1. Plotnikov V. J. (1926). Insects injurious to cultivated plants in Central Asia. (In Russian.) Tashkent.
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