Larvae of wild type (WT) strain of Chymomyza costata Zetterstedt (Diptera: Drosophilidae) enter diapause (stop developing) in response to short-day signal at a constant 18 ∘ C, whereas larvae of a non-photoperiodic-diapause (NPD) strain do not respond to photoperiodic signalling and continue in larval development irrespective of daylength. The present study shows that WT larvae also respond reliably to thermoperiodic signalling (daily cycles of temperature) under constant darkness, whereas the NPD larvae do not, suggesting that the pathways transducing the environmental token stimuli (photoperiod and thermoperiod) onto the diapause developmental programme might merge functionally in the central biological clock system known to be mutated in NPD strain. Temperature and larval population density modify the output of token stimuli signalling. High temperatures (>24 ∘ C) tend to avert, whereas low temperatures (<18 ∘ C), especially in combination with constant darkness, stimulate diapause induction in WT strain. Overcrowding (>200 larvae per 5 g of larval diet) lengthens the duration of larval development and induces a 'diapause-like' developmental arrest of relatively weak intensity in up to 60% of larvae of both strains. At high temperatures (>30 ∘ C), all WT larvae continue direct development but subsequently die during the pupal stage. Low temperature exposure (<12 ∘ C) causes quiescence in the majority of the larvae of both strains. Starvation blocks development and causes mortality when applied in larvae younger than day 3 of the third instar. Older larvae survive starvation and their photoperiodically-induced developmental pre-programming is not affected. Collectively, the results show that diapause induction in C. costata is a result of various interacting effects of multiple environmental factors.
Pistachio twig borer, Kermania pistaciella is an important pest of pistachio trees. It has an univoltine life-cycle and its larvae tunnel and feed inside pistachio twigs for almost 10 months each year. The last larval instars overwinter inside the twigs. Survival/mortality associated with low temperatures during overwintering stage is currently unknown. We found that overwintering larvae of the Rafsanjan (Iran) population of K. pistaciella rely on maintaining a stably high supercooling capacity throughout the cold season. Their supercooling points (SCPs) ranged between -19.4 and -22.7°C from October to February. Larvae were able to survive 24 h exposures to -15°C anytime during the cold season. During December and January, larvae were undergoing quiescence type of dormancy caused probably by low ambient temperatures and/or changes in host tree physiology (tree dormancy). Larvae attain highest cold tolerance (high survival at -20°C) during dormancy, which offers them sufficient protection against geographically and ecologically relevant cold spells. High cold tolerance during dormancy was not associated with accumulation of any low-molecular mass cryoprotective substances. The SCP sets the limit of cold tolerance in pistachio twig borer, meaning that high mortality of overwintering populations can be expected only in the regions or years where or when the temperatures fall below the average larval SCP (i.e., below -20°C). Partial mortality can be expected also when temperatures repeatedly drop close to the SCP on a diurnal basis.
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