2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
SHAMIM AKHTER CHOUDHARY

In the present study, an attempt was made to study the effect of plant extract on Sexual behaviour of Mutant Strain (Curled) of Drosophila melanogaster. The LC50 has been estimated with 1% of the food media. The virgin females and males were isolated and fed with normal food media for three days. Then sub-lethal concentrations of 0.625 μl / 100 ml food, 1.2 μl /100 ml food, 2.5μl /100 / food of nicotine were mixed in food medium and allowed in flies to feed for two days. Then appropriate combination of untreated / treated males and females were introduced into the mating chamber. Courtship latency, mating latency and copulation duration were studied. After observation of the behaviour, mated flies were allowed to produce progeny. The sexual behaviour of bachelor male and virgin female obtained in the progeny was also studied. The pooled data were analyzed by student t-test and the result indicates p-value significant at 0.05 levels. The courtship latency was affected by in treatment but it is neither dose dependent nor sex dependent.


2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-176
Author(s):  
Mohammad Shamimul Alam ◽  
Md Nazmul Hoque ◽  
Mousumi Akter ◽  
Reza Md Shahjahan

Samples of Drosophila species were collected from some selected sites (viz., Dohar Upazila of Dhaka Division, Hironpoint of the Sundarbans, Satchori of Sylhet Division) of Bangladesh and these were cultured in the laboratory to study developmental stages, external morphological traits and sex comb. They were identified as D. melanogaster, D. ananassae and D. bipectinata. The sex comb teeth number and arrangement were distinct for all three species. D. melanogaster had one row of 10 - 11 teeth in the sex comb. D. ananassae had eight rows of teeth in the sex comb possessing 32 - 33 teeth in total. D. bipectinata had 2 - 3 rows of teeth in the sex comb and total teeth number varied from 11 to 15. Among three species, sex comb teeth number of D. bipectinata varied most. Eleven different patterns (n=20) in sex comb were observed in D. bipectinata indicating significant diversity within species. Variation in pupation sites among three species was also observed in the laboratory condition. D. bipectinata pupated on the food medium, whereas other two species pupated on the vial wall. Thus, diversity among these three species of Drosophila was documented which could be utilized as bioindicator in future. Dhaka Univ. J. Biol. Sci. 28(2): 167-176, 2019 (July)


1972 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 115-135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann Louise Belt ◽  
Barrie Burnet

SUMMARYThe melanotic tumour gene tu-C4 in Drosophila melanogaster shows incomplete dominance, together with variable penetrance and expressivity. It is tentatively located in the region of locus 52–53 on the third chromosome. Tumour formation in mutant homozygotes involves a precocious haemocyte transformation leading to the appearance of lamellocytes at the beginning of the third larval instar. These aggregate to form tumour-like masses which subsequently melanize. The process of tumour formation is in broad outline similar to that found in other tumour strains. Melanotic tumour formation is treated as a dichotomous threshold character, assuming an underlying normal distribution of liability relative to a fixed threshold. The expression of the tumour gene can be influenced by the levels of protein, phospholipid, nucleic acid and carbohydrate in the larval food medium, and changes in dominance and penetrance induced by sub-optimal environments deficient in these nutrients are positively correlated. Reinforcement by selection of the dominance relations of tu-C4 was accompanied by correlated changes in penetrance. Conversely, selection for increased penetrance was accompanied by correlated changes in dominance. Dominance and penetrance, it is concluded, are fundamentally related aspects of tumour gene expression. Recruitment of dominance modifiers linked to the tumour gene was excluded by the mating scheme employed, and the observed changes in dominance relations in response to selection were due largely to modifiers located on the second chromosome. Changes in dominance relations produced by selection could be significantly reinforced, or reversed, by environmental factors and consequently show a substantial genotype – environment interaction effect. These facts are relevant to current theories of dominance evolution.


1970 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 239-244
Author(s):  
MM Husain ◽  
MR Hasan

Effect of malathion on treated food medium was studied on adult and 1st, 2nd and 3rd instar larvae of Tribolium castaneum. The LD50 for the instars was 228.22, 78.13 and 183.01 ppm, respectively. The rate of mortality increased with increasing concentrations. Toxicity probably depended on the ingestion of the treated food medium. Bangladesh J. Sci. Ind. Res. 41(3-4), 239-244, 2006


2019 ◽  
Vol 113 (1) ◽  
pp. 181
Author(s):  
Špela MODIC ◽  
Primož ŽIGON ◽  
Jaka RAZINGER

The Spotted-wing drosophila (SWD), <em>Drosophila suzukii</em> (Matsumura, 1931) (Diptera, Drosophilidae) was recorded for the first time in Slovenia in autumn 2010. Shortly thereafter, it turned out to be one of the most important insect pests of soft and stone fruit in Slovenia and elsewhere. Within the expert work in the field of plant protection, more precisely within task inventarisation of beneficial organisms for biological control, the presence of indigenous <em>D. suzukii</em> parasitoids was investigated in 2018. Sentinel traps baited with <em>D. suzukii</em> larvae and pupae in banana slices enriched with artificial food medium for drosophilids were used for inventorying <em>D. suzukii</em> parasitoids in raspberries. The pupal parasitoid<em> Trichopria drosophilae </em>(Perkins, 1910)<em> </em>(Hymenoptera: Diapriidae) and the larval parasitoid <em>Leptopilina heterotoma </em>(Thompson, 1862)<em> </em>(Hymenoptera: Figitidae)<em> </em>were recorded parasitizing <em>D. suzukii</em>for the first time in Slovenia in August 2018 in Central Slovenia (Ljubljana).<p> </p><p> </p><p> </p>


1970 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
MM Husain ◽  
M Munsur Rahman

Repellent response of Bhat (Clerodendron viscosum L) to adult and larvae of Tribolium castaneum was studied. Results indicated that both the adults and larvae were repelled by contact with food medium treated with Bhat leaf dust conditioned with 100, 500, 1000 and 2000 ppm of flour. Bangladesh J. Sci. Ind. Res. 41(1-2), 67-72, 2006


1958 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 146-147 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Rivard

This technique was developed to discover whether a tyroglyphid mite, Tyrophagus castellanii Hirst, was feeding on moulds growing on a food medium rather than on the food medium itself. Later on the technique was also found satisfactory for obtaining, under controlled temperature and humidity conditions, individual development records for all stages of the life-cycle of the mite.


1951 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 234-239 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. J. Arnason ◽  
R. L. Irwin ◽  
J. W. T. Spinks

X-chromosomes of P32-treated wild-type Drosophila melanogaster were tested for the presence of recessive lethal mutations. Treated larvae were reared in food medium containing initially 6.5, 32.5, 65.0, or 162.5 mrd. P32 per ml. Of 838 tested chromosomes 42 had recessive lethals. The frequency of mutation was roughly proportional to P32 content of the food. An initial concentration of 18.8 mrd. P32 in larval food is expected to produce about the same frequency of recessive lethal mutations as is obtained with 1000 r. of X rays applied to mature sperm. A fly reared in medium having an initial concentration of 32.5 mrd. per ml. receives, prior to mating, a calculated total radiation dose of 0.62 gram roentgens. At this dosage 4.2% recessive lethals were recorded. For equivalent amounts of ionization P32 is here apparently 2.3 times as effective as X rays.


1979 ◽  
Vol 83 (2) ◽  
pp. 239-250 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. H. THOMAS ◽  
ERIK SKADHAUGE

White Leghorn laying hens were maintained on commercial poultry food (medium-Na+ diet) and fresh water. Birds maintained on a high-Na+ diet received, in addition, 10 ml 9% (w/v) NaCl/kg by stomach load for 2 days before the perfusion experiments. Some birds on each dietary Na+ level also received aldosterone injections (60 μg/kg per day, i.m.) for 2 days before the perfusion experiments. The lumen of the coprodeum and colon of anaesthetized birds was perfused with solutions resembling ureteral urine, with systematically varied Na+, NH4+, Cl− and osmotic concentrations. Aldosterone enhanced net Na+ absorption (JNa) and associated net Cl− absorption and K+ secretion, and induced (in birds on medium-but not on high-Na+ diets) the appearance of a saturable JNa component dependent on the luminal concentration of Na+. Aldosterone enhanced net absorption of NH4+ and decreased the transmural potential difference in birds on a high-Na+ diet only; water and phosphate fluxes were not affected. Disparities between aldosterone- and Na+-depletion-induced effects suggested that one or more factors (in addition to aldosterone) are involved in the normal mediation of the responses of the lower intestine of the domestic fowl to varied Na+ intake.


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