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SILKING BEHAVIOR OF THE GYPSY MOTH, PORTHETRIA DISPAR

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

David E. Leonard
Affiliation:
The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, New Haven

Abstract

After feeding, gypsy moth larvae construct a silk mat (resting mat) on which they remain. Prior to molting, this mat is reinforced, or a new, dense mat is constructed (molting mat). Late in the last larval instar, a sparse cocoon is constructed. When larvae are starved, a shift in behavior is noted, with increased locomotion, irritability, and the trailing of a strand of silk as larvae wander. First-instar larvae, quiescent and anchored on resting mats, are not readily induced to spin down on silk threads; hence are not readily dispersed by wind. Hungry first-instar larvae, more apt to be spinning down, are presumed to be more readily dispersed by wind. Larvae which undergo an additional instar have a longer prefeeding phase and might be more readily dispersed than "normal' larvae. The effects of hunger may also cause the shift in diel periodicity of mid- and late-instar larvae, resulting in some dispersal of these larvae away from areas where food will be depleted.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1967

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References

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