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Studies on certain aspects of the neuromuscular physiology of insects

It is well known that high potassium ion concentrations depolarize nervous tissue and it has been suggested that the nerve sheath surrounding the peripheral nerves of insects serves as a protective barrier for the exclusion of potassium ions, in the haemolymph, from the immediate environment of axons. Further it is known that the concentration of potassium ions in the haemolymph of phytophagous insects is far higher than that in predatory forms; this has led to the suggestion that the nerve sheath in plant feeding insects should be more highly developed than that of entomophagous insects. In this work the structure of the nerve sheath in phytophagous and predatory insects has been studied and this assumption has been shown to be groundles. However, preliminary experiments on the effects of ions and drugs on the peripheral nerves of phytophagous and predatory insects have shown that there is a definite difference in susceptibility between the nerves of these two forms and this has led to the postulate of a diffusion barrier beneath the level of the nerve sheath, which is more highly developed in phytophagous than in predatory forms. The properties of this second barrier are discussed. Part 1. / During the course of the work which has been described in Part 1- an outbreak of large saturniid moths Nudaurelia cytherea capensis Stoll.) occurred in the Grahamstown area. It was felt that an investigation into the properties of the flight motor of this moth, which has an extremely low wing beat frquency, might be rewarding as our knowledge of the flight motor in insects is limited to those with very much higher wing beat frequencies than that of this moth. The anatomy, innervation and histology of the flight muscles of Nudaurelia are described and it is shown that the flight motor of this moth is functionally different to that of other insects which have been investigated. Further, Nudaurelia shows a characteristic warm-up fluttering of the wings prior to flight - this phenomenon has also been examined in the following investigation. This study has yielded information about the location of a warm-up centre in the central nervous system of this moth. Part 2.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:rhodes/vital:5866
Date January 1963
CreatorsMoran, V. C. (V. Cliff)
PublisherRhodes University, Faculty of Science, Zoology and Entomology
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis, Masters, MSc
Format140 p., pdf
RightsMoran, V. C. (V. Cliff)

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