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Glycerol and glucose accumulation during diapause in a tropical beetle
Author(s) -
PULLIN A. S.,
WOLD A H.
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
physiological entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.693
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1365-3032
pISSN - 0307-6962
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-3032.1993.tb00451.x
Subject(s) - diapause , biology , glycerol , hibernation (computing) , temperate climate , carbohydrate , zoology , ecology , biochemistry , larva , state (computer science) , algorithm , computer science
. Carbohydrate changes were measured during the 10‐month adult diapause in the neotropical beetle, Stenotarsus rotundus Arrow (Endomychidae, Coleoptera) to test the hypothesis that metabolic suppression causes the accumulation of polyols in the absence of the need for cold tolerance. Glycerol and glucose both accumulate during the first 3 months from June to September, but decline in October, accumulate again in December‐January and finally decline after January and stay low until the adults leave their diapause site in April. Any adaptive significance for this pattern is unknown but its coincidence with previously measured metabolic suppression suggests that glycerol and glucose accumulate as a result of metabolic adjustments during diapause. The relevance of these results to the evolution of polyol accumulation for cryoprotection in temperate insects in discussed.

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