1,442 research outputs found
Auto-spermatophore extrusion in male crickets
The reproductive cycle of the male cricket consists of
the mating stage and the sexually refractory stage. The
latter is further divided into the first refractory stage
(RS1) from spermatophore extrusion in copulation to
spermatophore preparation after copulation, and the
second refractory stage (RS2) from spermatophore
preparation to recommencement of a calling song. RS2 is
time-fixed and unaffected by the female or by stress, hence
RS2 is assumed to be controlled by the reproductive timer.
Previously, we suggested that the timer is located in the
terminal abdominal ganglion (TAG), because functional
inactivation of the TAG by local cooling lengthened RS2 in
proportion to cooling time. To obtain further evidence
of timer localization and to examine the operation of
the timer in dissected animals, we investigated the
characteristics of auto-spermatophore extrusion, a
phenomenon in which males eject the mature
spermatophore themselves without any prior courtship.
The occurrence of auto-spermatophore extrusion was
100% in dissected males with the TAG separated,
compared to 1.7% in intact males. The time interval
(SPaSE) between spermatophore preparation and autospermatophore
extrusion was comparable to RS2
measured by the calling song. Spike recording from a
genital motor neurone in the separated TAG indicated
that burst discharge associated with auto-spermatophore
extrusion occurred with a SPaSE comparable to RS2.
Other efferent neurones, some of which were identified as
dorsal unpaired median (DUM) neurones, showed a timedependent
spike frequency increase during SPaSE. These
results strengthen our previous conclusion that the
reproductive timer is located within the TAG, and
demonstrate that the timer functions normally even when
the TAG is separated from the central nervous system.</p
The preparation of BP single crystals by high pressure flux method
Single crystals of BP, a III-V compound semiconductor, were obtained by the high pressure flux method. Cu3P and Ni12P5 powders were used as the flux, and mixed with BP powder. Two kinds of mixtures were prepared: (1) 1.8g (BP) + 35 G (Cu3P) and (2) 1.7 g (BP) + 25 g (Ni12P5). They were compressed into pellets, heated at 1300 C for 24 h in an induction furnace under a pressure of 1 MPa using Ar-P2 gas, and slowly cooled to room temperature. In case (1), BP single crystals grew along the (III) plane, and in case (2) they grew as an aggregate of crystallites. The cathodoluminescence spectra of the synthetic BP crystals showed peaks near 680 nm (1.82 eV) for case (1), and 500 nm (2.47 eV) for case (2). By using the high pressure flux method conventional sized crystals were obtained in a relatively short time
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