1. Eggs of the blowflyProtophormia spec. were separated into anterior and posterior fragments of varying sizes. The operations were carried out between oviposition and the blastoderm stage. The partial larvae produced by the fragments were scored for the cuticular pattern they had formed. 2. The cuticle of the 1st instar larva carries 11 denticle belts which correspond to the anterior borders of the thoracic and abdominal body segments. These are considered the elements of a linear longitudinal pattern which starts with the head region. 3. Egg fragments of the sizes studied did not produce the complete cuticular pattern. 4. If denticle belts were present on the partial larvae formed in egg fragments, these always included the corresponding terminal pattern element (no. 1 in anterior, no. 11 in posterior fragments). Bigger partial patterns from anterior fragments may have any belt up to no. 10 as their most posterior belt, posterior partial patterns may start anteriorly with any belt up to no. 1, i.e. behind the head region. 5. After fragmentation during early stages of development, all eggs fail to form some pattern elements. Fragmentation thus causes a gap in the pattern. Extent and position within the pattern of this gap depend on level and stage of fragmentation. 6. With increasing egg age (developmental stage) at fragmentation, the gap in the cuticular pattern becomes progressively smaller. Eggs fragmented during or after formation of the blastodermal cell walls as a rule form all pattern elements. 7. The progressive reduction of the gap in the cuticular pattern is due to formation of bigger sets of pattern elements inboth partner fragments. I.e. on the average an anterior or posterior fragment of given size will produce more pattern elements if separated from the rest of the egg at a later stage than if separated early. 8. In order to produce a given set of pattern elements, a fragment needs to be bigger on the average when separated early than when separated later on. This applies to both anteriorand posterior fragments of the fragmentation levels studied. 9. According to these results, the egg ofProtophormia cannot be considered a mosaic of determinants for the different pattern elements at oviposition. The developmental fate of at least the more equatorial egg regions appears to become specified epigenetically during the period between oviposition and blastoderm formation. 10. Once the egg has become subdivided into blastoderm cells, it reacts as a developmental mosaic with respect to the pattern studied. 11. Preliminary results inDrosophila are compatible with these conclusions. 12. The results are compared to those obtained from other insect groups, and formal models for their interpretation are discussed. Pattern specification by interaction of terminal egg regions can be considered the common denominator for a number of egg types. 13. The results demonstrate that formally comparable processes of pattern formation occur in different insect egg types at different stages of development.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00581882DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

pattern elements
24
pattern
18
cuticular pattern
16
pattern formation
12
anterior posterior
12
posterior fragments
12
egg
10
fragments
8
oviposition blastoderm
8
partial larvae
8

Similar Publications

In a novel, on-road study, using a 'Ghost Driver' to emulate an automated vehicle (AV), we captured over 10 hours of video (n = 520) and 64 survey responses documenting the behaviour and attitudes of pedestrians in response to the AV. Three prototype external human-machine interfaces (eHMIs) described the AV's behaviour, awareness and intention using elements of anthropomorphism: High (human face), Low (car motif), Abstract (partial representation of human features that lacked precise visual reference); these were evaluated against a (no eHMI) baseline. Despite many pedestrians reporting that they still relied on vehicular cues to negotiate their crossing, there was a desire/expectation expressed for explicit communication with future AVs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Aims: Sexual trauma is associated with multiple negative health and social conditions, including compulsive sexual behavior. The present study examined network structures involving sexual trauma history, psychological distress (defined as depression and/or anxiety symptoms), substance use, transactional sex, and compulsive sexual behavior. Prior network analysis work in this area is limited.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Theoretical modeling and modal analysis of multi-element coupled transducers.

J Acoust Soc Am

January 2025

National Key Laboratory of Underwater Acoustic Technology, Harbin Engineering University, Harbin 150001, China.

Low-frequency transducers are considerably smaller than the wavelength. When multiple low-frequency transducers are closely packed, they couple with the surrounding water and form a transducer-water-transducer coupling structure called multi-element coupled transducers (MCT). This study presents a theoretical model of the MCT based on radiation and mutual radiation theory and analyzes it under multiple resonance frequencies and vibration modes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Toward a Consistent Framework for Describing the Free Vibration Modes of the Brain.

J Biomech Eng

January 2025

Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA, USA.

Frequency-domain analysis of brain tissue motion has received increased focus in recent years as an approach to describing the response of the brain to impact or vibration sources in the built environment. While researchers in many experimental and numerical studies have sought to identify natural resonant frequencies of the brain, limited description of the associated vibration modes limits comparison of results between studies. We performed a modal analysis to extract the natural frequencies and associated mode shapes of a finite element model of the head.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: The incidence rate of intervertebral disc degeneration (IVDD) is increasing year by year, which brings great harm to our health. The change of biomechanical factors is an important reason for IVDD. Therefore, more and more studies use finite element (FE) models to analyze the biomechanics of spine.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!