Just because you type a few key words into a search engine doesn't mean what you pull up is relevant. Bombyx diapause is related to day length experienced by the adult moth which has eyes and, if you've ever kept them, the eggs don't hatch without a cold period. I imainge all your other examples are also off track as well.As for talking to an entomologist, you apparently have no understanding of entomology or you'd realize it's a massive field and entomologists specialize and only those specializing in orthopteroid insects would have anything but very basic knowledge of mantids.
Orin,
Let me quote from page 309 of the
Encyclopedia of Insects (Resh and Cardé, 2003). Which, by the way, is a well respected publication and was emphatically recommended to me by an Entomologist acquaintance of mine:
"The best understood hormonal mechanism regulating embryonic diapause is based on the silkworm. In this species diapause intercedes early during embryogenesis, just before segmentation. The development fate of the embryo is determined by the presence or absence of diapause hormone (DH), a neuropeptide secreted by the mother's subesophageal ganglion. In the presence of DH, the ovariole produces eggs that enter diapause, and when the hormone is not present the eggs develop without the interruption of diapause. Whether the mother releases DH is dependent upon the photoperiod she was exposed to as an embryo. Thus, the mother's photoperiodic history dictates whether she will release the DH needed to influence the diapause fate of her progeny."
I will also quote page 166 of
Insect Hormones by H. Frederik Nijhout:
"The control of embryonic diapause has been best studied in the Chinese silkworm
Bombyx mori. Some races of
Bombyx have an obligatory embryonic diapause, and thus have only one generation per year; they are univoltine. The embryos of other races of
Bombyx, however, undergo a facultative diapause, and such races can have more than one generation each year. Whether or not an embryo from such a race will enter diapause depends on the photoperiod that its mother experienced while she herself was an embryo."
In regards to the eyes being used to gather photoperiodic information, let me provide a quote from page 308 of the
Encyclopedia of Insects (Resh and Cardé, 2003):
"Photoperiodic information is perceived through a receptor in the brain, integrated and stored in the brain, and then translated into endocrine events that control the induction and maintenance of diapause. The location of the photoreceptor responsible for the measurement of daylength has been studied in relatively few insects, but in most of them the compound eyes and ocelli are not the conduit for this information. Surgical destruction of these visual centers or coating the eyes with an opaque paint usually does not interfere with the photoreception involved in the programming of diapause. The photoperiodic signal appears to impinge directly on the brain, but the exact location of these extraretinal photoreceptors has not been elucidated."
Finally, a quote from page 158 of
The Insects by Gullan and Cranston:
"Insects can detect day-length or night-length changes (photoperiod stimuli), sometimes with extreme accuracy, through brain photoreceptors rather than compound eye or ocelli. The insect brain also stores the programing for diapause..."
Yes, I have raised
Bombyx mori and, if I can recall from experiences 40+ years ago, the ones I raised needed the eggs to be chilled for a while. But clearly that is not always the case based on the information I have provided here. I suspect your information saying the "Bombyx diapause is related to day length experienced by the adult moth which has eyes" is incorrect. What basis do you have for challenging my other examples?
I very well understand that entomology covers an expansive and growing list of species with specialization the most common path taken by those that pursue it. I considered a career as an Entomologist many years ago. But, to your point, insects in the Order
Orthoptera are not the only insects that take cues from the photoperiod. They are not the only insects that implement diapause. While the molecular mechanisms of diapause are varied and not well understood, the environmental cues are and I suspect most entomologist have at least a basic understanding of those cues since diapause is covered in even the most basic classroom textbooks. You don't need to be a mantid expert to know that mantids breathe through spiracles.
Scott