By G. O. BEDFORD
Australian Journal of Zoology, 1970, 18: 155-169
Summary
Development of the egg of D. violescens commences as nuclei multiply and congregate at the posterior pole (stage 1A). A germ disk then forms which elongates and becomes segmented as it turns anticlockwise on the surface of the yolk. Anatrepsis is completed when the tail end of the embryo reaches almost halfway to the anterior pole on the micropylar side of the egg. Katatrepsis commences as the embryo moves head-first around the posterior pole and continues to differentiate. The process is completed when the head of the pharate first-instar nymph comes to rest beneath the operculum at the anterior pole of the egg.
Eggs kept at a constant warm temperature enter first diapause when there are numerous nuclei at the posterior pole (stage 1A of embryology), and if held under these conditions for a prolonged period they may emerge from diapause irregularly and continue development.
In the field eggs develop continuously but slowly, suggesting that
diapause and embryogenesis may proceed together at temperatures favourable
to both.