Page:Insects - Their Ways and Means of Living.djvu/314

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.


While the larval tissues are undergoing dissolution, the adult tissues are being built up from those groups of dormant cells, the histoblasts, that have retained their vitality. Whatever it is that produces histolysis in the defunct larval tissues, it bas no effect on the regenerative tissues, which now begin a period of active development, or histogenesis (i.e., tissue building), which results in the completion of the adult organs. In most of the organs the two processes, histolysis and histogenesis, are com- plemental to each other, the new tissues spreading as the old are dissolved, so that there is never a lack of con- tinuity in the parts undergoing reconstruction. It is only in the muscles, as we have already observed, that the old tissues are destroyed before the new ones are formed. Because of the high physiological activity (rnembolism) going on within the pupa, the blood of the insect at this stage becomes filled with a great quantity of matter sulting from the dissolution of the larval tissues. During the pupal period, the insect takes no food nor does it discharge any waste materials--the substance of the growing tissues is derived from the débris of those degen- erating. But the transformation is hOt all direct. The insect is provided with an organ for converting some of the products of histolysis into proteid compounds that can be utilized by the tissues in histogenesis. This organ is thefa?-body (see Chapter IV and Figure 158). During the larval lire the ceIls of the fat body store up large quantities of fat, and in some insects glycogen, both of which energy-forming substances are discharged into the blood at the beginning of the pupal period. And now the fat cells become also active agents in the conversion of histolytic products into proteid bodies, probably by enzymes g?ven off from their nuclei. These proteid bodies are finally also discharged into the blood, where they are absorbed as nutriment by the tissues of the newly-formed organs. At the close of the pupal period, the fat-body itself is often almost entirely consumed or

[ ?6o ]


PLATE