Gomaa, H. (2010). BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY AND ENHANCEMENT OF SILK YIELD PRODUCED BY Bombyx mori L. LARVAE FED ON MULBERRY LEAVES FORTIFIED WITH ROYAL JELLY. Journal of Plant Protection and Pathology, 1(10), 837-844. doi: 10.21608/jppp.2010.86948
H. A. Gomaa. "BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY AND ENHANCEMENT OF SILK YIELD PRODUCED BY Bombyx mori L. LARVAE FED ON MULBERRY LEAVES FORTIFIED WITH ROYAL JELLY". Journal of Plant Protection and Pathology, 1, 10, 2010, 837-844. doi: 10.21608/jppp.2010.86948
Gomaa, H. (2010). 'BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY AND ENHANCEMENT OF SILK YIELD PRODUCED BY Bombyx mori L. LARVAE FED ON MULBERRY LEAVES FORTIFIED WITH ROYAL JELLY', Journal of Plant Protection and Pathology, 1(10), pp. 837-844. doi: 10.21608/jppp.2010.86948
Gomaa, H. BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY AND ENHANCEMENT OF SILK YIELD PRODUCED BY Bombyx mori L. LARVAE FED ON MULBERRY LEAVES FORTIFIED WITH ROYAL JELLY. Journal of Plant Protection and Pathology, 2010; 1(10): 837-844. doi: 10.21608/jppp.2010.86948
BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY AND ENHANCEMENT OF SILK YIELD PRODUCED BY Bombyx mori L. LARVAE FED ON MULBERRY LEAVES FORTIFIED WITH ROYAL JELLY
Plant Protection Department, Faculty of Agriculture, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt
Abstract
Nutritional values of mulberry leaves greatly affected growth and development of the commercial silk worm, Bombyx mori L. larvae and in turn silk production. Therefore, larvae of the last two instars were fed on treated leaves by dipping them in royal jelly solution at the rate of 5 g in 200 ml distilled water before offering them to larvae as food. This treatment increased the weights of the fourth and fifth instar larvae, weights of fresh cocoons, pupae, cocoon shell and reeled silk filament. The weights of ingested and digested treated mulberry leaves as well as approximate digestibility and efficiency of conversion of ingested and digested food to body substances in the fourth and fifth instar larvae were also increased as compared with those of larvae fed on untreated mulberry leaves. Feeding the last two instar larvae on treated leaves elicits favourable response in improving the commercial quantities of silk fibre and can be used in Sericulture for yield enhancement.