RESUMEN
Accessory glands of crowd-reared females of Schistocerca gregaria were ligatured from the lateral oviducts. Hatchlings resulting from egg pods laid after the treatment showed a significant shift towards solitarious behaviour as compared to hatchlings from control-treated females. Morphometric measurement of hatchlings revealed no consistent difference between ligatured and control females, however, one ratio (hind femur length/vertex width) was approaching significance. Hatchlings from eggs of crowd-reared females behaved solitariously when freshly laid eggs were washed with a saline solution. Gregarious behaviour could be restored when washed eggs were treated with a saline extract of the accessory glands. The colouration of hatchlings was not affected by any treatment. Our findings implicate the accessory glands in the production, release or activation of the recently reported gregarizing factor found in the egg pod foam [McCaffery, A.R., Simpson, S.J., Islam, M.S., Roessingh, P., 1998. A gregarizing factor present in the egg pod foam of the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria. Journal of Experimental Biology 201, 347-363].