The Role of Minor Pheromone Components in Segregating 14 Species of Longhorned Beetles (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) of the Subfamily Cerambycinae

2019 ◽  
Vol 112 (5) ◽  
pp. 2236-2252 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence M Hanks ◽  
Judith A Mongold-Diers ◽  
Robert F Mitchell ◽  
Yunfan Zou ◽  
Joseph C H Wong ◽  
...  

Abstract We present research on the chemical ecology of 14 species of longhorned beetles (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae), in four tribes of the subfamily Cerambycinae, conducted in east-central Illinois over 8 yr. Adult males produce aggregation-sex pheromones that attract both sexes. Twenty independent field bioassays explored the pheromone chemistry of the species and tested the possible attractive or antagonistic effects of compounds that are not produced by a given species, but are pheromone components of other species. Analyses of beetle-produced volatiles revealed compounds that had not been reported previously from several of the species. The most common pheromone component was (R)-3-hydroxyhexan-2-one, but pheromones of some species included isomers of the related 2,3-hexanediols. Males of the congeners Phymatodes amoenus (Say) and Phymatodes testaceus (L.) produced pure (R)-2-methylbutan-1-ol. Enantiomers of 2-methylbutan-1-ol also proved to be powerful synergists for Megacyllene caryae (Gahan), Sarosesthes fulminans (F.), and Xylotrechus colonus (F.). The major components of pheromone blends were consistently present in collections of headspace volatiles from male beetles, and only the major components were inherently attractive to a subset of species when tested as single components. Minor components of some species acted as powerful synergists, but in other cases appeared not to influence attraction. Among the minor components identified in headspace extracts from males, 2,3-hexanedione and 2-hydroxyhexan-3-one appeared to be analytical artifacts or biosynthetic by-products, and were neither attractants nor synergists. The antagonistic effects of minor compounds produced by heterospecific males suggest that these compounds serve to maintain prezygotic reproductive isolation among some species that share pheromone components.

2012 ◽  
Vol 42 (6) ◽  
pp. 1050-1059 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence M. Hanks ◽  
Jocelyn G. Millar ◽  
Judith A. Mongold-Diers ◽  
Joseph C.H. Wong ◽  
Linnea R. Meier ◽  
...  

We evaluated the attraction of native species of cerambycid beetles to blends of cerambycid pheromones and the host plant volatiles ethanol and α-pinene to determine whether such blends could be effective lures for detecting and monitoring multiple species. The complete six-component blend of pheromones included racemic 3-hydroxy-2-hexanone, 2,3-hexanediol isomers, (E)-6,10-dimethyl-5,9-undecadien-2-ol and the corresponding acetate, 2-(undecyloxy)-ethanol, and racemic 2-methyl-1-butanol. Bioassays in east-central Illinois captured 3070 cerambycid beetles of 10 species, including four species in the subfamily Cerambycinae ( Neoclytus acuminatus (Fabricius, 1775), Neoclytus mucronatus (Fabricius, 1775), Phymatodes lengi Joutel, 1911, and Xylotrechus colonus (Fabricius, 1775)) and six species in the subfamily Laminiae ( Aegomorphus modestus (Gyllenhal in Schoenherr, 1817), Astyleiopus variegatus (Haldeman, 1847), Astylidius parvus (LeConte, 1873), Graphisurus fasciatus (DeGeer, 1775), Lepturges angulatus (LeConte, 1852), and Monochamus carolinensis (Olivier, 1792)). Beetles were attracted to their pheromone components within the blend, with inhibition only evident in one species. Host plant volatiles synergized attraction for some species, and synergism usually was attributed to ethanol, with α-pinene enhancing attraction only for the pine specialist M. carolinensis. The optimal strategy for targeting a broad range of cerambycid species would be to bait traps with a blend of several pheromones plus ethanol and α-pinene because synergism by these plant volatiles is critical for some species, whereas strong inhibition is uncommon.


1985 ◽  
Vol 63 (9) ◽  
pp. 2134-2140 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce W. Brown ◽  
George O. Batzli

The role of competition in free-living populations of tree squirrels was evaluated in two field experiments. (i) Numbers of adult female fox squirrels (Sciurus niger) were manipulated and the response of gray squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis) was monitored. (ii) Supplemental feeding with native mast was used to determine if food was limiting for squirrel populations in east-central Illinois. Although sample sizes were small, a trend towards increased survival and reproduction in supplemented woodlots lent support to the idea that food availability limits squirrel densities during some winters. The manipulation of adult female fox squirrels did not indicate that densities of either fox or gray squirrels could be explained simply by competition. Some dispersion patterns on the larger plots were consistent with competition, but other explanations could not be completely ruled out.


1988 ◽  
Vol 43 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 918-928 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ernst Priesner ◽  
Hermann Bogenschütz ◽  
Christer Löfstedt

The alkenyl acetates E9-12:Ac, Δ11-12:Ac and Zll-14:Ac were identified as minor components of the C. murinana female pheromone blend by chemical analyses of volatile pheromone gland constituents and potential pheromone precursors, electrophysiological recordings from single receptor cells, and field trapping tests. Gland washes from virgin females contained these compounds at 3%, 10% and 5%. respectively, the amount of the primary pheromone component Z9-12:Ac already reported. A 0.3% addition of either Δ11 - 12 : Ac or Z11-14:Ac significantly raised trap captures over Z9-12:Ac alone and a 3-30% addition of either minor component revealed maximum captures, not increased further by including both synergists within the same blend. A functional role of the E9-12: Ac could not be established during this study; 3% of it when combined with the pheromonal ratio mixture of the three other components tended to increase trap captures further whereas in various other mixture combinations the E9-12:Ac strongly reduced captures. These inhibitory effects were more pronounced with attractant blends based on Δ11-14:Ac rather than Δ11-12:Ac. Each blend component activated its own type of antennal receptor cell.


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