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Regulation of pheromone production in virgin and mated females of two tortricid moths
Author(s) -
Foster Stephen P.,
Roelofs Wendell L.
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
archives of insect biochemistry and physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.576
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1520-6327
pISSN - 0739-4462
DOI - 10.1002/arch.940250404
Subject(s) - pheromone , biology , sex pheromone , medicine , endocrinology , titer , tortricidae , mating , botany , zoology , lepidoptera genitalia , immunology , antibody
Sex pheromone titers in females of two tortricid moths, Epiphyas postvittana and Planotortrix octo , did not significantly vary between the scotophase and photophase. Pheromone production in these two species is controlled by a factor located in the head of the respective females, probably the pheromone biosynthesis‐activating neuropeptide (PBAN). Unlike that reported for the related tortricid, Argyrotaenia velutinana , the bursa copulatrix in female E. postvittana and P. octo does not appear to contain a factor that stimulates pheromone production. After mating, female E. postvittana permanently shut down pheromone production. In contrast, pheromone titer in mated P. octo females is reduced to a level approximately half that of similar‐age virgins. While the abdominal nervous system is involved in the inactivation of pheromone production in mated E. postvittana females and probably acts to stop release of PBAN from the corpora cardiaca, the abdominal nervous system is not involved in effecting the decreased pheromone titers of mated P. octo females. It is possible that in the latter species, a humoral factor(s) is responsible for effecting the decreased pheromone titers, possibly through affecting the release of PBAN from the corpora cardiaca. Bioassaying head extracts allowed changes in PBAN titer in female E. postvittana to be inferred. PBAN titers remain roughly constant in virgins but increase after mating. This suggests that PBAN is biosynthesized throughout the life of an adult virgin female at approximately the same rate as it is released. Furthermore, it appears that the decline in pheromone titer observed in older E. postvittana females is probably due to a decline in competency of the gland to produce pheromone rather than to a decrease in PBAN titer in older females. © 1994 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.