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Host odours enhance the responses of adult Rhyzopertha dominica to male‐produced aggregation pheromone
Author(s) -
Bashir T.,
Birkinshaw L.A.,
Hall D.R.,
Hodges R.J.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
entomologia experimentalis et applicata
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.765
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1570-7458
pISSN - 0013-8703
DOI - 10.1046/j.1570-7458.2001.00912.x
Subject(s) - olfactometer , bostrichidae , pheromone , biology , attraction , host (biology) , green leaf volatiles , sex pheromone , odor , botany , pest analysis , horticulture , toxicology , zoology , ecology , herbivore , philosophy , linguistics , neuroscience
The behavioural responses of adult male and female Rhyzopertha dominica (Coleoptera, Bostrichidae) to blends of host volatiles and male‐produced aggregation pheromone were observed in a four‐arm airflow olfactometer. The odour sources used were five pheromone‐releasing males each on a single maize grain (lower maize‐volatiles blend), five pheromone‐releasing males on 500 g of maize (higher maize‐volatiles blend) or the host volatiles emanating from 500g of maize (maize volatiles alone). Multiple‐choice tests, in which volatiles from all three odour sources were presented in the exposure chamber at the same time, were used to study odour preferences of the males and females. Both sexes showed strongest attraction to the higher maize volatile blend but there were significant sex differences in response to the odour sources. Males spent significantly more time than females in the zone with only maize volatiles, and females spent significantly more time in the higher maize‐volatiles zone. However, when odour sources were offered singly, females gave numerically greater responses than males to all sources although this difference was statistically significant for only the lower maize‐volatiles blend. As males are more attracted than females to host odours alone it is suggested that they may be more highly adapted to seek out new hosts while females are more inclined to locate a food source by following the pheromone signals produced by males. However, both sexes responded most strongly to the odour source comprising aggregation pheromone with the higher proportion of maize volatiles.

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