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Bimodal cue complex signifies suitable oviposition sites to gravid females of the common green bottle fly
Author(s) -
Brodie Bekka,
Gries Regine,
Martins Alysha,
VanLaerhoven Sherah,
Gries Gerhard
Publication year - 2014
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 - 10.1111/eea.12238
Subject(s) - carrion , biology , semiochemical , attraction , nonanal , dimethyl trisulfide , zoology , calliphora vicina , black fly , botany , calliphoridae , food science , sex pheromone , chemistry , philosophy , linguistics , sulfur , organic chemistry , larva , dimethyl disulfide
Abstract Gravid females of the common green bottle fly, L ucilia sericata M eigen ( D iptera: C alliphoridae), readily locate recently deceased vertebrates as oviposition sites, particularly when these animals have been injured. We investigated semiochemical and visual cues that mediate attraction of gravid females to fresh rat carrion. Female flies were more strongly attracted to incised rat carrion than to intact carrion. They were also attracted to Porapak Q headspace volatile ( HSV ) extract of incised rat carrion. Analyzing aliquots of Porapak Q HSV extract by gas chromatographic‐electroantennographic detection revealed nine components [phenol, para ‐ and/or meta ‐cresol (could not be separated), guaiacol, dimethyl trisulfide ( DMTS ), phenylacetaldehyde, ( E )‐2‐octenal, nonanal, and tetramethyl pyrazine] that consistently elicited responses from blow fly antennae. In laboratory experiments, a synthetic blend of these nine components was as attractive to gravid females as Porapak Q HSV extract, but blend attractiveness was due entirely to DMTS . In both laboratory and field experiments, increasing doses of DMTS attracted increasingly more flies. Coupled with DMTS , carrion‐type color cues (dark red, black) were more effective than bright color cues (white, yellow) in attracting flies. In field experiments, dark traps baited with DMTS captured a total of 214 calliphorid flies (200 L .  sericata , 10 L ucilia illustris M eigen, three C alliphora vicina R obineau‐ D esvoidy, one C alliphora vomitoria L .), all of which were gravid females. These results support the conclusion that DMTS and dark color represent a bimodal cue complex that signifies suitable oviposition sites to gravid calliphorid females, particularly L . sericata .

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