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Semiochemical attractants for the beech leaf‐mining weevil, O rchestes fagi
Author(s) -
Silk P.J.,
Mayo P.D.,
LeClair G.,
Brophy M.,
Pawlowski S.,
MacKay C.,
Hillier N.K.,
Hughes C.,
Sweeney J.D.
Publication year - 2017
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.12603
Subject(s) - beech , weevil , botany , biology , attraction , horticulture , sex pheromone , pest analysis , boll weevil , linguistics , philosophy
Abstract The beech leaf‐mining weevil, O rchestes fagi L. ( C urculionidae: C urculioninae: R hamphini), a pest of European beech, F agus sylvatica L. ( F agaceae), was recently discovered infesting American beech, F agus grandifolia Ehrh., in Nova Scotia, Canada. Adult O .  fagi feed on both young and mature leaves of beech as well as on other species (e.g., raspberry, R ubus spp.), but oviposition and larval feeding are restricted to beech. Females oviposit in young developing beech leaves at the time of bud burst. We characterized volatiles emitted from buds, leaves, and sapwood of American beech and examined their potential as attractants alone or when combined with other weevil pheromones for O .  fagi . We predicted that adults would be attracted to volatiles emitted from beech leaves, especially those emitted from bursting beech buds. Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry ( GC / MS ) analyses of volatiles collected from buds at pre‐ and post‐budburst identified two diterpene hydrocarbons, 9‐geranyl‐ p ‐cymene ( 1 ) and 9‐geranyl‐α‐terpinene ( 2a ), that were emitted in large amounts at the time of bud burst. Compound 1 significantly increased mean catch of males and total O .  fagi (but not females) on sticky traps compared with unbaited controls. Y‐tube bioassays confirmed attraction of male O .  fagi to bursting beech buds and compound 1 . Attraction of male O .  fagi to 1 , emitted in large quantities from American beech, is likely adaptive because both oviposition and mating of O .  fagi coincide with budburst. Our data suggest that traps baited with 1 may be useful for monitoring the spread of O .  fagi in North America.

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