Premium
Orientation of flying male Anobium punctatum (Coleoptera: Anobiidae) to sex pheromone: separating effects of visual stimuli and physical barriers to wind
Author(s) -
WyATT TRISTRAM D.,
VASTIAU KATIA,
BIRCH MARTIN C.
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
physiological entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.693
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1365-3032
pISSN - 0307-6962
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-3032.1997.tb01157.x
Subject(s) - pheromone , biology , sex pheromone , silhouette , stimulus (psychology) , attraction , ecology , zoology , cognitive psychology , psychology , computer science , computer vision , linguistics , philosophy
. Flying male woodworm, Anobium punctatum , are able to locate a source of female pheromone offered as a point source but land more quickly if the same odour source is presented on a model ‘tree’ (cylinder). We tested the response to a two‐dimensional black ‘tree’ marked as a silhouette on the upwind screen of the wind tunnel, with or without a hidden upwind barrier to the wind. The beetles responded equally to pheromone presented on a visual silhouette with wind barrier and to the hidden upwind wind‐barrier alone, suggesting that the wind‐barrier itself has a significant effect on insect orientation and landing: visual stimuli do not add to the landing response if the barrier is present. However, without the barrier upwind, landing was faster when the visual stimulus was present than without. This is the third forest‐living species to be shown to respond in this way, which suggests this phenomenon may be more widespread. The possibility that this phenomenon is present in other, non‐forest, phytophagous insects, their predators and parasitoids is discussed.