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Attraction of male winterform pear psylla to female‐produced volatiles and to female extracts and evidence of male–male repellency
Author(s) -
Guédot Christelle,
Horton David R.,
Landolt Peter J.
Publication year - 2009
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/j.1570-7458.2008.00807.x
Subject(s) - olfactometer , attraction , biology , host (biology) , zoology , odor , insect , pear , sexual attraction , pest analysis , botany , ecology , sexual behavior , psychology , social psychology , linguistics , philosophy , neuroscience
Pear psylla, Cacopsylla pyricola (Förster) (Homoptera: Psyllidae), is a major pest of commercial pears in North America and Europe. Olfactometer trials have shown that males of both the summer and winter morphotype are attracted to female‐infested host material. Additional work with the summer morphotype has shown that males are attracted to females even in the absence of the host plant, which is evidence that female C. pyricola produce a volatile sex attractant. Here, we describe similar results with the winterform, confirming for this morphotype that the female psylla rather than the infested host material is the source of the attractant. Male winterforms displayed attraction to odors from live females in the absence of the host plant, freshly killed females, and female whole body extracts. The female whole body extracts were at least as attractive as a comparable number of live females, suggesting that we were successful at extracting the components of the attractant with this procedure. All previous olfactometer trials with C. pyricola used the insect as the attractant source; the current study is the first to demonstrate that volatile chemicals isolated from the female insect were attractive to male conspecifics. Winterform males were also assayed to odors produced by conspecific males. We found that male psylla avoided volatile odors from live males, freshly killed males, or whole body extracts of males. To our knowledge, these results are the first indication that males of any member of the Psyllidae avoid odors associated with conspecific males.

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