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Wiley InterScience | ||
![]() Physiological EntomologyVolume 25 Issue 2, Pages 172 - 179 Published Online: 25 Dec 2001 Journal compilation © 2009 The Royal Entomological Society
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Mate finding in the forest cockchafer, Melolontha hippocastani, mediated by volatiles from plants and females
Copyright 2000 Blackwell Science Ltd KEYWORDS
Carpinus betulus
• field tests • GC-EAD • mate location •
Melolontha hippocastani
• plant volatiles •
Prunus serotina
•
Quercus rubra
• Scarabaeidae • sex pheromone ABSTRACTSummaryThe response of the forest cockchafer, Melolontha hippocastani F. (Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae), towards volatiles emitted by different host plants and conspecifics was tested in field experiments during the flight period at dusk. Funnel traps containing artificially damaged leaves from the host plants Carpinus betulus L. and Quercus rubra L., as well as from the non-host plant Prunus serotina Ehrh. caught significantly more beetles than empty control traps. On the other hand, traps baited with undamaged leaves from Q. rubra did not catch significantly more beetles than empty controls. Leaves from C. betulus damaged by beetle feeding did not attract more beetles than artificially damaged leaves. By use of gas chromatography coupled with electroantennographic detection (GC-EAD) electrophysiological responses of males and females were shown for 18 typical plant volatiles. A synthetic mixture of selected typical green plant volatiles was also highly attractive in the field. A total of 9982 beetles was caught during the field experiments, among them only 33 females. This suggests that attraction to damaged foliage during flight period at dusk is male-specific. Field experiments testing the attractiveness of female M. hippocastani towards conspecific males by employing caged beetles and beetle extracts indicated that males of M. hippocastani use a female-derived sex pheromone for mate location. On wired cages containing either unmated feeding females, or unmated females without access to foliage, or feeding males in combination with extracts from unmated females, significantly more males landed during the flight period than on comparable control cages containing feeding males or male extracts. A possible scenario of mate location in M. hippocastani involving feeding-induced plant volatiles and a female-derived sex pheromone is discussed. Accepted: 13 March 2000; |