Title: | Field Evaluation of Selected Plant Volatiles and Conspecific Pheromones as Attractants for Agriotes obscurus and A. lineatus (Coleoptera: Elateridae) |
Author(s): | van Herk W; Vernon B; Bourassa-Tait G; Toth M; Kovacs E; |
Address: | "Agassiz Research and Development Centre, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, P.O. Box 1000, Agassiz, BC V0M 1A0, Canada. Sentinel IPM Services, 4430 Estate Drive, Chilliwack, BC V2R 3B5, Canada. Plant Protection Institute, Centre for Agricultural Research, Pf. 102, H-1525 Budapest, Hungary. Intko Supply Ltd., Suite 428, 8-6014 Vedder Rd., Chilliwack, BC V2R 5P5, Canada" |
ISSN/ISBN: | 2075-4450 (Print) 2075-4450 (Electronic) 2075-4450 (Linking) |
Abstract: | "Sex pheromones are commonly used in traps to monitor populations and movements of male click beetles, but to date few attractants have been identified for females. Notable exceptions are plant-derived kairomones for female Agriotes brevis and A. ustulatus, allowing the monitoring of both males and females of these species with lures containing both pheromones and plant volatiles. The attractiveness of these plant volatiles for two congeners, A. obscurus and A. lineatus, which are agricultural pests in Europe and North America, was evaluated in the current study. Both the four-component MINIM plant-derived lure for A. brevis, and the blend of (E)-anethol and (E)-cinnamaldehyde for A. ustulatus, were not attractive to A. obscurus and A. lineatus, and instead appeared to reduce captures-both when compared to blank controls, and when blended with and compared to the sex pheromones of these species. This was most pronounced in A. obscurus, where (E)-anethol and (E)-cinnamaldehyde reduced male captures by 43 and 37%, respectively. Combining the pheromones of A. obscurus and A. lineatus reduced captures of these species by 77 and 19%, respectively, compared to these pheromones singly. This suggests that attractants for female click beetles can be highly species-specific, and that the blending of pheromones of congeneric species with each other, or with plant volatiles, can reduce captures. Further research into developing such attractants for economic species is urgently needed" |
Keywords: | click beetles integrated pest management semiochemicals trapping wireworms; |
Notes: | "PubMed-not-MEDLINEvan Herk, Wim Vernon, Bob Bourassa-Tait, Gabrielle Toth, Miklos Kovacs, Ervin eng Switzerland 2022/02/26 Insects. 2022 Feb 6; 13(2):173. doi: 10.3390/insects13020173" |