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« Previous Abstract"Using generic pheromone lures to expedite identification of aggregation pheromones for the cerambycid beetles Xylotrechus nauticus, Phymatodes lecontei, and Neoclytus modestus modestus"    Next AbstractSex and Aggregation-Sex Pheromones of Cerambycid Beetles: Basic Science and Practical Applications »

Ann Entomol Soc Am


Title:Seasonal phenology of the cerambycid beetles of east-central Illinois
Author(s):Hanks LM; Reagel PF; Mitchell RF; Wong JC; Meier LR; Silliman CA; Graham EE; Striman BL; Robinson KP; Mongold-Diers JA; Millar JG;
Address:"Department of Entomology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801. Department of Entomology, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521"
Journal Title:Ann Entomol Soc Am
Year:2014
Volume:107
Issue:1
Page Number:211 - 226
DOI: 10.1603/AN13067
ISSN/ISBN:0013-8746 (Print) 0013-8746 (Linking)
Abstract:"We summarize field data on the species composition and seasonal phenology of the community of cerambycid beetles of east-central Illinois. Data were drawn from field bioassays conducted during 2009 - 2012 that tested attraction of adult beetles of diverse species to a variety of synthetic pheromones and host plant volatiles. A total of 34,086 beetles of 114 species were captured, including 48 species in the subfamily Cerambycinae, 41 species in the Lamiinae, 19 species in the Lepturinae, two species in the Spondylidinae, and one species each in the Necydalinae, Parandrinae, Prioninae, and the Disteniidae. Most of the best-represented species were attracted to pheromones that were included in field experiments, particularly species that use (R)-3-hydroxyhexan-2-one as a pheromone component. The species captured, and their patterns of abundance and seasonal phenology were similar to those in an earlier study conducted in Pennsylvania. The most abundant species identified in both studies included the cerambycines Elaphidion mucronatum (Say), Neoclytus a. acuminatus (F.), Neoclytus m. mucronatus (F.), and Xylotrechus colonus (F.). Cerambycine species became active in an orderly progression from early spring through late fall, whereas most lamiine species were active in summer and fall, and lepturine species were limited to summer. Potential cross attraction between some cerambycine species that shared pheromone components may have been averted by differences in seasonal activity period, and by minor pheromone components that acted as synergists for conspecifics and/or antagonists for heterospecifics. These results provide quantitative data on the abundance and seasonal phenology of a large number of species"
Keywords:Pheromone cross attraction reproductive isolation semiochemical;
Notes:"PubMed-not-MEDLINEHanks, Lawrence M Reagel, Peter F Mitchell, Robert F Wong, Joseph C H Meier, Linnea R Silliman, Christina A Graham, Elizabeth E Striman, Becca L Robinson, Kenneth P Mongold-Diers, Judith A Millar, Jocelyn G eng K12 GM000708/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/ England 2014/04/01 Ann Entomol Soc Am. 2014 Jan 1; 107(1):211-226. doi: 10.1603/AN13067"

 
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