Title: | "Kairomone strains of Euclytiaflava (Townsend), a parasitoid of stink bugs" |
Address: | "USDA-ARS Chemicals Affecting Insect Behavior Laboratory, Agricultural Research Center-West Beltsville, Maryland 20705, USA. aldrichj@ba.ars.usda.gov" |
ISSN/ISBN: | 0098-0331 (Print) 0098-0331 (Linking) |
Abstract: | "Tachinid flies commonly use the pheromones and allomones of stink bugs (Pentatomidae) as host-finding kairomones. Pheromone-baited traps for predaceous (Podisus spp.) and phytophagous (Euschistus spp.) pentatomids were used to obtain tachinid parasitoids in order to study the semiochemical relationships between these parasitic flies and their stink bug hosts. Gas chromatography-electroantennogram detector (GC-EAD) experiments and field tests were conducted to determine if pheromone strains of the tachinids, Euclytia flava and Hemyda aurata, occur in nature and to determine if the EAD-active compound, (E)-2-octenal (a common allomone compound of Heteroptera), affects attraction of tachinid parasitoids to synthetic Podisus pheromones. Addition of (E)-2-octenal to Podisus spp. synthetic pheromones in field traps tended to suppress attraction of the bugs, whereas (E)-2-octenal decreased, did not affect, or increased pheromonal attraction of tachinid parasitoids depending on the host species pheromone being tested and the habitat type in which the traps were deployed. Evidence from GC-EAD experiments of E. flava associated with different stink bug hosts suggested that kairomone-strains of this tachinid parasitoid coexist naturally. The significance of cryptic kairomone strains of parasitoids for classical biological control is discussed, and the mechanisms whereby parasitoids evolve kairomonally mediated host-shifts is considered" |
Keywords: | "Aldehydes/metabolism Animals Chromatography, Gas Female Insect Hormones/*physiology Insecta/*parasitology Male;" |
Notes: | "MedlineAldrich, J R Zhang, A eng 2002/10/10 J Chem Ecol. 2002 Aug; 28(8):1565-82. doi: 10.1023/a:1019972312132" |