Interspecific pheromone cross-attraction among soybean bugs (Heteroptera): does Piezodorus hybneri (Pentatomidae) utilize the pheromone of Riptortus clavatus (Alydidae) as a kairomone?
- PMID: 16705488
- DOI: 10.1007/s10886-006-9093-0
Interspecific pheromone cross-attraction among soybean bugs (Heteroptera): does Piezodorus hybneri (Pentatomidae) utilize the pheromone of Riptortus clavatus (Alydidae) as a kairomone?
Abstract
The chemical and ecological function of cross-attraction of Piezodorus hybneri (Pentatomidae) to the Riptortus clavatus (Alydidae) pheromone (a mixture of three components) was studied. In a field attraction test using traps with synthetic pheromone components, P. hybneri was attracted to (E)-2-hexenyl (E)-2-hexenoate, a component of the R. clavatus pheromone. Other components had neither an additive nor a synergistic effect on the attraction of P. hybneri. Neither (E)-2-hexenyl (E)-2-hexenoate nor other components of the R. clavatus pheromone were detected in volatiles or whole-body extracts of P. hybneri adults by gas chromatographic analysis. In addition, (E)-2-hexenyl (E)-2-hexenoate could not be found in volatiles of soybean plants. Therefore, it appears that P. hybneri responds to a component of the R. clavatus pheromone that is not emitted by P. hybneri itself. We discuss this interspecific pheromone cross-attraction of the soybean bug and hypothesize that P. hybneri utilizes the pheromone of its competitor as a kairomone for host location.
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