Identification of a hyperactive pheromone analog in field tests of pheromone mimics for two click beetle species in the genus Cardiophorus (Coleoptera: Elateridae)
IF 1.6 3区 环境科学与生态学Q4 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Jacqueline M. Serrano, Yunfan Zou, Jocelyn G. Millar
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引用次数: 2
Abstract
Females of two click beetle species, Cardiophorus tenebrosus and C. edwardsi (Coleoptera: Elateridae), produce methyl (3R,6E)-2,3-dihydrofarnesoate as their sex pheromone. We had serendipitously discovered that males of both species were also strongly attracted to (R)-fuscumol acetate ((E)-6,10-dimethylundeca-5,9-dien-2-yl acetate), a known longhorned beetle (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) pheromone, due to its structural similarities to the click beetle pheromone. To further investigate the specificity of the responses of Cardiophorus males, additional analogs with different chain lengths and structural relationships compared to the natural pheromone were synthesized and tested. In field and electroantennogram bioassays, only fuscumol propionate ((E)-6,10-dimethylundeca-5,9-dien-2-yl propionate) elicited strong responses from Cardiophorus males, indicating that they were able to distinguish chain length and spatial relationships between the structural elements. In field trials, C. tenebrosus males were attracted equally to the analog and their natural pheromone, but the pheromone elicited stronger antennal responses from males. In contrast, traps baited with fuscumol propionate caught approximately 26 times as many C. edwardsi males compared to traps baited with the natural pheromone, although the analog elicited significantly smaller antennal responses from C. edwardsi males. Thus, in terms of behavioral responses, fuscumol propionate appears to be acting as a hyperactive pheromone mimic, a phenomenon which has rarely been observed in insect semiochemistry.
期刊介绍:
It is the aim of Chemoecology to promote and stimulate basic science in the field of chemical ecology by publishing research papers that integrate evolution and/or ecology and chemistry in an attempt to increase our understanding of the biological significance of natural products. Its scopes cover the evolutionary biology, mechanisms and chemistry of biotic interactions and the evolution and synthesis of the underlying natural products. Manuscripts on the evolution and ecology of trophic relationships, intra- and interspecific communication, competition, and other kinds of chemical communication in all types of organismic interactions will be considered suitable for publication. Ecological studies of trophic interactions will be considered also if they are based on the information of the transmission of natural products (e.g. fatty acids) through the food-chain. Chemoecology further publishes papers that relate to the evolution and ecology of interactions mediated by non-volatile compounds (e.g. adhesive secretions). Mechanistic approaches may include the identification, biosynthesis and metabolism of substances that carry information and the elucidation of receptor- and transduction systems using physiological, biochemical and molecular techniques. Papers describing the structure and functional morphology of organs involved in chemical communication will also be considered.