Similar worldwide patterns in the sex pheromone signal and response in the oriental fruit moth, Grapholita molesta (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae)

A.L. Knight; W. Barros-Parada; D. Bosch; L.A. Escudero-Colomar; E. Fuentes-Contreras; J. Hernández-Sánchez; C. Yung; Y. Kim; O.B. Kovanci; A. Levi; P. Lo; F. Molinari; J. Valls; C. Gemeno

Keywords: Lepidoptera, sex pheromone, geographical variation, population variation

Abstract

The response of Grapholita molesta (Busck) males to three-component sex pheromone blends containing a 100% ratio of the major sex pheromone component, (Z)-8-dodecenyl acetate and a 10% ratio of (Z)-8-dodecenol, but with varying ratios of (E)-8-dodecenyl acetate (0.4, 5.4, 10.4, 30.4, and 100.1% E-blends) was tested with populations in eight stone and pome fruit orchards in Europe, Asia, and North and South America. Traps baited with the 5.4% E-blend caught significantly more males than traps with any other blend with all populations. Significantly more males were caught in traps baited with the 10.4% E-blend than in traps with the remaining blends, except with the 0.4% E-blend in Turkey. Significant differences in male moth catches occurred between the other blends with the 0.4>30.4% E-blend, and the 30.4 > 100.1% E-blend. Male moth catches with the 100.1% E-blend only differed from the hexane control in Chile. No apparent differences were noted to these blends in populations collected from pome or stone fruits. Flight tunnel assays to synthetic blends with a subset of populations were similar to the field results, but the breadth of the most attractive E-blends was wider. Flight tunnel assays also demonstrated a high level of male–female cross-attraction among field-collected populations. Female gland extracts from field-collected populations did not show any significant variation in their three-component blends. The only exceptions in these assays were that long- term laboratory populations were less responsive and attractive, and produced different blend ratios of the two minor components than recently collected field populations.

Más información

Título de la Revista: BULLETIN OF ENTOMOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Volumen: 105
Editorial: CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Fecha de publicación: 2015
Página de inicio: 23
Página final: 31
Idioma: English
Notas: ISE