Field evaluation of plant odor and pheromonal combinations for attracting plum curculios.

J Chem Ecol

Department of Entomology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003, USA.

Published: December 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the appeal of synthetic odors and a pheromone (grandisoic acid) to plum curculios, a type of beetle, using two kinds of traps in an apple orchard.
  • In 2001, the researchers found that benzaldehyde was the only synthetic odor that enhanced the attractiveness of the pheromone, while in 2002, increasing the release rate of GA positively impacted captures in panel traps but not in pyramid traps.
  • The best combination determined was benzaldehyde at 10 mg/day and grandisoic acid at 1 mg/day, suggesting this mix could improve monitoring traps for plum curculios.

Article Abstract

The attractiveness of different synthetic host odors and a synthetic aggregation pheromone (grandisoic acid [GA]) to overwintered adult plum curculios (PCs), Conotrachelus nenuphar (Herbst) (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), was examined using two types of traps (sticky panels and black pyramids) placed in border areas surrounding an unsprayed section of an apple orchard in Massachusetts. In 2001, we evaluated the response of PCs to three synthetic fruit volatiles (benzaldehyde [BEN], ethyl isovalerate [EIV], and limonene [LIM]) assessed alone and in combination with GA, as well as the response to GA alone and a no-odor (control) treatment. BEN was the only host volatile that synergized the response of PCs to GA for both trap types. For both trap types, GA was as attractive to PCs as a single component as when in combination with either EIV or LIM. In 2002, four release rates of BEN (0, 2.5, 10, and 40 mg/day) and two release rates of GA (1 and 2 mg/day) were evaluated for attractiveness to PCs using panel and pyramid traps. For panel traps, an increase in amount of GA released (from 1 to 2 mg/day) was associated with a 35% increase in captures. However, PC captures by pyramid traps were similar regardless of the amount of GA released. For panel traps, 10 and 40 mg/day of BEN were the most attractive release rates regardless of the amount of GA released. For pyramid traps baited with GA. PC captures were enhanced by the presence of BEN, regardless of release rate. In 2003, GA at 1 mg/day + BEN at 80 mg/day of release did not enhance PC captures by panel traps relative to lower release rates of BEN. Pyramid traps releasing GA at 1 mg/day performed best when baited with BEN at 10 mg/day of release; a release rate of 80 mg/day of BEN decreased the attractiveness of the binary combination of BEN + GA. Combined results suggest that BEN at 10 mg/day + GA at 1 mg/day of release constitutes an attractive lure that may improve the effectiveness of monitoring traps for PCs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/b:joec.0000008017.16911.aaDOI Listing

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