4.6 Article

Generic Lures Attract Cerambycid Beetles in a Tropical Montane Rain Forest in Southern China

Journal

JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 107, Issue 1, Pages 259-267

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1603/EC13333

Keywords

Cerambycidae; pheromone; attractant; longhorned beetle

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Sciences Foundation of China [21050110424, 21150110575]
  2. Chinese Academy of Sciences [2010Y1JB1]
  3. United States National Science Foundation [OISE-0904100]
  4. United States Department of Agriculture-Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service [09-8100-1422-CA, 10-8130-1422-CA, 11-8130-1422-CA]
  5. Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) Research Program 6: Forests, Trees and Agroforestry
  6. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
  7. International Fund for Agricultural Development
  8. United Nations Development Program
  9. World Bank

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The attraction of cerambycid beetles to 10 known cerambycid pheromones was tested in a tropical montane rain forest in southern China. From 28 May to 25 June 2010, 1,526 cerambycids representing 71 species were captured in pheromone-baited traps, with 14 species accounting for 92% of the specimens. Test compounds with a 3-hydroxyalkan-2-one or 2,3-alkanediol motif attracted significant numbers of both sexes for eight species in the subfamily Cerambycinae, including species of Demonax, Rhaphuma, and Xylotrechus. Rhaphuma horsfieldi (White) was the only species that was strongly attracted to more than one test compound, with significant attraction to both (2R*, 3R*)-2,3-hexanediol and (2R*, 3R*)-2,3-octanediol. Within the Lamiinae, males and females of five species were significantly attracted to 2-(undecyloxy) ethanol, including Acalolepta formosana (Breuning), Monochamus bimaculatus Gahan, Pharsalia subgemmata (Thomson), Pseudomacrochenus antennatus (Gahan), and Xenohammus bimaculatus Schwarzer. Only male Megopis costipennis White (Prioninae) were significantly attracted to (2R*,3S*)-2,3-octanediol, suggesting that this compound may be a sex pheromone component for this species. To date, 2,3-octanediols have only been reported as aggregation pheromone components for cerambycids in the subfamily Cerambycinae. Our results support the hypothesis that both closely related (congeners) and more distantly related cerambycid species (different tribes and even subfamilies) may share pheromone components. Our results also demonstrate that traps baited with even a limited number of different classes of pheromones may be useful tools for surveying cerambycid diversity, as well as for detecting and monitoring particular species, especially those that have the potential to be invasive pests in other parts of the world.

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