TY - JOUR
T1 - Identification of sex attractants for 6 North American click beetle species in 4 tribes of the Elateridae
AU - Millar, Jocelyn G.
AU - Williams, Livy
AU - Serrano, Jacqueline M.
AU - McElrath, Thomas C.
AU - Zou, Yunfan
AU - Grommes-Yeager, Anna C.
AU - Schoeppner, Emma
AU - Huseth, Anders S.
AU - Kuhar, Thomas P.
AU - Etzler, Frank E.
AU - Hanks, Lawrence M.
N1 - We thank the University of Illinois Committee on Natural Areas, the Champaign County Forest Preserves District, Vermilion County Conservation District, and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources for access to field sites. Technical support in South Carolina was provided by Lance Lawrence, and in Illinois by Anupama Udayakumar, Rachel Rusen, Coen Carroll, Eli Crouch, and Elijah Davis
We appreciate funding support from the United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service State Potato Partnership Funds projects 2092-22000-022-00D and 6080-22000-030-00D.
PY - 2024/12/1
Y1 - 2024/12/1
N2 - We describe experiments that evaluated potential sex pheromone components for 6 North American click beetle species. In field trials in Illinois, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Virginia, male beetles of 6 species were strongly attracted to geranyl butyrate (Agriotes insanus Candèze), 5-methylhexyl (Z)-4-decenoate (Elater abruptus Say), 11-dodecenyl butyrate (Melanotus ignobilis Melsheimer), and limoniic acid (Gambrinus griseus [Palisot de Beauvois], G. rudis [Brown], and G. plebejus [Say]). Collection of E. abruptus in South Carolina represents a new state record. For each species, capture rates varied geographically and temporally, possibly due to differences in local population densities and regional phenology, or the efficiency of different trap designs or trap placement. Structural similarities were observed between the tested attractants and previously identified pheromones of closely related species. For example, males of A. insanus were attracted to geranyl butyrate, analogous to the terpenoid ester pheromones of a number of European congeners. The attractant for E. abruptus, 5-methylhexyl (Z)-4-decenoate, is an analog of the pheromone of its European congener E. ferrugineus L., and the attractant for M. ignobilis, 11-dodecenyl butyrate, is an analog of attractants of European and Asian congeners. Attraction of the 3 Gambrinus species to limoniic acid parallels recent reports of attraction of the congeners G. seminudus (Van Dyke) and G. ursinus (Van Dyke) to this compound, which was originally identified from closely related species of Limonius. Full identifications of additional sex pheromones for elaterid species should provide a more complete picture of the diversities/similarities of the semiochemicals mediating reproductive behaviors of this biologically diverse and taxonomically complex group.
AB - We describe experiments that evaluated potential sex pheromone components for 6 North American click beetle species. In field trials in Illinois, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Virginia, male beetles of 6 species were strongly attracted to geranyl butyrate (Agriotes insanus Candèze), 5-methylhexyl (Z)-4-decenoate (Elater abruptus Say), 11-dodecenyl butyrate (Melanotus ignobilis Melsheimer), and limoniic acid (Gambrinus griseus [Palisot de Beauvois], G. rudis [Brown], and G. plebejus [Say]). Collection of E. abruptus in South Carolina represents a new state record. For each species, capture rates varied geographically and temporally, possibly due to differences in local population densities and regional phenology, or the efficiency of different trap designs or trap placement. Structural similarities were observed between the tested attractants and previously identified pheromones of closely related species. For example, males of A. insanus were attracted to geranyl butyrate, analogous to the terpenoid ester pheromones of a number of European congeners. The attractant for E. abruptus, 5-methylhexyl (Z)-4-decenoate, is an analog of the pheromone of its European congener E. ferrugineus L., and the attractant for M. ignobilis, 11-dodecenyl butyrate, is an analog of attractants of European and Asian congeners. Attraction of the 3 Gambrinus species to limoniic acid parallels recent reports of attraction of the congeners G. seminudus (Van Dyke) and G. ursinus (Van Dyke) to this compound, which was originally identified from closely related species of Limonius. Full identifications of additional sex pheromones for elaterid species should provide a more complete picture of the diversities/similarities of the semiochemicals mediating reproductive behaviors of this biologically diverse and taxonomically complex group.
KW - Agriotes
KW - Elater
KW - Gambrinus
KW - Melanotus
KW - pheromone
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85212777188&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85212777188&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/ee/nvae077
DO - 10.1093/ee/nvae077
M3 - Article
C2 - 39304338
AN - SCOPUS:85212777188
SN - 0046-225X
VL - 53
SP - 973
EP - 980
JO - Environmental entomology
JF - Environmental entomology
IS - 6
ER -