Oviposition response of spruce budworm (Lepidoptera : Tortricidae) to aliphatic carboxylic acids

Citation
Gg. Grant et al., Oviposition response of spruce budworm (Lepidoptera : Tortricidae) to aliphatic carboxylic acids, ENV ENTOMOL, 29(2), 2000, pp. 164-170
Citations number
38
Categorie Soggetti
Entomology/Pest Control
Journal title
ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY
ISSN journal
0046225X → ACNP
Volume
29
Issue
2
Year of publication
2000
Pages
164 - 170
Database
ISI
SICI code
0046-225X(200004)29:2<164:OROSB(>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
We investigated the effects of carboxylic acids on the oviposition behavior of the spruce budworm, a major defoliator of coniferous forests in North A merica. Carboxylic acids have been implicated as semiochemicals involved in lepidopteran host Ending and oviposition, and they occur as free acids in the epicuticular It as of host (Picea and Abies spp.) foliage where spruce budworm lay eggs. In a dual-choice laboratory bioassay, several straight ch ain and cyclic monocarboxylic acids, and two dicarboxylic acids, significan tly enhanced oviposition. Peak activity was associated with saturated acids having 8-12 carbons. Unsaturated oleic and linoleic acids mere also prefer red. The lowest effective dosage occurred at 7.8 nmol/cm(2) (1 mM solution) . At higher dosages (greater than or equal to 780 nmol/cm(2)), C-9-C-10 aci ds became strongly deterrent and some shorter-chain and longer-chain acids became stimulating. Electroantennogram responses to C-6-C-16 acids indicate d that behaviorally active acids are detected by olfaction. The most active acids (C-8-C-12 and oleic) have not been reported in the free fatty acid f raction of host cuticular waxes. However, long-chain C-14-C-28 acids are pr esent as free acids, but they elicited significant oviposition responses on ly at doses that exceeded their levels in foliage waxes. Spruce budworm pre ference for carboxylic acids may represent a nonspecific response common to Lepidoptera, which may have evolved because of the ubiquitous occurrence o f carboxylic acids in plants.