Odor composition of preferred (buffalo and ox) and nonpreferred (waterbuck) hosts of some savanna tsetse flies
Publication Type
Journal Article
Journal Name
Physiological Entomology
Publication Date
1-1-1996
Abstract
Volatiles from solitary-reared (solitarious) and crowd-reared (gregarious) adult male desert locusts, Schistocerca gregaria (Forskal) (Orthoptera: Acrididae), were quantitatively and qualitatively different. In particular, solitarious males did not emit phenylacetonitrile, a key component of the aggregation pheromone produced by gregarious adult males. In laboratory bioassays, solitarious and gregarious adults of both sexes responded similarly to the natural aggregation pheromone blend, the major pheromone component phenylacetonitrile, and a synthetic pheromone blend comprising benzaldehyde, guaiacol, phenylacetonitrile and phenol. EAG measurements showed significant differences in the responsiveness of adults of the two phases to the four synthetic components at high doses; however, the general response patterns were similar. These results suggest that the gregarious adult male aggregation pheromone may play a role in the arrestment and subsequent recruitment of solitarious individuals into gregarious or gregarizing groups during the early stages of a locust outbreak.
Keywords
Acrididae, Aggregation pheromone, Electroantennogram, Guaiacol, Olfactometer, Phenol, Phenylacetonitrile, Schistocerca gregaria
Recommended Citation
Njagi, P., Torto, B., Obeng-Ofori, D., & Hassanali, A. (1996). Odor composition of preferred (buffalo and ox) and nonpreferred (waterbuck) hosts of some savanna tsetse flies. Physiological Entomology, 21 (2), 131-137. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3032.1996.tb00845.x