Abstract
The Neotropical broad-headed bug, Neomegalotomus parvus (Westwood), is adapted to various leguminous crops and is considered a pest in common bean and soybean. The chemical communication of this species was studied in order to identify an attractant pheromone. Males and females of N. parvus produce several short-chain esters and acids, and their antennae showed electrophysiological responses to five of these compounds, three common to both sexes (hexyl butanoate, 4-methylhexyl butanoate, and hexyl hexanoate), and two female-specific compounds (4-methylhexyl pentanoate and hexyl pentanoate). Both aeration extracts of females and a solution containing five synthetic compounds mimicking the natural blend were attractive to males and females N. parvus in a laboratory bioassay. Aspects of the chemical ecology of the broad-headed bugs and the possibility to use pheromone-baited traps in the field for monitoring are discussed. © 2012 Raul Alberto Laumann et al.
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CITATION STYLE
Laumann, R. A., Borges, M., Aldrich, J. R., Khrimian, A., & Blassioli-Moraes, M. C. (2012). Attractant pheromone of the Neotropical species Neomegalotomus parvus (Westwood) (Heteroptera: Alydidae). Psyche (London). https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/280340
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