Attractiveness of some host plant and conspecific male semiochemicals to the banana weevil, Cosmopolites sordidus (Germar, 1824)
Item
Title
Attractiveness of some host plant and conspecific male semiochemicals to the banana weevil, Cosmopolites sordidus (Germar, 1824)
Date
2004
Language
English
Abstract
The attractiveness of some chemicals derived from host plant and conspecific male sources in olfactometer bioassays was studied. The attractiveness of the chemicals was examined at two concentrations and, in some cases, in combination With banana rhizome. Pieces of banana rhizome on which male weevils (Cosmopolites sordidus) had fed were aJso compared With similar pieces of fresh rhizome. The attractiveness of the chemicals to the weevil varied With concentration. At 10 gi , 3methyl-butyraldehyde, 2-methy(-butyraldehyde and isobutyraldehyde proved to be very attractive to the weevil. At the same concentration, 4-mercaptophenol, va)eraldehyde and methachrolein were also moderately attractive. At both I and 10 ILI, 2-methylbutyraldehyde was attractive. Ethyi acetate and 3-carene were attractive to the weevil at the tower concentration of I pl. A combination of 4-mercaptophenol, 2-n-butylfuran, 3methylbutyraldehyde and valeraldehyde With the banana rhizome were attractive, while 2-methylbutryaldehyde caused the rhizome to be repellent to the weevil, Rhizomes eaten by male wcevils were more attractive than uneaten ones. The attractiveness of the combination of some of the chemicals With the rhizome and the additive or synergistic action of the rhizome for otherwise unattractive chemicals suggests that these chemicals can be used to improve on the trapping efficiency of split pseudostem and rhizome traps in the field.
Collection
Citation
“Attractiveness of some host plant and conspecific male semiochemicals to the banana weevil, Cosmopolites sordidus (Germar, 1824),” CSIRSpace, accessed December 22, 2024, http://cspace.csirgh.com/items/show/1880.