Male
Megacyllene caryae (Gahan) (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) respond to females only after touching them with their antennae, indicating that mate
recognition is mediated by a contact sex pheromone. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analyses of whole-body solvent extracts
of male and female
M. caryae revealed substantial differences in hydrocarbon profiles, with nearly half of the compounds in the extracts from females
being absent from those of males. Biological activities of fractions of crude extracts of females, and reconstructed blends
of the most abundant straight-chain (
nC
27,
nC
28,
nC
29), methyl-branched (2Me-C
26, 9Me-C
29, 11, 13, 15Me-C
29), and unsaturated (
Z9:C
29,
Z13:C
29,
Z14:C
29,
Z13:C
31,
Z14:C
31,
Z15:C
31) compounds in extracts of females were tested in arena bioassays, assessing four steps in the mating behavior sequence of
males (orientation, arrestment, body alignment, mounting and attempting to couple the genitalia). Males showed limited response
to dead females treated with fractions of the crude extract or blends of synthetic straight-chain and methyl-branched alkanes,
but responded strongly to the blend of synthetic monoenes. Further trials determined that the complete sequence of mating
behaviors, up to and including coupling the genitalia, was elicited by
Z9:C
29 alone.
Z9:C
29 is a homolog of the contact pheromone (
Z9:C
25) of the congener
M. robiniae (Förster). Previous work with
M. robiniae suggested that wipe sampling of cuticular hydrocarbons of females by solid phase microextraction yielded a more representative
profile of components actually encountered by a male’s antennae, and so provided a more readily interpretable profile of potential
semiochemicals present in the wax layer than does solvent extraction. We tested this hypothesis by comparing hydrocarbon profiles
of female
M. caryae by the two sampling methods.
Z9:C
29 was the only compound among the dominant hydrocarbons that was present in higher abundance in SPME than in solvent extracts
(∼12% vs. ∼8%, respectively), supporting this hypothesis.
Key Words Cerambycidae - mating behavior - cuticular hydrocarbon - solid-phase microextraction - contact sex pheromone