Cha Dong H, Loeb Gregory M, Linn Charles E, Hesler Stephen P, Landolt Peter J
US Pacific Basin Agricultural Research Center, USDA-ARS, Hilo, HI.
Department of Entomology, Cornell University, Geneva, NY.
Environ Entomol. 2018 Aug 11;47(4):946-950. doi: 10.1093/ee/nvy054.
Fermentation volatiles attract a wide variety of insects and are used for integrated pest management. However, identification of the key behavior modifying chemicals has often been challenging due to the time consuming nature of thorough behavioral tests and unexpected discrepancies between laboratory and field results. Thus we report on a multiple-choice bioassay approach that may expedite the process of identifying field-worthy attractants in the laboratory. We revisited the four-component key chemical blend (acetic acid, ethanol, acetoin, and methionol) identified from 12 antennally active wine and vinegar chemicals for Drosophila suzukii (Matsumura) (Diptera: Drosophilidae). The identification of this blend took 2 yr of continuous laboratory two-choice assays and then similarly designed field trials. This delay was mainly due to a discrepancy between laboratory and field results that laboratory two-choice assay failed to identify methionol as an attractant component. Using a multiple-choice approach, we compared the co-attractiveness of the 12 potential attractants to an acetic acid plus ethanol mixture, known as the basal attractant for D. suzukii, and found similar results as the previous field trials. Only two compounds, acetoin and, importantly, methionol, increased attraction to a mixture of acetic acid and ethanol, suggesting the identification of the four-component blend could have been expedited. Interestingly, the co-attractiveness of some of the 12 individual compounds, including a key attractant, methionol, appears to change when they were tested under different background odor environments, suggesting that background odor can influence detection of potential attractants. Our findings provide a potentially useful approach to efficiently identify behaviorally bioactive fermentation chemicals.
发酵挥发物能吸引多种昆虫,并被用于害虫综合治理。然而,由于全面的行为测试耗时较长,且实验室结果与田间结果存在意外差异,因此确定关键的行为调节化学物质往往具有挑战性。因此,我们报告了一种多项选择生物测定方法,该方法可能会加快在实验室中识别值得在田间应用的引诱剂的过程。我们重新审视了从12种对铃木果蝇(松村)(双翅目:果蝇科)触角有活性的葡萄酒和醋化学物质中鉴定出的四成分关键化学混合物(乙酸、乙醇、3-羟基丁酮和甲硫醇)。鉴定这种混合物需要进行2年的连续实验室双选试验,然后进行类似设计的田间试验。这种延迟主要是由于实验室结果与田间结果之间存在差异,即实验室双选试验未能将甲硫醇鉴定为引诱剂成分。使用多项选择方法,我们比较了12种潜在引诱剂与乙酸加乙醇混合物(已知为铃木果蝇的基础引诱剂)的共同引诱力,结果与之前的田间试验相似。只有两种化合物,即3-羟基丁酮,重要的是甲硫醇,增加了对乙酸和乙醇混合物的吸引力,这表明四成分混合物的鉴定本可以加快。有趣的是,当12种单独化合物中的一些,包括关键引诱剂甲硫醇,在不同背景气味环境下进行测试时,它们的共同引诱力似乎会发生变化,这表明背景气味会影响对潜在引诱剂的检测。我们的研究结果提供了一种潜在有用的方法,可有效识别具有行为生物活性的发酵化学物质。