Activity of male pheromone of Melanesian rhinoceros beetle Scapanes australis

J Chem Ecol. 2002 Mar;28(3):479-500. doi: 10.1023/a:1014531810037.

Abstract

Laboratory and field investigations were carried out to investigate the nature and role of the male pheromone emitted by the Dynast beetle Scapanes australis and to develop a mass trapping technique against this major coconut pest in Papua New Guinea. We report the biological data obtained from natural and synthetic pheromone, previously described as an 84:12:4 (w/w) mixture of 2-butanol (1), 3-hydoxy-2-butanone (2), and 2,3-butanediol (3). EAG recordings from natural and synthetic pheromone and a pitfall olfactometer were poorly informative. In contrast, extensive field trapping trials with various synthetic pheromone mixtures and doses showed that 1 and 2 (formulated in polyethylene sachets in 90:5 v/v ratio) were necessary and sufficient for optimum long-range attraction. Beetles were captured in traps baited with racemic 1 plus 2, with or without a stereoisomer mixture of 3 (2.5- to 2500-mg/day doses). Plant pieces, either sugarcane or coconut, enhanced captures by the synthetic pheromone, which was active alone. Traps with the pheromone caught both sexes in a 3:2 female-male ratio. A pheromone-based mass trapping led to the capture of 2173 beetles in 14 traps surrounding 40 ha of a cocoa-coconut plantation. The captures followed a log-linear decrease during the 125-week trapping program. The role of the male pheromone and its potential for crop protection are discussed.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Butanols / pharmacology*
  • Butanones / pharmacology*
  • Butylene Glycols / pharmacology*
  • Cocos
  • Coleoptera / physiology*
  • Female
  • Insect Control
  • Male
  • Plant Extracts / pharmacology
  • Sex Attractants / pharmacology*
  • Smell

Substances

  • Butanols
  • Butanones
  • Butylene Glycols
  • Plant Extracts
  • Sex Attractants
  • 2-butanol
  • 2,3-butylene glycol