Male specific natural products in the bug, Leptoglossus phyllopus: Chemistry and possible function
Abstract
In the Coreoidea and some allied groups, male adults possess an abdominal gland opening through a midventral ostiole in the 7–8th abdominal intersegmental membrane. Using a GC-MS system, the following aromatic volatiles were identified in the abdominal gland secretion from males of the leaf footed bug, Leptoglossus phyllopus: guaiacol, benzyl alcohol, syringaldehyde, methyl p-hydroxybenzoate, acetosyringone, and vanillin. Males from which the glands were removed still mated and were competitive with control males for a limited number of females. The ventral abdominal gland secretion may act as a long-range attractant of females. The possibility that attraction of females by males in Heteroptera is an adaptation facilitating colonization of successional habitats is discussed.
- Publication:
-
Journal of Insect Physiology
- Pub Date:
- January 1976
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1976JInsP..22.1201A
- Keywords:
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- Pheromone;
- sex attractant;
- exocrine;
- ectodermal glands;
- Heteroptera;
- Coreidae;
- migration;
- benzyl alcohol;
- and guaiacol