| Literature DB >> 29040654 |
Xiuxiu Xu1,2, Xiaoming Cai1, Lei Bian1, Zongxiu Luo1, Zhaoqun Li1, Zongmao Chen1.
Abstract
Plant volatiles help herbivores to locate their hosts, and therefore, they could be used to help develop pesticide-free pest management strategies. To develop an attractant for tea leafhopper (Empoasca onukii), we screened nine tea plant volatile compounds for their attractiveness using Y-tube olfactometer assays. Results indicated that tea leafhoppers significantly preferred ocimene, limonene, (Z)-3-hexenol, and (Z)-3-hexenyl acetate over clean air. These compounds were combined in a blend which lost its attractiveness at concentrations below 10-2 g/ml in liquid paraffin. In field tests, the blend was attractive to leafhoppers only in autumn, but not in summer. Analyses of the tea field background odor showed that all four components of the blend were present at much higher concentrations in summer (0.05-0.001 ng/liter) than in autumn (~10- to 25-fold lower). In field Y-tube bioassays, compared with the tea field background odor, the blend was attractive at a concentration of 10-1 g/ml in liquid paraffin, but not at 10-2 g/ml. These results suggest that field background odor can disrupt the attractiveness of an attractant based on plant volatiles to herbivores.Entities:
Keywords: Empoasca onukii; attractant; background odor; plant volatile
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29040654 DOI: 10.1093/jee/tox269
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Econ Entomol ISSN: 0022-0493 Impact factor: 2.381