PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Identification of communal oviposition pheromones from the black fly Simulium vittatum.

  • Tommy W McGaha,
  • Ryan M Young,
  • Nathan D Burkett-Cadena,
  • Joseph P Iburg,
  • Jeremy M Beau,
  • Sayed Hassan,
  • Charles R Katholi,
  • Eddie W Cupp,
  • Bill J Baker,
  • Thomas R Unnasch,
  • Raymond Noblet

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0118904
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3
p. e0118904

Abstract

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The suite of pheromones that promote communal oviposition by Simulium vittatum, a North American black fly species, was identified and characterized using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, electrophysiological, and behavioral bioassays. Behavioral assays demonstrated that communal oviposition was induced by egg-derived compounds that were active at short range and whose effect was enhanced through direct contact. Three compounds (cis-9-tetradecen-1-ol, 1-pentadecene, and 1-tridecene) were identified in a non-polar solvent extract of freshly deposited S. vittatum eggs that were capable of inducing the oviposition response. Electroantennography demonstrated that two of these three compounds (1-pentadecene and 1-tridecene) actively stimulated antennal neurons. Identification of the oviposition pheromones of this family may be helpful in developing control measures for nuisance black flies and for medically-important species such as Simulium damnosum sensu lato.