Forests (Oct 2022)

Evidence of Pheromone Use in a Fulgorid, Spotted Lanternfly

  • Hajar Faal,
  • Miriam F. Cooperband,
  • Isaiah Canlas,
  • Daniel Carrillo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/f13101639
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
p. 1639

Abstract

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The spotted lanternfly, Lycorma delicatula (Hemiptera: Fulgoridae) is a polyphagous, phloem-feeding invasive forest, agricultural, and nuisance pest that is rapidly spreading through the U.S. Little is known about how fulgorids locate each other to mate. To determine if conspecific semiochemicals such as pheromones occur, whole body extracts (WBE) of adult spotted lanternflies from different physiological states were tested for attraction in a dual-choice olfactometer. In olfactometer assays, prior to mating, males were oriented to WBE from males and females. During their mating period, males were attracted to WBE of females, but not to that of males. After mating and oviposition had taken place, males were not attracted to either male or female extracts. Conversely, females did not orient to any WBE from either sex during any physiological state. These behavioral responses by males but not females to WBE from conspecifics in different physiological states suggest the possible presence of an aggregation-sex pheromone in the spotted lanternfly.

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