Insects (Nov 2022)

A Chemical Lure for Trapping Both Sexes of <i>Amata phegea</i> L.

  • Szabolcs Szanyi,
  • Antal Nagy,
  • István Szarukán,
  • Zoltán Varga,
  • Júlia Katalin Jósvai,
  • Miklós Tóth

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/insects13111051
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
p. 1051

Abstract

Read online

The addition of synthetic eugenol and benzyl acetate to the known floral chemical and moth attractant phenylacetaldehyde synergized the attraction of Amata phegea (Lepidoptera: Amatidae). Traps baited with the ternary blend caught ca. four times more A. phegea moths than traps baited with phenylacetaldehyde alone. Both female and male moths were attracted; in a preliminary test, the female numbers caught were almost double compared to the males. Most A. phegea were caught when the blend was formulated in a dispenser with medium release rates. Traps baited with the ternary lure in polyethylene bag dispensers detected a single well-pronounced peak in seasonal trapping, suggesting that this multicomponent bisexual lure could be efficient enough to be applied to the detection and monitoring of female and male A. phegea.

Keywords