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Male-produced anti-sex pheromone in a plant bug

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Abstract

In plant bugs (Miridae), females produce sex pheromones in the metathoracic scent gland, which in most other true bugs (Heteroptera) is responsible for chemical defense. The possibility that the metathoracic gland secretion of male plant bugs plays a role other than defense has been largely overlooked. Here we show that in a pine-inhabiting mirid, Phytocoris difficilis Knight, hexyl butyrate and (E)-2-hexenyl butyrate are abundantly produced only in males; we demonstrate that these metathoracic gland compounds elicit strong antennal responses in conspecific males, and that these butyrates totally interrupt attraction of males to the female-produced sex pheromone. Our results suggest that in at least some plant bugs the male metathoracic scent gland esters have a natural communicative function as anti-sex pheromones, probably to interrupt further mating attempts by other males.

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Acknowledgements

We thank Dr. Meiling Webb (USDA-ARS CAIBL, Beltsville, Md.) and Nathan Zahm, University of Maryland, for field assistance.

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Correspondence to Jeffery R. Aldrich.

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Zhang, QH., Aldrich, J.R. Male-produced anti-sex pheromone in a plant bug. Naturwissenschaften 90, 505–508 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00114-003-0466-8

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