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Studies on the olfactory behavior of the Douglas-fir beetle, Dendroctonus pseudotsugae Hopkins

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Title Studies on the olfactory behavior of the Douglas-fir beetle, Dendroctonus pseudotsugae Hopkins
Names Jantz, Orlo Kenneth (creator)
Rudinsky, Julius A. (advisor)
Date Issued 1965-05-12 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1965
Abstract Behavioral responses exhibited by the Douglas-fir beetle,
Dendroctonus pseudotsugae Hopkins, to various attractant sources
were investigated under both laboratory and field conditions. Tests
were designed to observe olfactory responses. Results were correlated
and compared with collections from sampling nets and with
emergence patterns. Field data were collected during the flight
seasons of 1962, 1963, and 1964.
Laboratory tests revealed that the attractant produced by females
boring in both host and non-host logs arrested adult beetles.
Crawling beetles did not exhibit a directed response to attractive
materials without the presence of an air stream passing over the
material toward the insect. Beetles crawling near to an attractant
source were passively arrested. A histological study of both male and female digestive tracts
indicated that the midgut may be the point of origin of the attractant
material. Rapid changes in the appearance of the ventricular epithelium
that occurred shortly after feeding indicated a disintegration
of nucleated cells into the lumen. Since this phenomenon was much
less pronounced in the male, it was thought to include more than
simple digestive processes, and therefore be responsible for release
of the attractant compound by the female. Differences in hindgut
epithelium associated with feeding were not apparent.
The occurrence of seasonal activities depends upon the time of
spring emergence and is directly regulated by environmental conditions.
The exact time of emergence depends upon climatic conditions during the period of development and maturation. The beetle
is stimulated to flight by temperature and light, but later olfactory
stimuli predominate in regulation of its flight.
Field attraction by logs of various tree species, attack and
subsequent brood development were studied. The finding that the
unmated female produces an attractant while feeding on phloem of
various tree species was confirmed. Attack and development varied
between the different tree species. Response of field populations to
attraction produced by reemerged females was less than response
to virgin females.
Significant responses were obtained using low concentrations of Douglas-fir oleoresin and pine oleoresin fractions. Largest
responses occurred with 2-1/2 percent Douglas-fir oleoresin. Tests
with fractions of pine oleoresin showed that alpha pinene was the
most attractive constituent, followed by limonene.
Tests confirmed that Douglas-fir beetles respond to fresh uninfested
Douglas-fir logs. The freshness of cut definitely regulated
the responses obtained. The sex ratio of two females to one male
responding to oleoresin compounds and to fresh cut logs indicated
the importance of oleoresin vapors in host selection, since the female
initiates the gallery.
Oleoresin functions as an attractant for the beetles in flight
but at high concentrations repels crawling beetles.
Investigations confirmed that the number of beetles attracted
decreases immediately after mating. Those beetles mated early
in the morning before flight had started remained nearly nonattractive
all day, while check samples continued to show the expected
diurnal pattern of response.
Experiments with boring dust extracts collected in the laboratory
and later tested in the field suggested the volatility of the attractive
substance. Limited attraction to dust extracts collected in
water as opposed to those collected in ethyl alcohol indicated that
the attractant is too volatile to be retained in water.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Insects -- Sense organs
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/48082

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