Field attraction of Eurydema ornata (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae) to allyl isothiocyanate.
Sándor KoczorMiklós TóthPublished in: Scientific reports (2023)
Several Eurydema species (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae) are considered as pests, however, reports on their chemical ecology are scarce. In the current study we focused on Eurydema ornata (Linnaeus) a pentatomid pest of several brassicaceous crops. Since the species is known to feed preferably on generative parts of plants, a series of floral and green leaf volatiles were tested by electroantennography and compounds eliciting remarkable responses were also tested in the field. Three compounds elicited the most outstanding responses from antennae of E. ornata: allyl isothiocyanate, phenylacetaldehyde and ± linalool. Field experiments were conducted in Hungary between 2017 and 2021 to test the potential attractive effects of the compounds. Three Eurydema species were caught in the experiments E. ornata, E. oleracea (Linnaeus) and E. ventralis Kolenati. In the experiments combinations containing allyl isothiocyanate attracted both males and females of E. ornata. The compound was also attractive on its own, in a positive, dose-dependent manner. When presented alone, neither phenylacetaldehyde nor ± linalool was attractive to the species, furthermore, addition of these compounds to allyl isothiocyanate did not affect attraction considerably. To our knowledge this is the first demonstration of field attration of an Eurydema species to a semiochemical and one of the few reports on trapping of a pentatomid species with a synthetic plant volatile in the field. Perspectives regarding research and potential practical applications are discussed in the paper.