Pentane extracts of matureDrosophila melanogaster males substantially increased the attractiveness of food odors to both males and females in a wind-tunnel olfactometer. Extracts of females caused no such increase. An active component of the extract was isolated and identified as (Z)-11-octadecenyl acetate (cis-vaccenyl acetate, cVA), and synthetic cVA was active in bioassay. Hydrolysis of the ester linkage or movement of the double bond to the 9 position destroyed the activity. Mature virgin males released cVA into their feeding vials, and amounts of synthetic CVA equal to that released per male caused significant bioassay responses. Females, which were known to receive cVA from males during copulation, were found to emit relatively large amounts of the ester into their feeding vials within 6 hr after mating. cVA had been demonstrated previously to be a close-range pheromone inD. melanogaster, discouraging males from courting other males or recently mated females; it now appears to have a longer-range function as well.
Existence of a male-produced pheromone, which attracts both males and females in a wind-tunnel olfactometer, has been demonstrated inDrosophila simulans (Sturtevant). A pheromone component was identified as (Z)-11-octadecenyl acetate (Z11-18: Ac), also known ascis-vaccenyl acetate. The pheromone is synergized by food volatiles. In bioassay ca. 1/1000 of a mature male equivalent of Z11-18: Ac is attractive and activity increases with increased amounts of Z11-18: Ac. Flies do not begin responding to Z11-18: Ac until after they have been away from food for at least 2 hr. Z11-18: Ac is transferred from the male to the female during mating, and the female emits the majority of the transferred Z11-18: Ac within 6 hr after mating.
ABSTRACT. Aggregation pheromones have been demonstrated in the closely related taxa: Drosophila americana americana Spencer, D. a. texana Patterson, D. novamexicana Patterson, and D. lummei Hackman. These pheromones function much as has been reported previously for D. virilis Sturtevant. The compounds are produced by sexually mature males, but both sexes respond in a wind‐tunnel olfactometer. In all species except D. lummei, a 21‐carbon alkene is an important pheromone component. In D. virilis the hydrocarbon is (Z)‐10‐heneicosene (Z10–21), but in D. a. americana, D. a. texana and D. novamexicana it is (Z)‐9‐heneicosene (Z9‐21). All these taxa respond best to the heneicosene which they produce. D. lummei possesses no heneicosenes but, curiously, responds well to both Z9‐21 and Z10‐21. All species possess five male‐specific esters which were previously discovered in D. virilis: methyl tiglate, ethyl tiglate, isopropyl tiglate, methyl hexanoate and ethyl hexanoate. Ethyl tiglate is the most abundant in each case. Responses to the esters vary among the taxa, ranging from highly significant in D. lummei, particularly to ethyl tiglate, to not demonstrable in D. a. americana. Variability in ester response has also been demonstrated between two strains of D. virilis. In all cases the crude male‐derived pheromone is synergistic with an extract of fermented willow bark, on which oviposition is said to occur.
The male-produced aggregation pheromone ofDrosophila virilis was found to contain five ester components, in addition to a previously identified hydrocarbon, (Z)-10-heneicosene (Z10-21). The five esters were: the methyl, ethyl, and 1-methylethyl (isopropyl) esters of 2-methyl-(E)-2-butenoic (tiglic) acid and the methyl and ethyl esters of hexanoic acid. The esters were not detected in females. Each ester was active by itself in laboratory bioassay tests, and each increased the number of flies responding toZ10-21 ca. 4-5 times. In comparisons among the five esters at 10 ng per compound, ethyl tiglate was the most active, and methyl tiglate, the least. No mixture of esters was found to be significantly more active than ethyl tiglate alone. In a doseresponse study, bioassay activity increased with dose for both ethyl tiglate andZ10-21. Newly emerged males did not have detectable levels of the esters. All five esters increased as sexual maturity was approached. Ethyl tiglate and ethyl hexanoate were the most abundant in mature males, usually over 15 ng per individual. Ratios among the esters were variable. Male flies also contained an as yet unidentified attractant(s) still more polar than the esters, which was synergistic with the esters and hydrocarbon. Food odors also synergized the synthetic compounds.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.