“…In the last decade or so, long-distance sex and aggregation pheromones have been identifi ed in several species of longhorn beetles in the subfamilies Cerambycinae (Fettköther et al, 1995;Allison et al, 2004;Lacey et al, 2004Lacey et al, , 2007Mitchell et al, 2015, Ray et al, 2015, Spondylidinae (Silk et al, 2007;Sweeney et al, 2010), Prioninae (Cervantes et al, 2006), Lamiinae (Fonseca et al, 2010, Pajares et al, 2010Teale et al, 2011;Allison et al, 2012;Fierke et al, 2012) and Lepturinae (Ray et al, 2011, and use of racemic blends as well as pure enantiomers in traps has signifi cantly increased the detection rate of several species of cerambycids Mitchell et al, 2011;Hanks & Miller, 2012Wong et al, 2012;Sweeney et al, 2014;Ray et al, 2015;Miller et al, 2015b). As a result, racemic blends of the cerambycinae pheromones, 3-hydroxyhexan-2-one and 3-hydroxyoctan-2-one, have been used in operational surveillance programs by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency from .…”