1991
DOI: 10.1007/bf01402948
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Chemical characterization of fruit and fungal volatiles attractive to dried-fruit beetle,Carpophilus hemipterus (L.) (Coleoptera: Nitidulidae)

Abstract: The chemical basis underlying orientation to fruit and fungal odors was investigated for the dried-fruit beetle,Carpophilus hemipterus (L.). In wind-tunnel bioassays of walking and flight response from 1.8 m, beetles were attracted to odors of the yeastSaccharomyces cerevisiae on agar, aseptic banana, or banana inoculated withS. cerevisiae, although both banana substrates elicited greater response than the yeast alone. When presented in a two-choice bioassay, the yeast-inoculated banana attracted approximately… Show more

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Cited by 68 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…Thirty-gram samples of whole-wheat bread dough inoculated with baker's yeast or similar samples of fruits were incubated in 240-mt Qorpak straight-sided jars at room temperature for about 24 hr or five to seven days, respectively, before being used for volatile collections or for bioassays. Fresh tomato, banana, sweet corn, and strawberry were maintained aseptically or inoculated using a previously described method (Phelan and Lin, 1991) with either Saccharomyces cerevisiae or Candida krusei, two yeasts that are ubiq-uitous in nature (Alexopoulos, 1979). The lid of each jar was installed with a 37-mm Bacterial Air Vent (Gelman Science, Ann Arbor, Michigan) for ventilation, and a sleeve-type rubber septum (Thomas Scientific) for collection of headspace samples.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Thirty-gram samples of whole-wheat bread dough inoculated with baker's yeast or similar samples of fruits were incubated in 240-mt Qorpak straight-sided jars at room temperature for about 24 hr or five to seven days, respectively, before being used for volatile collections or for bioassays. Fresh tomato, banana, sweet corn, and strawberry were maintained aseptically or inoculated using a previously described method (Phelan and Lin, 1991) with either Saccharomyces cerevisiae or Candida krusei, two yeasts that are ubiq-uitous in nature (Alexopoulos, 1979). The lid of each jar was installed with a 37-mm Bacterial Air Vent (Gelman Science, Ann Arbor, Michigan) for ventilation, and a sleeve-type rubber septum (Thomas Scientific) for collection of headspace samples.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Headspace volatiles were trapped on Tenax GC and then thermally desorbed to a capillary gas chromatograph (Phelan and Lin, 1991). Due to the high concentration and volatility of ethanol and acetaldehyde relative to the other odor components, two volatile collection methods were used.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ascoid sensilla of L. longipalpis can house between three and eleven olfactory receptor cells and other olfactory sensilla also occur on the antenna (M. Vlimant and P. A. Diehl, unpublished data). The dried fruit beetle, Carpophilus hemipterus (L), is a generalist herbivore and is known to respond in a wind tunnel to eighteen chemical components of banana odour (Phelan & Lin, 1991). The simplest blend that induced a full behavioural response contained at least four compounds representing three functional groups.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus the lower attractiveness of the pollen dough conditioned for 14 days is suggestive of the disappearance of attractant and the appearance of repellent compounds in the volatiles, and possibly an antagonistic interaction between the yeast associated with the SHB and a different microorganism. Interestingly, acetaldehyde, ethanol, ethyl acetate and several of these ethyl esters have been identified in volatiles released by microbial cultures, and these volatiles either act alone as kairomones or synergize the activity of pheromones in various nitidulid species (Smilanick et al, 1978;Lin and Phelan, 1991;Phelan and Lin, 1991;Bartelt et al, 1993;James et al, 1996;Nout and Bartelt, 1998;Bartelt and Zilkowski, 1998;Zilkowski et al, 1999;Teal et al, 2006). Strikingly, 2-phenylethanol, also a fermentation product (Zilkowski et al, 1999, Zhu et al, 2003, is the major component of volatiles released by pollen dough conditioned for 14 days.…”
Section: Analysis Of Volatilesmentioning
confidence: 99%