“…It acts as a sex pheromone in Polyergus breviceps and P. rufescens (Greenberg et al, 2004;Castracani et al, 2005); a trail pheromone in Tetramorium impurum and Mayriella overbecki (Morgan and Ollett, 1987;Kohl et al, 2000); and as an alarm pheromone in Gnamptogenys pleurodon (Duffield and Blum, 1975). Sometimes methyl 6-methylsalicylate is mixed with other compounds to elicit a response, such as in P. breviceps and P. rufescens (Greenberg et al, 2004;Castracani et al, 2008); or it is the only compound needed to elicit a sexual response, such as in P. rufescens (Castracani et al, 2005). In Camponotus spp., Bothroponera soror, P. breviceps, P. rufescens, and G. pleurodon, methyl 6-methysalicylate comes from the mandibles (Brand et al, 1973;Longhurst et al, 1980;Blum et al, 1987;Greenberg et al, 2004;Castracani et al, 2005).…”