“…While social insects also use CHCs for recognition and interaction with nestmates and as fertility and dominance signals (Singer, 1998;Liebig, 2010), solitary insects mainly use CHCs for the discrimination of conspecifics and enemies, location of mating partners and the elicitation of courtship behaviour (Ruther et al, 2011). Evidence for solitary insects using CHCs as contact sex pheromones comes from several insect orders, for example the Coleoptera (Buprestidae: Lelito et al, 2009;Silk et al, 2009;Cerambycidae: Ginzel, 2010; Chrysomelidae: Sugeno et al, 2006;Peterson et al, 2007;Geiselhardt et al, 2009), Diptera (Drosophilidae, Glossinidae and Muscidae: Wicker- Thomas, 2007;Ferveur & Cobb, 2010) and Hymenoptera (Syvertsen et al, 1995;Schiestl et al, 2000;Sullivan, 2002;Mant et al, 2005;Steiner et al, 2005Steiner et al, , 2006Steiner et al, , 2007. Within the parasitic wasp family Pteromalidae, females of Roptrocerus xylophagorum (Sullivan, 2002), Lariophagus distinguendus (Steiner et al, 2005(Steiner et al, , 2007, Nasonia vitripennis (Steiner et al, 2006) and Dibrachys cavus (Ruther et al, 2011) produce CHCs which act at short-range as contact sex pheromones eliciting courtship behaviour in males.…”