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Agricultural Research Service United States Department of Agriculture
 
Research Project: INSECT-PLANT-MICROORGANISM INTERATIONS AFFECTING CORN QUALITY AND SAFETY

Location: Crop Bioprotection Research

Title: Pheromone Components from the Weathering of Cuticular Lipids

Author

Submitted to: National Entomological Society of America Annual Meeting
Publication Type: Abstract
Publication Acceptance Date: November 20, 2002
Publication Date: N/A

Technical Abstract: Cuticular lipids containing carbon-carbon double bonds are extremely common in insects; major examples are alkene and alkadiene hydrocarbons. Such compounds oxidize and break down slowly under typical field conditions. One important reaction is cleavage at a double bond to release aldehydes. Thus, heavy, essentially non-volatile cuticular lipids can release smaller, volatile products into the air as the lipids weather. These volatile products sometimes serve as long-range pheromone components, and three examples of this situation from the Hymenoptera will be reviewed.

     
Last Modified: 02/09/2009