10 results on '"D. Wakarchuk"'
Search Results
2. Evaluation of Synthetic Pheromones for Monitoring Forest Tent Caterpillar (Lepidoptera: Lasiocampidae) Populations
- Author
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B. C. Schmidt, Jens Roland, and D. Wakarchuk
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,Population ,Tent caterpillar ,Zoology ,Biology ,Malacosoma ,biology.organism_classification ,Pheromone trap ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,Lasiocampidae ,Insect Science ,Sex pheromone ,Botany ,Pheromone ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
To effectively monitor forest tent caterpillar (Malacosoma disstria Hubner) populations, the use of synthetic sex pheromones to trap adults was evaluated in outbreak and nonoutbreak population levels. Three pheromone blends were field-tested, consisting of 1) (Z,E)-5,7-dodecadienal, 2) 100:1 (Z,E)-5,7-dodecadienal: (Z,Z)-5,7-dodecadienal and 3) 100:1:10 (Z,E)-5,7-dodecadienal: (Z,Z)-5,7-dodecadienal: (Z)-7- dodecanal. The tertiary blend (3) was superior for capturing forest tent caterpillar moths, and was best able to resolve population density levels. Lures dosed with 11 μg or less of either the binary (2) or tertiary blends failed to capture moths at nonoutbreak population levels, while lures dosed at 390 μg gave the highest mean trap catch and the lowest rate of zero-captures.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The ability of various chemicals to elicit olfactory beta-waves in the pyriform cortex of meadow voles (Microtus pennsylvanicus) and laboratory rats (Rattus norvegicus)
- Author
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Elaine M. Zibrowski, C.H. Vanderwolf, and D. Wakarchuk
- Subjects
Male ,Zoology ,Sensory system ,Olfaction ,Biology ,Xylenes ,stomatognathic system ,Piriform cortex ,Cortex (anatomy) ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Microtus ,Molecular Biology ,Aldehydes ,Arvicolinae ,Terpenes ,General Neuroscience ,Anatomy ,Feeding Behavior ,Olfactory Pathways ,biology.organism_classification ,Olfactory Bulb ,Stimulation, Chemical ,Olfactory bulb ,Camphor ,Rats ,Electrophysiology ,Smell ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Odor ,Odorants ,Monoterpenes ,Cymenes ,Vole ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Developmental Biology ,Benzyl Alcohol - Abstract
Previous research has shown that, in freely moving laboratory rats, the odors of benzyl alcohol, camphor, carvacrol, isopentenyl methyl sulfide, 2-propylthietane, salicylaldehyde, trimethylthiazoline, and xylene (plus other compounds) elicit high amplitude bursts of roughly 20-Hz waves (beta-waves) in the olfactory bulb and pyriform cortex. Since all these compounds are effective antifeedants in a variety of small herbivores, a more extensive test of the effect of the odor of a variety of antifeedants on pyriform cortex activity in meadow voles (Microtus pennsylvanicus) was undertaken. A beta-wave response was reliably elicited in the vole pyriform cortex by the odors of isopentenyl methyl sulfide (a component of fox odor), 2-propyl thietane (a component of stoat odor), and xylene but not by the odors of 29 other compounds. The results indicate: (a) that there are clear interspecific differences in the olfactory reactions of the pyriform cortex and (b) that not all antifeedants elicit beta-waves in the pyriform cortex.
- Published
- 2001
4. Field Response of Black Turpentine Beetle to Pine Resin Oxidation and Pheromone Displacement.
- Author
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LeMay GA, O'Loughlin T, Wakarchuk D, and Hulcr J
- Subjects
- Animals, Pheromones pharmacology, Resins, Plant, Turpentine pharmacology, Coleoptera physiology, Pinus
- Abstract
The black turpentine beetle, Dendroctonus terebrans, is an economically important pest of pines in the Southeastern U.S., with a high potential for invasion to other pine-rich regions. Dendroctonus terebrans attraction to an injured host tree lessens over time as the host material degrades. Likewise, kairomonal volatiles emitted from the host change as constituents of the defensive resin oxidize. Therefore we hypothesized that volatiles associated with a fresh host would be more attractive to D. terebrans than those associated with a dead or dying host. We replicated the natural oxidation process of turpentine, fractionated the distilled products to isolate the oxidized products, and deployed the complex mixtures to measure field attraction based on the amount of oxidation performed. Contrasting with previous studies, our results suggest that D. terebrans attraction is not primarily based on host tree degradation. In a second experiment incorporating Dendroctonus pheromones, we demonstrate D. terebrans has a displacement-dependent response to endo-brevicomin, a pheromone associated with the sympatric southern pine beetle, D. frontalis. This has implications not only for possible interspecific signaling, but also for the role of endo-brevicomin in D. terebrans colonization behavior. The results from this study broaden the understanding of D. terebrans chemical ecology and directly contribute to the development of an effective lure-based monitoring system that will benefit future research and management efforts. This may become important if the species is established outside its native range, as in the closely related red turpentine beetle, Dendroctonus valens, which caused mass pine tree mortality following its introduction to Asia., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Advances in Semiochemical Repellents to Mitigate Host Mortality From the Spruce Beetle (Coleoptera: Curculionidae).
- Author
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Hansen EM, Munson AS, Wakarchuk D, Blackford DC, Graves AD, Stephens SS, and Moan JE
- Subjects
- Animals, Colorado, New Mexico, Pheromones, Utah, Coleoptera, Picea, Weevils
- Abstract
We tested 3-methyl-2-cyclohexen-1-one (MCH) and novel semiochemicals as potential spruce beetle (Dendroctonus rufipennis Kirby) (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Scolytinae) repellents over multiple years in Utah and Colorado trapping bioassays. MCH is a known spruce beetle repellent and our testing revealed Acer kairomone blend (AKB) and isophorone plus sulcatone as repellents. We subsequently tested these semiochemicals for area and single tree protection to prevent spruce beetle attacks at locations in Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, New Mexico, and Alaska. Individual tree protection trials found MCH-AKB provided significant protection against spruce beetle attacks in the southern Rocky Mountains but not in Alaska. Adding sulcatone or doubling MCH-AKB pouches did not further enhance protection. A degree of protection was extended to spruce at least 10 m distant from the repellents, including in Alaska. Tree diameter was not a significant covariate among treated trees but was positively correlated with the probability of infestation for surrounding spruce. In area protection trials, spruce in control plots were 2.4 times more likely to be in a higher severity attack class compared with spruce in plots treated with MCH-AKB pouches deployed at 30 sets per hectare. Tree diameter had a significant, positive relationship to the probability of infestation. We found MCH-AKB to offer a high degree of protection against beetle attack in Engelmann spruce (Picea engelmannii Parry ex Engelm.) (Pinales: Pinaceae) (Picea engelmannii Parry ex Engelm.) (Pinales: Pinaceae), especially for single tree protection (66% of control trees were strip- or mass-attacked compared with 6% of repellent-treated trees). AKB requires registration and labeling, however, before this economical and environmentally benign semiochemical can be used operationally., (Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Entomological Society of America 2019.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Inhibitory Effects of Semiochemicals on the Attraction of an Ambrosia Beetle Euwallacea nr. fornicatus to Quercivorol.
- Author
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Byers JA, Maoz Y, Wakarchuk D, Fefer D, and Levi Zada A
- Subjects
- Animals, Bicyclic Monoterpenes, Coleoptera physiology, Cyclohexane Monoterpenes, Ethanol metabolism, Female, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry, Insect Repellents chemistry, Insect Repellents pharmacology, Male, Monoterpenes chemistry, Monoterpenes pharmacology, Terpenes chemistry, Terpenes pharmacology, Behavior, Animal drug effects, Coleoptera drug effects, Persea metabolism, Pheromones chemistry, Pheromones pharmacology
- Abstract
The Euwallacea fornicatus (Eichhoff) species complex includes the polyphagous shot hole borer (PSHB), an ambrosia beetle infesting avocado limbs, Persea americana Mill. Synthetic quercivorol, a monoterpene alcohol, is known to attract females (males are flightless) over a range of release rates spanning three orders of magnitude. The upper release dose was extended 10-fold using sticky traps baited with quercivorol released at 1× (0.126 mg/day), 10×, and 108× relative rates to obtain a dose-response curve fitting a kinetic formation function. Naturally infested limbs of living avocado trees were wrapped with netting to exclude the possibility of catching emerging beetles on the encircling sticky traps. The results indicate PSHB are significantly attracted to infested limbs. Ethanol released over a 64-fold range (lowest rate of 7.5 mg/day) was moderately inhibitory of PSHB attraction to 1× quercivorol. β-caryophyllene and eucalyptol did not appear to affect attraction at the rates tested. A field test of potential inhibitors of 1× quercivorol was done using ~1 mg/day releases of monoterpene ketones: (-)-(S)-verbenone, (+)-(R)-verbenone, 3-methyl-2-cyclo-hexen-1-one (MCH or seudenone), piperitone, (+)-(S)-carvone, and racemic cryptone. Only piperitone and the two enantiomers of verbenone were strongly inhibitory. A blend of piperitone and verbenone tested together at different distances (0, 0.5, 1, 2, and 4 m) from a 1× quercivorol baited sticky trap became increasingly ineffective in inhibiting the attractant as separation distance increased. Due to the relatively short-range repellency (<1 m), the inhibitors would need to be released from several places on each tree to effectively repel PSHB from avocado trees. Effective attraction radii, EAR, and circular EARc are estimated for the quercivorol baits released at 1×, 10× and 108× rates. Push-pull simulations of moving beetles were performed in 1 ha plots with 2, 4, or 16 traps of 10× EARc and 400 trees (0, 1, or 3 inhibitors per tree) of which ten had an infested limb (EARc = 0.5 m). The simulations indicate that push-pull methods would be more effective in reducing PSHB mating than simply using mass-trapping alone.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Lethal Trap Trees and Semiochemical Repellents as Area Host Protection Strategies for Spruce Beetle (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Scolytinae) in Utah.
- Author
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Matthew Hansen E, Steven Munson A, Blackford DC, Wakarchuk D, and Scott Baggett L
- Subjects
- Animals, Cyclohexanes, Utah, Insect Control methods, Insect Repellents, Pheromones, Weevils
- Abstract
We tested lethal trap trees and repellent semiochemicals as area treatments to protect host trees from spruce beetle (Dendroctonus rufipennis Kirby) attacks. Lethal trap tree treatments ("spray treatment") combined a spruce beetle bait with carbaryl treatment of the baited spruce. Repellent treatments ("spray-repellent") combined a baited lethal trap tree within a 16-m grid of MCH (3-methylcyclohex-2-en-1-one) and two novel spruce beetle repellents. After beetle flight, we surveyed all trees within 50 m of plot center, stratified by 10-m radius subplots, and compared attack rates to those from baited and unbaited control plots. Compared to the baited controls, spruce in the spray treatment had significantly reduced likelihood of a more severe attack classification (e.g., mass-attacked over strip-attacked or unsuccessful-attacked over unattacked). Because spruce in the spray treatment also had significantly heightened probability of more severe attack classification than those in the unbaited controls, however, we do not recommend lethal trap trees as a stand-alone beetle suppression strategy for epidemic beetle populations. Spruce in the spray-repellent treatment were slightly more likely to be classified as more severely attacked within 30 m of plot center compared to unbaited controls but, overall, had reduced probabilities of beetle attack over the entire 50-m radius plots. The semiochemical repellents deployed in this study were effective at reducing attacks on spruce within treated plots despite the presence of a centrally located spruce beetle bait. Further testing will be required to clarify operational protocols such as dose, elution rate, and release device spacing., (Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Entomological Society of America 2016. This work is written by US Government employees and is in the public domain in the US.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Variation in manuka oil lure efficacy for capturing Xyleborus glabratus (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Scolytinae), and cubeb oil as an alternative attractant.
- Author
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Hanula JL, Sullivan BT, and Wakarchuk D
- Subjects
- Animals, Georgia, Insect Control, Leptospermum chemistry, Oils, Volatile pharmacology, Pheromones pharmacology, Piper chemistry, Plant Oils pharmacology, Weevils drug effects
- Abstract
Redbay ambrosia beetle, Xyleborus glabratus Eichoff, is an exotic species to North America vectoring a deadly vascular wilt disease of redbay [Persea borbonia (L.) Spreng], swampbay [P. palustris (Raf.) Sarg.], avocado (P. americana Mill.), and sassafras [Sassafras albidum (Nutt.) Nees]. Xyleborus glabratus is attracted to manuka oil lures, which are commercially available, and phoebe oil. Variable efficacy of manuka oil lures and insufficient availability of phoebe oil prompted us to investigate the reasons behind changes in manuka oil lure efficacy and to test cubeb oil, a readily available essential oil from Piper cubeba L. seeds, as an alternative attractant. Attraction, release rates and durations, and volatile composition of manuka oil lures manufactured in 2008 were compared with manuka oil lures manufactured in 2012, and to whole and a distilled fraction of cubeb oil. Manuka oil lures from 2008 were more attractive to X. glabratus than controls for 8 wk, whereas lures from 2012 were attractive for only 2 wk. Cubeb oil and the distilled fraction of it were as attractive as or more attractive than manuka oil in three trials. In gravimetric studies, manuka oil lures from 2008 and cubeb oil lures continued to release volatiles for 57 d, whereas lures from 2012 stopped after 16 d. The chemical composition of volatiles released from new manuka oil lures from 2008 was similar to 2012; however, a preservative (butylated hydroxytoluene) was detected in the 2008 lures. Cubeb oil was an effective attractant for X. glabratus that lasted 8-9 wk when released from bubble lures.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Comparison of naturally and synthetically baited spruce beetle trapping systems in the central Rocky Mountains.
- Author
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Hansen EM, Vandygriff JC, Cain RJ, and Wakarchuk D
- Subjects
- Animals, Colorado, Time Factors, Trees, Utah, Wyoming, Coleoptera physiology, Insect Control methods
- Abstract
We compared naturally baited trapping systems to synthetically baited funnel traps and fallen trap trees for suppressing preoutbreak spruce beetle, Dendroctonus rufipennis Kirby, populations. Lures for the traps were fresh spruce (Picea spp.) bolts or bark sections, augmented by adding female spruce beetles to create secondary attraction. In 2003, we compared a naturally baited system ("bolt trap") with fallen trap trees and with synthetically baited funnel traps. Trap performance was evaluated by comparing total beetle captures and spillover of attacks into nearby host trees. Overall, the trap systems did not significantly differ in spruce beetle captures, although bolt traps caught 6 to 7 times more beetles than funnel traps during the first 4 wk of testing. Funnel traps with synthetic lures had significantly more spillover than either trap trees or bolt traps. The study was repeated in 2004 with modifications including an enhanced blend synthetic lure. Again, trap captures were generally similar among naturally and synthetically baited traps, but naturally baited traps had significantly less spillover. Although relatively labor-intensive, the bolt trap could be used to suppress preoutbreak beetle populations, especially when spillover is undesirable. Our work provides additional avenues for management of spruce beetles and suggests that currently used synthetic lures can be improved.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The ability of various chemicals to elicit olfactory beta-waves in the pyriform cortex of meadow voles (Microtus pennsylvanicus) and laboratory rats (Rattus norvegicus).
- Author
-
Vanderwolf CH, Zibrowski EM, and Wakarchuk D
- Subjects
- Aldehydes, Animals, Arvicolinae, Benzyl Alcohol, Camphor, Cymenes, Electrophysiology, Feeding Behavior physiology, Female, Male, Odorants, Olfactory Bulb physiology, Rats, Stimulation, Chemical, Terpenes, Xylenes, Monoterpenes, Olfactory Pathways physiology, Smell physiology
- Abstract
Previous research has shown that, in freely moving laboratory rats, the odors of benzyl alcohol, camphor, carvacrol, isopentenyl methyl sulfide, 2-propylthietane, salicylaldehyde, trimethylthiazoline, and xylene (plus other compounds) elicit high amplitude bursts of roughly 20-Hz waves (beta-waves) in the olfactory bulb and pyriform cortex. Since all these compounds are effective antifeedants in a variety of small herbivores, a more extensive test of the effect of the odor of a variety of antifeedants on pyriform cortex activity in meadow voles (Microtus pennsylvanicus) was undertaken. A beta-wave response was reliably elicited in the vole pyriform cortex by the odors of isopentenyl methyl sulfide (a component of fox odor), 2-propyl thietane (a component of stoat odor), and xylene but not by the odors of 29 other compounds. The results indicate: (a) that there are clear interspecific differences in the olfactory reactions of the pyriform cortex and (b) that not all antifeedants elicit beta-waves in the pyriform cortex.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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