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A Ubiquitous Volatile in Noctuid Larval Frass Attracts a Parasitoid Species. | LitMetric

A Ubiquitous Volatile in Noctuid Larval Frass Attracts a Parasitoid Species.

Biology (Basel)

State Key Laboratory of Agricultural and Forestry Biosecurity, College of Plant Protection, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing 210095, China.

Published: August 2025


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Article Abstract

Natural enemies commonly probe larval bodies and frass with their antennae for prey hunting. However, the attractants to natural enemies emitted directly from hosts and host-associated tissues remained largely unknown. Here, we used two generalist noctuid species, (Hübner) and (JE Smith), along with the larval endoparasitoid (Haliday) to address the question. Extracts of larval frass of both the noctuid species were strongly attractive to females when hosts were fed either maize, cotton, soybean leaves, or an artificial diet without leaf tissues. By using a combination of electrophysiological measurements and behavioral tests, we found that the attractiveness of frass mainly relied on a volatile compound ethyl palmitate. The compound was likely to be a by-product of host digestion involving gut bacteria because an antibiotic supplement in diets reduced the production of the compound in frass and led to the decreased attractiveness of frass to the parasitoids. In contrast, extracts of the larval bodies of both the noctuid species appeared to be less attractive to the parasitoids than their respective fecal extracts, independently of types of food supplied to the larvae. Altogether, larval frass of the two noctuid species was likely to be more important than their bodies in attracting the endoparasitoid species, and the main attractant of frass was probably one of the common metabolites of digestion involving gut microbes, and its emission is likely to be independent of host plant species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12383394PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology14081007DOI Listing

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